Amazon scores big win as India court stalls Future's
$3.4 billion retail deal
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[August 06, 2021] By
Abhirup Roy and Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) -India's top court on
Friday handed Amazon.com Inc a major victory in a dispute where it
sought to block its partner Future Group from selling $3.4 billion in
assets to rival Reliance Industries.
The outcome of the tussle involving two of the world’s richest men,
Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Reliance’s Mukesh Ambani, is seen reshaping
India’s pandemic-hit shopping sector https://www.reuters.com/article/amazon-india-future-reliance-idUSKBN2871AM
and deciding if Amazon can blunt Reliance's dominance of the country's
nearly trillion-dollar retail market.
Amazon and Future have been locked in legal battles
https://www.reuters.com/
article/us-amazon-com-india-
future-reliance-idUSKBN2AM0HN over the Future Group deal, with the U.S.
firm accusing the Indian group of violating pre-existing contracts when
it sold its assets to Reliance. Future has denied any wrongdoing.
A two-judge bench of the Supreme Court said that an interim decision by
a Singapore arbitrator in October - that put the deal on hold after
finding merit in Amazon's objections - was valid and enforceable in
India.
Amazon had argued that the order is binding, while Future had argued it
was not. Both sides had agreed to use the Singapore arbitrator in case
of disputes when Amazon invested $200 million in a unit of Future in
2019. The arbitration proceedings are still ongoing.
Shares in Future Retail were up 6% ahead of the ruling, but tanked 10%
and hit a lower-circuit breaker in Mumbai trading after the order.
Reliance Industries fell as much as 2.3%.
Future Retail said in a statement it had been "advised that it has
remedies available in law, which it will exercise." It did not elaborate
on the legal options, but said it will take steps to conclude the deal
and protect the interests of its stakeholders and workforce.
Amazon said in a statement that it welcomed the court's ruling, adding:
"We hope that this will hasten a resolution of this dispute with Future
Group.”
Reliance did not respond to a request for comment.
India strictly regulates its retail and e-commerce sector. That has made
it difficult for foreign giants like Walmart and Amazon to rapidly
expand in one of the world’s fastest growing consumer markets, whose
retail landscape is dominated by brick-and-mortar retailers.
LIQUIDATION FEARS
Future had previously said the deal's failure would push the company
towards liquidation and impact livelihoods of 50,000 employees and 6,000
small- and medium-sized vendors.
[to top of second column] |
People shop at the Big Bazaar retail store in Mumbai, India,
November 25, 2020. REUTERS/Niharika Kulkarni
But the arbitrator in October said "economic hardship alone is not a
legal ground for disregarding legal obligations".
Future is still trying to convince a Singapore arbitration panel to
revoke the October interim decision stalling the deal, a lawyer involved
in the case told Reuters on Friday. That decision is expected in coming
weeks.
"Everything is clear for Amazon, it is a big win for them. It's for the
arbitration panel to decide now," said the lawyer, who declined to be
identified.
The dispute started after Future, India's second-largest retailer with
over 1,700 stores, entered into a deal last year to sell its retail,
wholesale, logistics and certain other businesses to Reliance for $3.38
billion, after COVID-19 hit its operations hard.
Amazon, which had its sights set on ultimately owning part of Future's
retail assets itself, argued the 2019 deal it had with a unit of Future
contained clauses prohibiting the Indian group from selling them to
anyone on a "restricted persons" list including Reliance.
Around 1,300 of Future's retail outlets in 400 cities sell groceries.
Its budget supermarkets cater to middle-class shoppers, while its
upmarket stores offer products like imported cheese and fresh guacamole,
relatively rare in India's retail landscape. That makes Future a prized
asset for both Reliance and Amazon.
Though the Supreme Court ruling is a shot in the arm for Amazon, it
faces another challenge from India's antitrust regulator which recently
accused the U.S. firm of concealing facts when it sought approval for
the 2019 investment in the Future unit, Reuters has reported
https://www.reuters.com/
technology/exclusive-india-watchdog-accuses-amazon-concealing-facts-deal-future-group-unit-2021-07-22.
Amazon has said it is confident of addressing those concerns.
(Reporting by Abhirup Roy and Aditya Kalra; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani
and Kim Coghill)
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