Alibaba smashes 11-11 sales record of $9bn in half the time



Online Orders Amount To $14.3bn By End Of `Singles' Day'
It only took Jack Ma half the time Wednesday to sell the same amount of stuff he did a year ago with his online channels as the annual Singles' Day shopping event set a sales record. Transactions through Alibaba Group Holding during the annual Singles' Day shopping event passed 57.1 billion yuan ($9 billion) before midday , eclipsing last year's record with 12 hours still to go. By midnight Beijing time, the value of the merchandize totalled 91.2 billion yuan ($14.3 billion), according to statistics displayed at the media centre. The top-selling items included baby-related and nutritional products, Nike sneakers and Levi's jeans, the company said.
Ma raised the stakes with this year's event by moving it to Beijing, bringing in more foreign brands and Hollywood celebrities Daniel Craig and Kevin Spacey to add glamour to the shopathon. Tapping into rising disposable incomes has paid off for China's biggest e-commerce emporium as it captures more of China's surging smartphone use with restaurant deliveries and video streaming.
“Chinese consumers have a lot of money in their hands,“ said Chen Xingdong, chief China economist at BNP Paribas in Beijing. “Online retailers need to customize their products to serve these increasingly savvy urban consumers. “ Alibaba's figures come as China's retail sales accelera ted in October, overcoming the slowest economic growth in 25 years.
Retail sales climbed 11%, the quickest gain this year and beating the median economist projection, as the nation's leaders seek to re-balance the economy toward consumption and services.
“The consumers that can create and lead demand will survive,“ Ma said Wednesday night. “In the next 15 years, China's economy will be good.“
Taking Singles' Day festivities to China's political, economic and media hub comes after Alibaba's roller-coaster first year as a public company .A record offering was followed by a record fall below the initial price, allegations the company wasn't doing enough to fight counterfeits on its platforms, and the replacement of its CEO.

Flipkart has hired Google veteran Surojit Chatterjee as the head of consumer experience and growth

Flipkart Ropes in Google Veteran Chatterjee


India's largest internet company Flipkart has hired Google veteran Surojit Chatterjee as the head of consumer experience and growth, reports Aditi Shrivastava. Chatterjee will leave Mountain View, San Francisco where he was the product management director for mobile search ads and AdSense for Search at Google and relocate to Bengaluru later this month. In his new role, he will be responsible for all consumer experience across desktop and mobile. Chatterjee holds a BS in Computer Science from IIT Kharagpur, and has 33 US patents to his name.

Samsung stays at No1 as market grows 20% in Q2; 4G devices and phablets drive sales

Online Sales, Low-cost Models Ring in Good Times for Smartphones



India's smartphone market bounced back in the quarter ended September -after declining for two consecutive quarters -on the back of low-cost devices and a spurt in online sales, with South Korea's Samsung Electronics maintaining its position at the top. The smartphone market grew 12% from the previous quarter and expanded 20% from a year earlier, according to Hong Kong-based Counterpoint Technology Market Research. One in three smartphones was sold online and a similar proportion of devices were LTE or 4G-enabled, with their shipments doubling sequentially and increasing 25-fold year on year.
Samsung maintained its No. 1 position in overall mobile phones with a share of 19% and in smartphones with a share of 23.2%, while Micromax Informatics and Intex -at No. 2 and No. 3 in both categories -narrowed the gap with the market leader. Micromax took 13.8% of the mobile phone and 17.7% of the smartphone market, respectively, while Intex had 11.3% and 11.7%, respectively.
“We are seeing significant proliferation of LTE and a larger display `6,500) form-factor in the sub-$100 (.price band as these features reach mass market level for the `mobilefirst' market such as India,“ said Tarun Pathak, a senior analyst at Counterpoint Research.
The Indian smartphone market is being fuelled by two device trends ­ one is 4G LTE and other is the phablet form-factor, Pathak said, and underlined that one of four phones was made in India, coming on the back of five major handset brands being assembled domestically.
Samsung said its market share by value for the September quarter was 43%, much higher than its competitors. “We've gained market share handsomely every month and across segments,“ said Manu Sharma, director -product marketing, for Samsung India, which launched two smartphones exclusively on Flipkart. The Korean company said its market share in smartphones was 43% in September, compared with 42% in August and 39% a year earlier.
The company also led in the premium smartphone segment -devices priced above . `30,000 -with a 51% share, a massive surge from 36% at the same time last year.“There's a high single-digit difference (between us and Apple) in the premium segment,“ he added.
Samsung's share in the . `10,00020,000 segment was 49% as of September, up from 43% a year ago.India, which is set to overtake the US as the second-fastest growing smartphone market after China by 2017, is where Samsung has been facing stiff competition from local players, including Micromax and Intex. The presence of Chinese players including Xiaomi, Lenovo and Huawei is making conditions even tougher for Samsung in India. The K3 Note from Lenovo was the bestselling smartphone in India in the September quarter. Lenovo took the No. 4 spot in the smartphone segment with a 9.8% share, followed by Lava with 6.6%.
A report by Ben Bajarin, principal analyst and head of primary research at Creative Strategies, predicts that Samsung may be out of the business completely within the next five years as it grapples with innovating the next big thing.

