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Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Coca-Cola Heads Back to India

Story first appeared in The Associated Press.

The Coca-Cola Co. plans to invest another $3 billion in India over the next eight years as it looks to boost its stake in the rapidly growing market.

The world's biggest beverage maker, whose brands include Minute Maid, Dasani and Powerade, has seen some of its biggest gains come from emerging markets as growth at home has slowed.

In April, Coca-Cola said its first-quarter volume in India rose 20 percent, compared with a 2 percent increase in North America.

Including the new cash infusion, Coca-Cola said Tuesday that it now plans to invest $5 billion in India between 2012 and 2020. That's on top of the more than $2 billion it invested since re-entering the country in 1993. The Atlanta-based company had left India in 1977 to avoid handing control over to its Indian subsidiary and revealing its secret formula.

Globally, Coca-Cola's market share of carbonated soft drinks is 52 percent, versus 21.4 percent for PepsiCo Inc., according to Beverage Digest, an industry tracker.

In most markets outside the U.S., Coke has a very large lead in carbonated soft drinks. In India, however, the gap is smaller; Coca-Cola has 56 percent of the market versus PepsiCo's 40 percent.

Coca-Cola said that its Thums Up - a spicier local soda it acquired in 1993 - and Sprite are the top selling soft drink brands in India, while its Maaza is the top-selling juice. Coca-Cola said its namesake soda also grew 27 percent in the first quarter.

The India business has been growing at a robust rate over the last five years, and Coca-Cola's goal is to continue this momentum.

The Chairman and CEO said that the company's growth in India is part of its plan to double revenue over this decade.

Coca-Cola and its bottling partners are investing more than $30 billion globally over the next five years - including new manufacturing plants, new distribution systems and new marketing in emerging markets - to support expected growth.

The company is also seeking its first stock split in 16 years. The company wants a 2-for-1 stock split. The move is subject to approval by shareholders on July 10.

Its shares fell 15 cents to $74.62 in morning trading Tuesday. They are still trading near the high end of their 52-week range of $63.34 to $77.82.


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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Reliance Ind. Cuts Gas Reserve Estimates

Story first appeared in The Wall Street Journal.

Reliance Industries Ltd. Wednesday cut its estimate of total proven natural gas reserves by 6.6% as it struggles with disappointing and declining output at its key D6 block in Krishna Godavari, which was intended to help it meet India's surging demand for the fuel.

Lower-than-expected output at D6 has hurt India's gas-based power plants and investment in the sector because banks have become cautious about lending due to the absence of committed fuel supplies. It has also hit the nation's steel, petrochemical and refining plants, which have been forced to import costlier gas.

Reliance, the country's largest private refiner by capacity, lowered its estimate of proven total natural gas reserves by 12.42 billion cubic meters to 103.958 billion cubic meters due to lower-than-projected output from D6.

The revision comes a day after the Oil Minister said production at the D6 block would tumble to 20 million standard cubic meters a day by March 2015, way below the 70 mmscm/d targeted for last financial year through March. Actual output for last year was 42 mmscm/d.

The Oil Ministry last week notified Reliance that it intended to prevent the company from recouping about $1 billion of its investment in D6 because it had failed to meet production targets included in the cost-recovery agreement.

In its annual report to shareholders, released late Tuesday, Reliance said the production decline at D6 has been steeper than anticipated because volume at existing wells was lower than expected and gas outside the main channel was too scarce to produce economically.

The company holds a 60% stake in D6. BP PLC owns 30% and Canada's Niko Resources 10%. Reliance also owns 30% of the Panna-Mukta-Tapti gas fields along India's west coast.

Reliance said in the annual report that it was conducting extensive reservoir studies in conjunction with BP to find a way to raise production at D6.

The company has formed an equal joint venture with BP -- India Gas Solutions Pvt -- to import and sell gas in India.

India's gas demand will rise 40% by March 2015 to 356.16 mmscm/d, but output will only grow 8.7% to 113 mmscm/d.

To tap gas resources overseas, Reliance entered into three shale-gas joint ventures in North America in 2010.

Reliance said shale-gas production would be challenging this financial year, in part because of historically low gas prices.


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Leaky Delhi Stadium Seen as $1 Trillion Boon for GMR, Reliance

Bloomberg

 
A day after the delayed opening of the weightlifting hall for New Delhi’s Commonwealth Games, workers in white helmets climbed across its roof to fix leaks.

The stadium, built by the Central Public Works Department, and 16 other arenas were supposed to be ready by March. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Aug. 14 told organizers at an emergency meeting to finish all construction before the games’ Oct. 3 start and ordered an investigation into the preparation for the event. By contrast, a new airport terminal, run by GMR Infrastructure Ltd., was built on time in March and started flights on July 28, Delhi International Airport Ltd. said.

