A vanilla commercial dispute is setting the stage
for a clash between the worldās No. 1 and No. 6 richest men. But the legal
wrangling is a sideshow. What Jeff Bezos and Mukesh Ambani are really fighting over
is pole position in the only billion-plus-people consumer market available to
both of them: India.
The ostensible battleground is a $3.4 billion
deal Indian tycoon Ambaniās Reliance NSE 1.23 % Industries
Ltd. stitched up in August to acquire assets of debt-laden local retailer
Future Group. Bezosās Amazon.com Inc. is trying to block the transaction.
That, in itself, is a bit of a dampener.
Expectations were building for the two billionaires to work together. In
September, Bloomberg News reported that Ambani had given Amazon an option to buy as much
as 40% of Reliance Retail Ventures Ltd., seeking to repeat the success he had
earlier this year in bringing in Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc. as partners to
his digital platform.
By seeking to stall Ambaniās purchase of Future,
Bezos may be signaling that he would rather remain a rival. Or, that heās
buying time to sweeten the offer currently on the table.
The actual quarrel is only interesting when you read between the lines of the claims and counterclaims.
Amazon bought a 49% stake last year in a private firm controlled by Kishore Biyani, a pioneer of modern-format retailing in the country. The investment gave the U.S. e-commerce giant the right to acquire Biyaniās shares in the publicly traded Future Retail NSE -0.49 % Ltd. from the third year. Another of Bezosās conditions was that Biyani wouldnāt sell his assets ā about 1,500 stores nationwide ā to restricted persons, including Reliance, which operates Indiaās largest retail chain.
After the Future-Reliance deal was announced, Amazon alleged breach of contract and obtained an interim stay against the sale from an arbitrator in Singapore, a preferred neutral venue in Asia for settling disputes in cross-border agreements. The U.S. company then wrote a letter to Indian stock exchanges and the regulator, asking them to not approve the transaction.
Future Retail has challenged Amazonās position by saying that the Singapore ruling has no legal basis in India, and that anyway, it wasnāt a party to the founderās agreement. Given the debilitating impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on operations, the retailer says itās doing the right thing by all stakeholders in selling assets to Reliance. As for Amazonās claim of $193 million in damages plus interest, that liability, if awarded by the arbitrator, should fall on Biyaniās private firm that did the deal, Future Retail argues.
Biyani is just a pawn in a much bigger power play. Future's cash crunch didn't emerge suddenly. Amazon had ample opportunity to tiptoe around Indiaās legal restrictions on foreign ownership of retail chains to act as a white knight. But it didnāt.
Amazon may still be interested in partnering with Ambani ā at the right price. Other investors, such as Silver Lake Partners and KKR & Co., have written him checks worth $5 billion in total. They may have feared losing out on what could become Indiaās most successful mix of physical and digital shopping, a strategy that leverages Reliance Retailās own outlets together with independently owned neighborhood stores connected to Ambaniās 4G phone network of 400 million users. However, the portion offered to Amazon would mean a $20 billion commitment. Bezos could afford to see how well Ambani executes his plan.
Amazonās India website kicked off its annual festival season last month to record sales in the first couple of days. Reliance Retailās revenue also jumped 30% in the September quarter from the previous three months. But although Indiaās nationwide lockdown has ended, not all stores have reopened fully. Footfall has yet to recover, especially in fashion and lifestyle and at stores inside malls. In Macquarieās estimates, the next fiscal yearās earnings per share for Reliance Industries, the holding company, may be 23% below the consensus street forecast. A reason, the brokerage says, is stiff competition, high investment and low margins in retail. Reliance Industries shares fell 8.6% in Mumbai on Monday.
Amazonās letter to the Securities and Exchange Board of India makes a reference to Indiaās āease of doing business,ā which has been a sore point with foreign investors from Vodafone Group Plc to Cairn Energy Plc. The regulator needs to hold listed firms accountable for their dealings, Amazon said in the letter, according to Reuters, which has seen a copy.
The last thing India wants is more of a bad rap. The Seattle-based firm already has to operate with one hand tied behind its back: As a foreign e-commerce player, it canāt own inventory or openly discount merchandise. Even harsher rules ā covering data and algorithms ā may be on their way. Itās important for regulators to not give Amazon the chance to paint a commercial feud as another sign of Indiaās unfair treatment of global investors.
In more ways than one, a waiting game by Bezos may not be a bad idea.
Sandip Ginodia , CEO
ALTIUS INVESTECH PVT LTD
We deal in over 60 unlisted companies with 15 years of experience
For latest prices visit : www.abhisheksecurities.com/unlisted.htm / call : 09830271248 .
Email : ginodiasandip1@gmail.com
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