Walmart attempts international turnaround with UK, India 
						tie-ups
						
		 
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		 [April 30, 2018] 
		 By Nandita Bose 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Walmart Inc's <WMT.N> 
		urgency to stem market share losses to rivals around the world is 
		driving it to partner with local players in the UK and India, even as it 
		scales back in some other markets like Brazil. The world's largest 
		retailer is in talks to merge its UK arm ASDA with J Sainsbury Plc <SBRY.L> 
		in which it will hold a minority stake. Walmart is also looking to 
		acquire a majority stake in India's leading online retailer Flipkart for 
		$10 billion to $12 billion after years of underperformance there. 
		 
		The moves underscore Walmart's renewed focus on catching up with 
		competitors, ranging from grocer Aldi Inc to Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>, in 
		key international markets. The retailer’s underperforming international 
		business contributed less than a quarter to its total revenue of $500.3 
		billion in fiscal 2018. 
						
		
		  
						
		"Walmart has simply been too slow to react when it comes to their 
		overseas business," said Burt Flickinger, managing director, Strategic 
		Resource Group. "They have finally started taking corrective action and 
		are now dedicating their resources to where they think they can grow," 
		he said. It also marks a shift in Walmart's traditional approach of 
		building a business on its own. 
		 
		"Walmart is clearly moving away from trying to crack tough foreign 
		markets by itself to striking partnerships because it realizes that is 
		the fastest way to bridge the gap with competitors," said Laura Kennedy, 
		vice president, retail sales and shopper practice at Kantar Consulting. 
		 
		A Walmart spokesman declined to comment on the negotiations in the UK 
		and India. 
		 
		Overall, sales from Walmart International, which runs about 6,300 stores 
		globally, stood at $118.07 billion in the fiscal year ended 2018, down 
		nearly 14 percent from $136.5 billion in 2014. This was in large part 
		due to adverse currency movements, which hurt the money repatriated from 
		its foreign arms, but also because of a series of missteps in major 
		markets around the world. In an effort to fix its international 
		performance, Walmart in January appointed Chief Operating Officer Judith 
		McKenna to run its international unit and has indicated it will focus on 
		its core North American markets and growth markets like China and India. 
		 
		Walmart's international woes have been exacerbated by slow 
		decision-making over the years and even initial talks with India’s 
		Flipkart began as far back as 2016. 
		 
		Walmart initially entered the Indian market in 2007 through a joint 
		venture with India’s Bharti Enterprises, years before Amazon debuted 
		there. That joint venture was called off in 2013 and its presence in 
		India has remained largely static since then, at least in part due to 
		restrictions around foreign investment in physical retail in India. 
		 
		Meanwhile, Amazon jumped in with a less regulated online marketplace 
		offering, retail consultants and investors said. Amazon now holds about 
		27 percent of India's burgeoning e-commerce market, according to 
		Euromonitor, where Walmart remains a footnote and only operates 21 
		cash-and-carry wholesale stores in the country that sell to businesses. 
						
		
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			A Walmart store is seen in Encinitas, California, U.S. on April 13, 
			2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo 
              
Walmart’s slow-footedness means if a deal is announced, Flipkart could be 
Walmart's largest acquisition to date, potentially at a steep premium to what 
SoftBank Group <9984.T> paid for a stake in the company less than a year ago. 
 
INTERNATIONAL BLUNDERS 
 
Walmart's international moves over the years have involved a series of blunders. 
For example, Walmart bet on an unprofitable, second-tier online retailer in 
China in 2011 and has since been behind Alibaba Group Holding Ltd <BABA.N>. In 
2016, Walmart sold its online business in China to pick up a stake in China's no 
2 retailer JD.com. 
 
In Brazil, Walmart has struggled to gain traction after a decade, while in the 
United Kingdom it has been unable to stem market share declines to hard 
discounters like Aldi Inc and Lidl. 
 
Now, Walmart is trying to offload a majority stake in its Brazilian operations 
to private equity firm Advent International. And on Saturday, Sainsbury said it 
and Walmart's British unit Asda are in talks to create the country's biggest 
supermarket group. 
 
Their combination, which some said shows Walmart’s retrenching in the market, 
would surpass Tesco's <TSCO.L> grocery market share and be worth up to 15 
billion pounds ($20.7 billion). 
Whether Walmart's latest moves will turn Walmart International into the growth 
engine it once was remains to be seen, consultants said. For now at least, 
investors have largely supported the decisions to jumpstart global growth made 
by Chief Executive Doug McMillon as exemplified by the market reaction to the 
talks in India. 
  
"In the short term, the Flipkart deal may look pricey, but the markets haven't 
punished Walmart because investors realize this is probably their best chance to 
have a fair fight with Amazon in India," Ken Murphy, portfolio manager at 
Aberdeen Standard Investments, said. Walmart's shares fell 20 percent from an 
all-time high in January largely due to concerns around its online performance 
in the United States. They have, however, risen 27 percent in the past year, 
outperforming the wider S&P 500 index, which rose 12 percent during the same 
period. 
 
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in New York, Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Cynthia 
Osterman) 
		  
				 
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