Thai,
Chinese jump into e-commerce market, worrying Vietnamese rivals
After Lazada and
Zalora were taken over by big retailers, the competition in the e-commerce
market became fierce. Vietnamese firms rushed to retain their market share.
The
high-cost game
In early April 2016, Alibaba, the Chinese giant, accepted to spend $137 million to become a big shareholder of Lazada, an e-commerce website present in six South East Asian markets, including Vietnam. According to Rocket Internet, with the deal, Lazada is valued at $1.5 billion.
The
deal is believed to pave the way for brands and distributors in Alibaba’s
chain all over the world to access the South East Asian market, including
Vietnam.
In mid-2016, Thai Central Group successfully took over Zalora Thailand, while Vietnamese Nguyen Kim successfully took over Zalora Vietnam. But in fact, Zalora Vietnam also belongs to Central Group, because Central Group now holds 49 percent of Nguyen Kim’s stakes. Sources said that the value of each deal was $10 million. It is estimated that 1.4 million transactions are made through Zalora in 10 countries in Asia Pacific every year. The deal of taking over Zalora would help Central Group expand its online business and compete with other big players in the region such as Alibaba (China) and Lippo Group (Indonesia). In fact, Rocket Internet took many important steps to conquer the South East Asian e-commerce market, where there are 550 million people. There was not the presence of Amazon and e-Bay when it opened Lazada and Zalora in 2012. However, this is not an easy game. Rocket Internet’s finance report released on April 14, 2016 showed that Zalora’s revenue increased by 78 percent ($234 million) in 2015, but it still took a loss of 36 percent ($105 million) Vietnamese have no choice but to join the race The appearance of foreign retailers in Vietnam, especially those from Japan, South Korea, France, Singapore and Thailand, shows the attractiveness of the Vietnamese market. However, according to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, modern retailing in Vietnam only accounts for 25 percent of total retail revenue, while the revenue of foreign retailers only accounts for 3.4 percent of total retail revenue. This means that the market is still very large for domestic companies. President of The Gioi Di Dong, the largest Vietnamese mobile phone distribution chain, said that offline sales had nearly hit the ceiling and domestic distributors now have to think of opening shops in remote areas. Online sales have been increasing rapidly. Analysts said that online retail is a trend that businesses must consider. However, to gain success, businesses need to be very strong in both financial capability and technology.
D. Anh, VNN
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Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 6, 2016
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