Delhi’s efforts to stage the 71-nation games for $7.9 billion contrast with the $70 billion makeover of Beijing for the 204-nation Olympics in 2008. While state control in China ensured the city was ready for rehearsals, Delhi’s government- run efforts have been mired in delays, accusations of corruption and mismanagement. That could lead to a bigger share of India’s $1 trillion planned infrastructure spending for private companies such as GMR and Reliance Infrastructure Ltd. that are on schedule, according to fund manager Viswanathan Vasudevan.

“The biggest learning for India is that the only way to execute major infrastructure projects is through public-private joint ventures,” said Vasudevan, who helps manage $350 million in assets, including Indian stocks, at Aquarius Investment Advisors Pte in Singapore. “The experience from the games shows a clear path of how they should take it forward.”

Accelerate Growth

The nation of 1.17 billion people has to improve infrastructure to accelerate economic growth, Singh has said. While the economy has expanded at an 8.5 percent clip in the last five years, poor transport and other facilities could cost 1.1 percentage points of growth, or $200 billion in fiscal 2017, McKinsey & Co. said in a report last year.

The nation’s Planning Commission said India will need to spend $1 trillion on highways, ports, airports and utilities between April 2012 and March 2017, twice the amount it recommended in the previous five years. At least half the investment should come from private companies, compared with about 34 percent between April 1, 2007 and March 31, 2009, the commission said in March.

“If the government’s budget situation is not that good, it will need to rely on private participation for funds,” said Gernot Schrotter, who helps manage $319 million in Asian assets, including Indian stocks, at Erste Sparinvest KAP in Vienna. “If you look at the efficiency gains, it is very smart for India to go for the public-private partnership model.”

Expanding Network

That would be a boon for construction companies like Bangalore-based GMR, Mumbai-based Larsen & Toubro Ltd. and Reliance Infrastructure that have gained experience and reputation on Delhi’s projects.

For the Commonwealth Games, a contest that includes Britain and its former colonies and dependencies, the Indian capital added the airport terminal and is expanding the metro network, constructing an express rail link to the city center, restoring 46 monuments, and augmenting water and electricity supplies.

The airport building was ready in 37 months, faster than the 45 months Beijing took to complete its terminal ahead of the Olympics. Delhi airport is run by a venture consisting of Bangalore-based GMR, state-run Airports Authority of India Ltd., Frankfurt-based Fraport AG and Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd.

A venture between billionaire Anil Ambani’s Reliance Infrastructure and Spain’s Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles SA will operate the 23 kilometer rail link, cutting travel time by at least a third to 19 minutes. State-run Delhi Metro Rail Corp. built the viaduct and tunnel for the link.

Next 10 Years


The 29 billion rupee ($620 million) project, due to start next month, will help Ambani’s group bid for metros in India that may be worth 750 billion rupees in the next 10 years, said Krishna Maheshwari, director, Delhi Airport Metro Express Ltd.

“Considering the very nascent stage in India there is a huge opportunity,” said Maheshwari. “This project will demonstrate the ability of Indian infrastructure companies to deliver iconic projects in a timely manner.”

Billionaire G. Mallikarjuna Rao’s GMR, in partnership with Malaysia Airports, won a contract in June to build and operate an airport in Male in the Maldives for 25 years.

“With the knowledge gained, the local companies will be able to pick new projects on their own,” said Juergen Maier, who helps manage $1.3 billion of assets, including Indian stocks, at Raiffeisen Capital Management in Vienna. “It also puts them in a position to win projects overseas.”

Airport Experience

Larsen, India’s biggest engineering company and concrete contractors, expects to use the know-how gained from the Delhi airport terminal for other ventures, said K.V. Rangaswami, president of construction.

“It is the largest project ever handled by us,” he said. “It has enhanced our engineering design capability.”

Larsen won the bid to build and operate the metro rail project in the southern city of Hyderabad, the state government of Andhra Pradesh said on Aug. 6.

Shares of Larsen rose as much as 1.3 percent in Mumbai trading before falling 0.2 percent to 1,773.55 rupees at the 3:30 p.m. close. GMR also gained 1.3 percent intraday before sliding 2 percent to 59.95 rupees. Reliance Infrastructure added 0.8 percent and then dropped 1.3 percent to 1,032.75 rupees. The stocks fell in line with the fall in the Bombay Stock Exchange’s benchmark Sensitive Index, or Sensex, which rose 0.5 percent earlier and then declined 0.01 percent to 18048.85 at close.

