Walmart is preparing to spend over $2.5 billion in India as the retailer doubles down on the opportunities it sees in India’s e-commerce and payments markets even as the firm contends with rising costs amid the market downturns.
Walmart spent about $780 million earlier this month to the Indian tax authorities after PhonePe, in which the retailer owns a majority stake, toptechtrends.com/2022/12/22/flipkart-and-phonepe-complete-separation/”>moved its domicile to India from Singapore. Walmart is also looking to invest between $200 million to $300 million in PhonePe’s toptechtrends.com/2023/01/18/indias-phonepe-tops-12-billion-valuation-in-new-funding/”>ongoing funding round, according to a source familiar with the matter. (PhonePe declined to comment.)
The company, which owns majority stake in Flipkart, is now looking to spend about $1.5 billion to buy back e-commerce firm’s shares from early backers Tiger Global and Accel Partners, Indian newspaper Economic Times reported Thursday.
India, the world’s second largest internet market, has become a key battleground for Walmart and Amazon.
Amazon has spent over $9 billion in India (including investments for AWS cloud regions in the country) over the past decade. Walmart, which missed the e-commerce race in the U.S., has coughed up over $20 billion on Flipkart and PhonePe to buy the lion’s share in India’s e-commerce and payments markets.
Flipkart leads the e-commerce market in India, according to Bernstein. And PhonePe commands over 40% of all transactions on UPI, a payments network in India built by a coalition of retail banks. UPI, which processes over 7 billion transactions a month, is the most popular way Indians pay online.
As Walmart makes splashy moves, its rival is taking a different approach. Amazon has spent the past few months streamlining its business in India. It has shut some of the newer bets — food delivery, wholesale distribution, and an attempt at online learning. But the company, by all accounts, appears to be continuing to invest in its core e-commerce business in India.
Amazon faced a very public setback in the country last year after India’s largest retail giant Reliance outwitted the American firm into securing retailer Future Group’s assets. Amazon went public toptechtrends.com/2022/03/14/amazon-accuses-estranged-indian-partner-future-and-reliance-of-fraud-in-newspaper-ads/”>with its frustration, and then entered the quiet mode.
In one of the first major announcements in two years in India, Amazon toptechtrends.com/2023/01/22/amazon-air-india-launch/”>launched Amazon Air in the country earlier this week. But company’s top country managers were absent from the event, according to a person familiar with the matter.
toptechtrends.com/2023/01/25/walmart-readies-another-2-5-billion-investment-in-india-phonepe-flipkart/”>Walmart readies another $2.5 billion investment in India’s e-commerce and payments by toptechtrends.com/author/manish-singh/”>Manish Singh originally published on toptechtrends.com/”>TechCrunch