Walmart keeps the door open for India retail play
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NAYANIMA BASU
New
Delhi, 10 October
American
retail major Walmart has snapped ties with Indian partner Bharti but its
plans to enter the country’s multi- brand retail space appears intact. The
company has urged the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) to
allow entry of private label suppliers as part of 30 per cent mandatory
sourcing norms.
It
has asked DIPP to amend the mandatory sourcing clause to introduce the
concept of private- labelling.
This,
if allowed, would help the US retail behemoth bring in some of its
international private labels that are keen to enter the fast- paced Indian
retail market.
Walmart,
which announced its break- up with Bharti on Wednesday, has sent to DIPP a
detailed plan on the way it wants its private label suppliers to operate in
India.
“They
( Walmart) have suggested private labelling to be inducted in the sourcing
clause. We are examining it and trying to understand the concept,” asenior
DIPP official told
Business
Standard.
He
said DIPP was trying to comprehend whether sourcing would be done from
foreign markets or from India before taking a call on the issue.
Through
its partnership with Bharti Retail, Walmart had brought in seven private
labels — Great Value, Equate, Hometrends, George, Astitva, Mainstays and
Simply Basic — offering adiverse mix of products in India at Easyday
supermarket chain.
Private
labels, popularly known as store brands, are owned by the retailers and sold
at lower prices within their own outlets. Big retailers are able to sell
these at lower prices, unaffected by margin worries, as the cost of marketing
and advertising of these private labels is nominal.
Indian
retail biggies, such as Future Group and Reliance Retail, also rely on
private labels to push their sales.
Even
as the government has relaxed entry norms for foreign multibrand retailers,
Walmart has expressed its discontent over some of the conditions the policy
lays out. Under pressure from international players, the government further
eased the norms on some of the riders, especially the one related to the
mandatory sourcing clause.
“They
still have problems with the sourcing norm. We are trying to analyse what
they are seeking,” the official said.
According
to the extant policy, foreign retailers can open outlets in the country on
the condition that 30 per cent of their sourced sales would come from small
to medium- sized domestic producers in India. However, the definition of
small sector has been expanded to include units with total investments of up
to $2 million in plant and machinery (instead of $ 1 million earlier).
Walmart
now wants to get this norm amended to fit in its private label suppliers.
Seeks
entry of private- label suppliers as part of 30% sourcing norms STICKING
POINT
The
mandatory MSME sourcing norm
>Up
to 51% FDI allowed
in
multi- brand retail on the condition that at least 30% of requirements will
be sourced from Indian micro, small and medium enterprises >To attract
FDI, the norm was eased by redefining the MSME sector to include units with
total investments of up to $ 2 million in plant and machinery ( instead of $
1 million earlier)
>Still
wary of the sourcing
norm,
Walmart has been seeking further relaxation
|
Thursday, October 10, 2013
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