Dug Up Sidewalks


In Delhi, with 47 days to go before the games sidewalks are still dug up and debris and construction material has spilled on to arterial roads, disrupting traffic.

State entities are building 39 training venues, 917 kilometers (570 miles) of lane resurfacing, 29 overpasses and 424 kilometers of street lighting, according to the ministry of youth affairs and sports.

Junior Sports Minister Pratik Prakashbapu Patil told parliament in December that 17 of the 18 venues would be completed by March, with the athletics stadium ready in June. One is still to be completed. The table tennis venue is expected to be ready by Aug. 18, Rahul Bhatnagar, joint secretary, ministry of youth affairs and sports, said yesterday.

The government’s Central Vigilance Commission said the quality of some public works is poor after examining 15 projects including stadia, overpasses and street lighting.

‘Financial Irregularities’


The Organising Committee suspended two top officials for alleged “financial irregularities,” while a third resigned, the panel’s spokesman Lalit Bhanot said on Aug. 5.

Prime Minister Singh told ministers and organizers on Aug. 14 there’d been “slippages in the time schedules of some of the concrete construction works and deficiencies” in completed projects, according to the Press Information Bureau’s website.

Singh directed ministers to investigate “all the complaints that have been received of procedural and other irregularities,” and impose “severe” punishment on anyone found guilty, the official release said.

At the weightlifting venue, B.K. Chugh, the Central Public Works Department’s director general of works, said the leaks were external and were being corrected.

“The finishing may not be very good,” Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit told reporters on July 21. “But I can assure the government engineers and contractors are very careful about the stability of the structures.”

Monday, April 26, 2010

Taco Bell a Big Hit in India

The Detroit Free Press

 
 
Taco Bell is off to a flying start in India, with its first unit, in Bangalore, averaging more than 2,000 customers a day. That's great news for owner Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM), which also operates Pizza Hut and KFC.

Yum intends to open 1,000 outlets in India by 2015. International expansion is a key focus for chain restaurants, as saturation and a stagnant economy have caused a fast-food slowdown in the U.S.

Emerging markets offer the potential for decades of growth, which is why McDonald's plans to double its presence in China by 2013. (Yum has 2,800 locations in China.)

It's not easy to bring American restaurant chains to new countries, but Yum's quick start in India and fantastic success in China is promising.

Yum's management likens India to China of 10 years ago. Considering that China now generates about 34% of Yum's revenue, the company clearly sees a great opportunity.

Investors should recognize their opportunity as well. Yum continues to position itself to take advantage of emerging middle classes and should enjoy steady growth through the coming decades.

Monday, February 8, 2010

PayPal Halts Certain Payment Transactions in India

AP

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The online payments service PayPal has taken the unusual step of suspending many transactions in India for more than a week.

A spokesman for the service said Saturday that "personal payments" to and from India are being blocked. Transfers to banks in India are being suspended as well.

The spokesman, Anuj Nayar, said PayPal is taking the step while it answers questions that have arisen about the service. He declined to elaborate.

Nayar said the suspensions began Jan. 28. He wrote in a blog post that PayPal, which is owned by eBay Inc., hopes "to resolve the situation as quickly as possible."

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Wal Mart Trying To Conquer World Markets`

Story from Business Week

It's rare that a $100 billion business can be marginalized, but such is the case with the international arm of Wal-Mart Stores (WMT). As a stand-alone company, it would rank among the top five global retailers. Inside the $401 billion retail giant, though, the business has traditionally received short shrift. Its Bentonville (Ark.) headquarters is underwhelming—a drab, largely windowless, one-story structure named after Bill Mitchell, a former Walmart executive whom nobody seems to remember.

Since venturing into Mexico in 1991, Walmart International has grown haphazardly. During the 1990s the retailer exported its big-box, low-price model. While that strategy worked in North America, the results were so bad in Germany and Korea that Walmart withdrew from those countries in 2006. In response, Michael T. Duke, the former international chief and current CEO, gave local managers more autonomy while instituting more stringent financial goals for each region.

The results are mixed: International sales rose 11.5% in the second quarter (before the impact of exchange rate fluctuations), while U.S. sales barely budged. But over the past few years, operating profit margins have declined on the international side, which now has 3,805 stores operating under 53 distinct banners in 15 markets. As international chief C. Douglas McMillon says, Walmart is "progressing from being a domestic company with an international division to being a global company."

A Tale of Four Countries

The trick is how to get there. Four countries illustrate the challenges the world's largest retailer will face in the coming years as it seeks new sources of global growth. In Japan, managers are trying to revitalize a business that has hemorrhaged money for years—weighed down by a ho-hum brand, the country's byzantine distribution system, and cultural resistance to the discount model. In India, restrictions on foreign ownership have forced the company to team up with conglomerate Bharti, an odd coupling that has so far resulted in one store. Walmart has spent more than five years in Russia, maintaining a team of 30 executives who are still trying to plot an entry strategy at a time when other foreign retailers, like Carrefour, are bulking up their presence. And in Chile, a decade-long courtship finally led to the acquisition of the country's leading supermarket chain earlier this year, bringing with it a different business model, based in part on financial services.

All four demonstrate the perilous but potentially lucrative terrain that lies outside the saturated retail markets of Europe and North America. And Walmart's success will ultimately hinge on its ability to learn from past mistakes and adapt quickly to the shifting realities of these markets. Ahead, a look at the company's strategies.

JAPAN

It's lunchtime at a newly remodeled Seiyu supermarket in Tokyo, and shoppers are swarming around bento boxes that sell for 289 yen, or about $3. In the back, peaches, bananas, and pears are stacked neatly in the bins they were shipped in while the front of the store houses bottles of Chianti and Burgundy from Asda, Walmart's British chain. Nami Misawa, 26, is looking through near-empty discount bins. The recession prompted her to come back to Seiyu, and she's glad she did. "This store used to be a mess," she says, "but now it looks great."

Misawa's newfound enthusiasm is welcome news for Walmart, which has taken a beating in Japan. It entered the country seven years ago with the purchase of a 6% stake in the 371-store Seiyu chain. Despite continued losses, Walmart gradually raised its stake, making Seiyu a wholly-owned subsidiary in June 2008.

Walmart has had to confront numerous issues in Japan, from longtime Seiyu managers resisting its initiatives to a tendency among Japanese shoppers to equate low prices with inferior products.

Bulk deals don't play well in a country where many live in small urban apartments, and the country's grocery distribution system is populated with wholesalers who broker deals between suppliers and retailers, skimming profits. Rival Carrefour abandoned the market years ago. "I have no idea why [Walmart is] still there," says Neil Z. Stern, a senior partner at consultancy McMillan/Doolittle.

Tapped for a Turnaround

Edward J. Kolodzieski is the man in charge of turning Seiyu around. As CEO of Walmart Japan, Kolodzieski has slashed expenses, closed 20 stores, and cut 29% of corporate staff. In-store butchers were removed, with most meat now processed in a central facility. With the freed-up floor space, Seiyu bulked up meals-to-go offerings. To bypass the middlemen, Seiyu has also boosted the number of products it imports directly from manufacturers by 25% over the past year, and is also focusing on increasing sales of its own private-label brands.

The biggest change, however, is a shift away from weekly specials to "everyday low prices" in areas like baby care and pet products, and, eventually, throughout the store. Taking a page from Britain's Asda, Seiyu instead uses its marketing dollars to compare prices against competitors. With the depth of the current recession, argues Tokyo-based business consultant Ken Hasebe, Japanese consumers "have finally accepted that you can buy quality merchandise for a lower price."

One positive sign: Seiyu has been posting positive comparable store sales since last November, including a 1.3% gain in same-store sales in the second quarter. (Comparable or same-store sales is a key retail metric that tracks the results of stores open a year or more.) Still, profit margins declined in the same period, proving that progress is slow: "It's taking a little longer than any of us would have liked," says CFO Thomas M. Schoewe.

INDIA AND RUSSIA

India and Russia are widely regarded as two of the world's fastest-growing retail markets—and two of the most frustrating for foreign retailers. Walmart boasts one wholesale outlet so far in India, and it has only a 30-person development office in Moscow to show after more than five years of scouting in Russia. But through a combination of joint ventures, acquisitions, and expansion, the retailer is hoping to become a major player in both.

India's $350 billion retail sector is composed of small family-run ventures, with organized chains accounting for less than 5% of sales. To get around government restrictions on foreign retailers selling to consumers, Walmart recently teamed up with Bharti Enterprises to open a cash-and-carry operation in the northern city of Amritsar. Best Price Modern Wholesale, as it's called, technically caters to merchants and small businesses. But with few restrictions, more than 30,000 members have signed up for the first store.

As in the U.S., the emphasis is on a wide selection of goods in one location at a low cost—everything from Castrol motor oil and sneakers to milk in large canisters that can be tied to the side of bicycles. Best Price employs 25 people to go around the region each week and check prices at mom-and-pop shops, to ensure that they're consistently offering the best value. Raj Jain, a former Whirlpool executive who now heads Walmart's Indian operations, also opened a training institute in Amritsar last December in partnership with Bharti and the Punjab government.

Have Tractor, Will Shop

With so few retail chains, employees have no background in the kind of merchandising and customer service skills needed to work at a large store. They also need to learn how to help customers with goods they have not seen before, such as the Japanese guava that some restaurant owners sampled on a recent visit.

Jain is also tapping Walmart's expertise to buy from farmers directly, cutting out local distributors. About 10% to 15% of Best Price's produce currently goes right from the field to the shelves, and Jain says he wants to increase that to 40% by next year.

Though small, the venture shows promise.

Jaideep Singh and his sister, Shalini, now drive a tractor 25 miles to pick up goods for their father's store. Jaideep says profits are up about 20% because of the low-priced goods that Best Price stocks. "We come two or three times a week," he says.
Confronting Russian Corruption

Walmart plans to open 10 to 15 outlets through the partnership over the next three years, eventually employing about 5,000 people. But McMillon wants to see Walmart running its own retail stores there, too. He pressed his case with commerce and agriculture ministers in New Delhi in July. "What I tried to convey is that we would invest more, and faster, if we had the opportunity to do so," he says. A representative from the Indian government declined to comment.

In Russia, the impediments to retail development are less visible but no less worrisome. Corruption is rampant with various administrative authorities capable of gumming up operations if payments are not made. Anticorruption group Transparency International ranked Russia 147th out of 180 countries on its most recent corruption perception index. In June, Swedish furniture retailer IKEA said it would halt further investment in Russia, citing the "unpredictability of administrative processes." The retailer's stores have been temporarily shut down in the past due to various questionable violations, and IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad went on Swedish radio earlier this year to link those problems to IKEA's refusal to pay bribes in Russia. (A Russian government representative declined to comment.)

While Walmart is looking at opening its own stores in Russia, it's far more likely it will start by acquiring a local retailer. Analysts say the prime candidate is Lenta, a fast-growing, privately held chain of 34 hypermarkets and the nation's fifth-largest retailer. Lenta founder Oleg Zherebtsov is saddled with debts and sold his 35% stake to the investment group of private equity firm TPG and the private equity arm of Russian state bank VTB in early September. "There was a time when we felt that market was overpriced, and that has changed somewhat," says McMillon. With rivals such as Metro expanding their presence through new stores, and Carrefour opening its second outlet in September, "they cannot wait," says Planet Retail analyst Milos Ryba.

CHILE

Chilean shoppers strolling through the aisles of their local D&S supermarket recently came across something not usually offered by the discounter: Apple (AAPL) iPods. That's not the only change coming for the 224-store chain, which sold a majority stake to Walmart earlier this year for $1.6 billion. (It now owns about 75% of D&S.)

In acquiring D&S (short for Distribución y Servicio), the nation's leading grocer and third-largest retailer, Walmart hopes to cement its dominance in Latin America, where it is by far the biggest retailer with $38 billion in sales, estimates research firm Planet Retail, double that of its closest rival, Carrefour. In Chile, Walmart enters a market that has long been inhospitable to foreign retailers. Home Depot (HD), Carrefour, and J.C. Penney are among the companies that have tried, and failed, to make it in Chile, a nation of 17 million with the sixth-largest retail market in Latin America.

Rather than go it alone, as others have attempted, Walmart cultivated close ties with D&S for more than a decade: Bob L. Martin, who ran the international division in the 1990s, says he first visited Chile in 1997. D&S, in turn, modeled much of its business practices on Walmart, looking to Bentonville "as an icon," says Claudio Pizarro, a professor at the University of Chile. (Walmart also imports products like salmon from Chile.)

Financial Services a Draw

Walmart has increased D&S's expansion budget from $150 million to $250 million, which will go toward opening nearly 70 stores this year, many of them small stores that cater to lower-income shoppers, according to Vicente Trius, Walmart Latin America's president and CEO.

The appeal of D&S goes well beyond its stores. About 1.7 million Chileans carry a Presto card issued by its financial services unit, up from 1.2 million in 2004. "There is a saying here that large retailers generate sales with [stores] and earnings with their credit cards," says Rodrigo Rivera, a partner with the Boston Consulting Group in Santiago.

Indeed, some South American retail chains generate upwards of 70% of their profits from financial services, analysts estimate. (At D&S that figure is just 17%.) Walmart already offers financial services in Mexico and Brazil, though its attempts to launch a bank in the U.S. have failed. The retailer is keen to grow the Presto business by adding more low-risk services such as selling life insurance for outside vendors.

Achieving the right balance between local knowledge and global scale is not easy. "We're in the early stages," says McMillon. "But we know you can't run the world from one place."