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						New e-commerce rules jolt Amazon.com in India as 
						products vanish
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		 [February 01, 2019]   
		By Aditya Kalra and Sankalp Phartiyal 
 NEW DELHI/MUMBAI (Reuters) - India's 
		revised e-commerce rules caused widespread disruption on Amazon's India 
		website when they kicked in on Friday, forcing the company to take down 
		its key grocery service and remove a wide range of products such as 
		sunglasses and floor cleaners.
 
 The products began to disappear from Amazon India late on Thursday as it 
		began complying with the regulations before a midnight deadline, two 
		sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
 
 In December, India modified foreign direct investment rules for its 
		burgeoning e-commerce sector, which has drawn major bets from not only 
		Amazon.com but also the likes of Walmart Inc, which last year bought a 
		majority stake in homegrown e-commerce player Flipkart.
 
 India's new e-commerce investment rules bar online retailers from 
		selling products via vendors in which they have an equity interest, and 
		also from making deals with sellers to sell exclusively on their 
		platforms.
 
		
		 
		
 Numerous items sold by Amazon vendors such as Cloudtail, in which Amazon 
		holds an indirect equity stake, were no longer available on its India 
		site. Amazon Pantry, a grocery service primarily managed by company 
		affiliates, was also discontinued, though grocery products could be 
		purchased individually.
 
 "Pantry is completely empty, how I am suppose to grocery shop," Twitter 
		user Pamela wrote on the social network. "Whatever government rules are, 
		(I) don't care, you guys fix it, I need to shop."
 
 Amazon, which saw record sales and profit during the holiday season, has 
		forecast first-quarter sales below Wall Street estimates due to the 
		uncertainty in India - one of its key growth markets.
 
 The situation in India is "a bit fluid right now," but the country 
		remains a good long-term opportunity, Amazon Chief Financial Officer 
		Brian Olsavsky said. The company's main goal was to minimize the impact 
		of the new rules on customers and sellers, he added.
 
 Flipkart CEO Kalyan Krishnamurthy warned last month that it faced 
		"significant customer disruption" if the new rules were implemented from 
		Feb. 1. On Friday, the company said it was disappointed the government 
		acted in "haste", but assured compliance.
 
 "We are committed to doing everything we can to be compliant with the 
		new rules," Flipkart India executive Rajneesh Kumar said in a statement, 
		without explaining how the website was impacted.
 
 POLITICS, INVESTOR SETBACK
 
 The new policy was announced after complaints from small Indian traders 
		who said the e-commerce giants used their control over inventory from 
		affiliated vendors to create an unfair marketplace where they could 
		offer discounts. Such arrangements will now be barred.
 
		
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			The logo of Amazon is pictured inside the company's office in 
			Bengaluru, India, April 20, 2018. REUTERS/Abhishek N. Chinnappa/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
Both Amazon and Walmart unsuccessfully lobbied against the latest rules and 
pushed for a delay in their implementation. The U.S. government too urged India 
to protect the investments of the two retailers, Reuters reported last week.
 But Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration stood firm as the move 
was widely seen as one to appease small traders in the run-up to a general 
election due by May.
 
 Industry sources have said the new rules will dent foreign investor sentiment 
and force the big online retailers to change their business structures, raising 
compliance costs.
 
"The company has no choice as they are fulfilling a compliance requirement, the 
customers will suffer," said one of the sources. "It is very upsetting for 
foreign investors."
 Both companies have bet heavily on India being a big growth driver: Amazon has 
committed to investing $5.5 billion there, while Walmart last year spent $16 
billion on Flipkart.
 
 Amazon's own range of Presto-branded home cleaning goods and other Amazon Basics 
products such as chargers and batteries vanished from its website late on 
Thursday.
 
 Clothing from Indian department store chain Shopper's Stop was also no longer 
available, as Amazon owns 5 percent of the company.
 
The Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT), which supported tougher scrutiny 
of large e-commerce players, said the removal of products by Amazon was a step 
in the "right direction".
 Exclusive deals with sellers, in compliance with the revised rules, will also be 
discontinued on Amazon India, the two sources said.
 
 
 
It was unclear how long the disruption will last. On Friday, Amazon's own range 
of Echo smart speakers, which were earlier removed as they were sold by a 
company affiliate, returned for sale via other sellers on the platform.
 
 However, buyers would now need to wait for up to 36 days to get some of the 
speakers delivered even under Amazon's fast-delivery Prime service, which often 
delivers goods in a day or two.
 
 (Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Sankalp Phartiyal; Additional reporting by Munsif 
Vengattil; Editing by Euan Rocha, Kevin Liffey and Himani Sarkar)
 
				 
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