Amazon may offer to buy India's Flipkart: report
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[April 04, 2018]
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc may
make a rival offer to buy Indian e-commerce firm Flipkart, which is in
tie-up talks with Walmart Inc, local media reported, as the two U.S.
retail giants jostle for dominance in India's booming online industry.
Amazon held early exploratory talks to buy control of Indian rival
Flipkart but a deal with Walmart is more likely, daily newspaper Mint
said on Wednesday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.
One person familiar with the matter told Reuters that the probability of
a deal with Amazon was low, and that any such deal could spark monopoly
concerns as Flipkart and Amazon dominate India's e-commerce market. The
person declined to be identified as discussions were private.
Amazon declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. Flipkart and
Walmart did not respond to requests for comment.
Walmart is in talks to buy over 40 percent of Flipkart in potentially
one of its biggest overseas deals, Reuters reported in February. A deal
would give the world's largest brick-and-mortar retailer access to an
e-commerce market that Morgan Stanley estimated to be worth $200 billion
in a decade's time.
The deal would also represent a direct challenge to Amazon in Asia's
third-largest economy. Amazon has committed to investing $5 billion in
India as it expands into online grocery delivery.
Walmart will buy a majority stake in Flipkart through a mix of primary
and secondary share purchases in a deal that could value the Indian firm
at $21 billion, Mint reported.
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Jeff Bezos, founder and chief executive officer of Amazon, poses as
he stands atop a supply truck during a photo opportunity at the
premises of a shopping mall in Bangalore, India, September 28, 2014.
REUTERS/Abhishek N. Chinnappa/File photo
Flipkart, founded by former Amazon employees Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal in
2007, controls nearly 40 percent of India's online retail market, ahead of
Amazon, showed estimates by researcher Forrester.
Like Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the pair began by selling books and diversified
rapidly, including by selling smartphones through exclusive flash sales.
Flipkart now competes with Amazon on almost all product categories.
Flipkart's success has attracted a bevy of deep-pocketed and tech-savvy
investors including U.S. hedge fund Tiger Global Management LLC, online
marketplace eBay Inc and software maker Microsoft Corp, as well as Chinese
technology firm Tencent Holdings Ltd.
It was valued at around $12 billion when Japan's SoftBank Group Corp's Vision
Fund bought roughly a fifth of the firm last year for $2.5 billion.
(Reporting by Jessica Kuruthukulangara in Bengaluru; Editing by Sunil Nair and
Christoper Cushing)
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