Peepul Capital is estimated to have earned `Rs 500 cr from Rs 80-cr investment in Ecom Express

Private equity investors, who have stayed away from investing in online retail companies, have instead quietly reaped a windfall by backing logistics companies providing back-end support in the ecommerce rush. In the latest deal, Peepul Capital recorded an over six-fold return on its investment in Ecom Express according to people aware of the transaction. Earlier this year Multiples Alternate Asset Management also made a partial exit from Delhivery, when the company raised fresh capital led by Tiger Global Management.
“These kinds of returns are only possible if there is multiple re-rating of both a company and a sector, which is not very common,“ said Prakash Nene, MD at Multiples, who declined to comment on specifics of the deal.
The PE firm made a partial exit after Tiger Global led a round of about `. 542 crore in the Delhi-based firm in May.
Peepul Capital is estimated to have earned ` . 500 crore on an initial investment of ` . 80 crore in Ecom Express. The firm made an exit when the logistics firm raised fresh capital in a round led by Warburg Pincus according to two people privy to the details.
The returns have been even high er for early seed and angel investors in these two companies, which handle delivery for top online retailers like Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal.
According to filings with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), seed fund Oliphans Capital bought shares in Ecom Express at around . 70 per share in 2013. The fund is es` timated to have sold some of these shares to Warburg Pincus during the investment round in June this year. Regulatory filings indicate Warburg -through its unit Eaglebay Investments -paid ` . 2,276 per share of Ecom Express; this would imply that Oliphans netted a return of over 30 times.
“It's only logical that investment is also about exits,“ said Anish Jhaveri, MD at Oliphans, declining to comment on returns made by his firm. “When we invested around $1 million in the company (Ecom Express) there were just four people in front of us who had just quit Blue Dart.“
Ecom Express was founded in 2012 by TA Krishnan, Sanjeev Saxena, K Satyanarayana and Manju Dhawan who had launched the etailing business at Blue Dart. The Delhi-based company expects to deliver goods in over 10,000 pin codes covering more than 1,500 towns and cities, across the country in the next few years.
The increasing interest in these companies is driven by the rapid growth in logistic support for online retail. A recent report on the Indian internet sector by brokerage IIFL estimates that the order volume for ecommerce shipments will increase 13x by 2020, with overall volume of ecommerce orders amounting to 2,000 tonnes per day.
Investors are of the view that just as tower companies gained in the telecom boom, the online retail rush will benefit from the back-end support companies.
“There are a lot of enablers which are important from a shadow driving perspective broadly similar to what telecom towers are to telco industry and EPC companies are to infrastructure,“ said Sreeni Vudayagiri, investment director at Peepul Capital, a PE firm with $700 million under management which primarily invests in mid-sized consumption and manufacturing businesses.

Tata Teams up with Hotmail Bhatia


Global telecom carrier Sabse Technologies, started by Hotmail founder Sabeer Bhatia, on Tuesday announced that Tata Sons' Chairman Emeritus Ratan Tata has made a strategic investment in the company. The Silicon Valleybased company, which operates Sabsebolo -the popular communications cloud platform for small and medium businesses -did not disclose details of the investment.

16 Habits which will save money for you

 16 Habits

  1. Stop purchasing items that you can do without
  2. