Exclusive: Amazon in talks with airline Azul for
shipping in Brazil - sources
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[April 17, 2018]
By Gram Slattery
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>
is in talks with Brazilian airline Azul SA <AZUL.N> on shipping goods in
the country, two sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters, in
the latest sign of the retailer's big plans in Latin America's largest
economy.
The talks with Azul, which serves over 50 percent more Brazilian
airports than its nearest rival, are the strongest signal yet that
Amazon is lining up distribution to sell products directly to consumers
throughout the country.
It also shows that the U.S. e-commerce company is serious about
overcoming the nation's notorious logistical challenges, including
shoddy roads, security problems and a national territory greater than
the continental United States.
Representatives for Azul declined to comment on the talks.
Amazon said it did not comment on "rumors or speculation."
The Seattle-based online retailer has so far waded slowly into Brazil's
highly competitive e-commerce market, starting with e-book sales in
2012, adding physical books two years later and offering third-party
sales of electronics in October.
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E-commerce accounts for around 5 percent of Brazil's roughly $300
billion retail market, about half its share in the United States. Yet
Brazil's online sales have doubled in four years and are expected to
grow at a double-digit pace in coming years.
Currently, Amazon relies on third-party vendors to ship their own goods
sold on its Brazilian website, but that appears to be changing.
In February, Reuters reported that Amazon was looking to lease a
50,000-square-meter warehouse just outside Sao Paulo, in a sign the
retailer may bring storage and distribution in-house.
In March, Reuters reported that the company met with an array of
manufacturers in Sao Paulo to discuss plans to stock and sell products
directly.
Both developments drove down shares in Brazilian e-commerce competitors,
such as Magazine Luiza SA <MGLU3.SA> and B2W Companhia Digital SA
<BTOW3.SA>. MercadoLibre Inc <MELI.O> has also fought Amazon
tooth-and-nail in Mexico and Brazil.
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The logo of Amazon.com Inc is seen in Sao Paulo, Brazil October 17,
2017. REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker/File Photo
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By partnering with Azul, Amazon would immediately gain access to a network of
more than 100 airports in Brazil, implying its ambitions go far beyond
metropolitan Sao Paulo.
Azul has built up an 18 percent share of Brazil's domestic air travel market
over the past decade by flying regional jets and turboprop planes into second-
and third-tier cities underserved by other carriers.
Azul's cargo unit, Azul Cargo Express, takes advantage of excess cargo capacity
in its passenger flights to offer rapid delivery to locations ranging from
far-flung Amazonian outposts to Brazil's major metropolitan centers.
The company offers shipping to more than 3,200 municipalities, as well as a
specialized e-commerce service known as Azul Cargo E-Commerce. Azul's hub,
Viracopos International Airport, is about a 45-minute drive from the warehouse
Amazon has been eyeing northwest of Sao Paulo.
The sources, who requested anonymity as the negotiations are confidential, did
not specify how advanced conversations were, nor did they say if the retailer
has also engaged Azul's rivals.
Competing airlines with Brazilian cargo operations include Latam Airlines Group
SA <LTM.SN> and Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes SA <GOLL4.SA>. Neither responded
immediately to requests for comment.
Last week, Azul announced it has leased two Boeing Co <BA.N> freight aircraft
"to support the rapid growth of its cargo business unit."
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(Reporting by Gram Slattery; Additional reporting by Flavia Bohone, Gabriela
Mello, and Tatiana Bautzer in Sao Paulo and Felipe Iturrieta in Santiago;
Editing by Brad Haynes and Cynthia Osterman)
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