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						Landing with a bump? 
						Germany's Rocket falls back to earth 
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		 [June 29, 2016] 
		By Emma Thomasson and Chijioke Ohuocha 
			BERLIN/LAGOS (Reuters) - When German 
			e-commerce investor Rocket Internet launched Jumia in 2012 as a 
			would-be African Amazon, it was optimistic that a rapidly expanding 
			middle class would quickly shift from street markets to shopping 
			online.
 Four years on, falling sales for sites like Jumia and slower growth 
			from Nigeria to Russia and Brazil is casting doubt on Rocket 
			Internet's ambition to become the world's biggest Internet company 
			outside the United States and China.
 
 Jumia made a loss of 17 million euros ($18.8 million) in the first 
			three months of 2016 on sales that fell more than a third. The 
			devaluation of Nigeria's naira last week is a new blow for Jumia, 
			which now operates in more than 20 countries in Africa.
 
 Revenue growth has also slowed at most of Rocket Internet's other 11 
			leading start-ups, ranging from furniture e-commerce and food 
			delivery in Europe to online fashion in markets from India to Latin 
			America and the Middle East.
 
 That is the consequence of Rocket's shift to rein in spending on 
			marketing and logistics as it seeks to stem losses which it said 
			peaked at 1 billion euros in 2015.
 
 As a result, shareholders have cast doubt on the valuation Rocket 
			has put on its portfolio and questioned the strategy of sending 
			business school graduates to set up 150 start-ups in more than 110 
			countries in just a few years.
 
			 
			Exclusive interviews with shareholders reveal growing scepticism 
			about Rocket's sprawling empire as emerging markets sour and 
			technology stocks cool. Its share price has fallen 39 percent this 
			year.
 "People have started to question whether the company portfolio is 
			really as good as we first thought," said a top 20 shareholder, who 
			declined to be named as they expect to trade stock. "A lot of trust 
			has been destroyed over the last 12 months."
 
 Founded in Berlin in 2007 by brothers Oliver, Alexander and Marc 
			Samwer, Rocket Internet aims to replicate the business models of 
			Amazon, China's Alibaba and ride service Uber in new markets.
 
 With few other tech companies listed in Europe, investors jumped at 
			the opportunity to gain exposure to an array of fast-growing 
			businesses when Rocket went public in 2014, pushing the stock up by 
			more than 50 percent in the first few months.
 
 However, the stock has been on a downward trajectory since peaking 
			in February 2015 after it surprised investors with a new capital 
			hike and shifted strategy to invest in the food delivery business in 
			developed markets.
 
 The latest share price tumble started in April when Sweden's 
			Kinnevik, Rocket's second-biggest shareholder after the Samwer 
			brothers, slashed the valuation for its emerging market fashion 
			websites by two thirds.
 
 That unsettled investors, especially after Kinnevik said its 
			representatives were stepping down from the board, citing potential 
			conflicts of interest over future investments.
 
 Kinnevik, which has hedged its bets on Rocket in Africa by investing 
			in Jumia's main rival Konga, declined to comment for this article. 
			It has said it will work closely with Rocket although it could 
			review its stake in two or three years.
 
 Martin Weber, a partner at venture capital firm Holtzbrinck, which 
			has a 1.9 percent Rocket stake, says the company has struggled to 
			provide enough information about its holdings.
 
 "The stock market loves transparency. And that is not practically 
			possible at Rocket," Weber told Reuters. "Rocket needs to prove that 
			it can get profitable companies on their feet."
 
			
			 
			Samwer has admitted Rocket had initially done too little to 
			communicate with investors after the firm went public, but he is not 
			worried about the share price.
 "We planted a lot of seeds and I believe in the next 24 months a lot 
			of investors will see it the same way," he told a Berlin tech 
			conference this month.
 
He says the sale in April of Lazada - Rocket's loss-making Amazon clone in 
Southeast Asia - for $1 billion to Alibaba underlines the logic of going into 
frontier markets before more established rivals. 
Some investors are prepared to give him more time. 
			
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			A man works online as he holds a branded cardboard box at a 
			warehouse for an online store, Jumia in Ikeja district, in Nigeria's 
			commercial capital Lagos June 10, 2016. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye 
            
			
 
"We believe that the portfolio is worth a lot more," said Ralph Dommermuth, 
chief executive of United Internet, Rocket's third-biggest shareholder, even 
after he took a 157 million euro writedown on his firm's Rocket stake in May.
 "Among European investors in young Internet firms, Rocket Internet is the 
broadest and has the most experience in the sector."
 
 CEO'S PROMISE
 
 Rocket now has a market capitalization of 3 billion euros, well below the 5.3 
billion valuation it put on its portfolio at April 30, and only just above the 
2.8 billion in cash held by Rocket and its operating companies as of March 31.
 
 Most Internet start-ups burn cash in early years as they pour money into 
marketing, logistics and technology to pursue revenue growth above all else, 
hoping to move into the black once they reach scale.
 
That approach has worked for the likes of Amazon, Alibaba and European online 
fashion site Zalando.
 Neil Campling, head of technology research at Northern Trust Securities, who 
rates the stock a "sell", doubts the Rocket businesses can replicate Amazon's 
success because their markets are so underdeveloped and the cost of logistics so 
much higher.
 
 "As soon as they reduce marketing, you see revenue growth decline 
substantially," he said. "They haven't got the scale."
 
 However, Samwer says Rocket has more than enough capital to fund its main 
start-ups until they turn profitable.
 
 Samwer promised last September to make three start-ups profitable by the end of 
2017, with Middle East fashion site Namshi, online home furnishings store 
Westwing and food takeout firm Delivery Hero seen as the most promising.
 
 
Jumia, which predicted in late 2013 it could turn a profit within 18 months, is 
far from that goal. It lost 111 million euros in 2015 on sales of 135 million. 
But Jumia Nigeria CEO Juliet Anammah believes the company can make a profit 
within three to five years. "Africa is a long-term play," she said.
 Samwer has now changed tack for his Amazon clones, shifting from buying and 
shipping their own stock - more suited to countries with well-established 
logistics - to providing a commission-based marketplace for third-party 
retailers, like Alibaba.
 
 "You are tapping into the supply capacity that exists in the country. So you are 
not dependant exclusively on your working capital to source and bring in retail 
products," Anammah said.
 
 Samwer remains optimistic for Jumia.
 
 "The people are still there even if emerging markets are cold... They still have 
some money," he said. "The offline to online shift continues."
 
 (Additional reporting by Sinead Cruise in London, Nadine Schimroszik in Berlin, 
Mia Shanley in Stockholm, Alexis Akwagyiram in Lagos, Harro ten Wolde and Eric 
Auchard in Frankfurt; editing by Susan Thomas)
 
				 
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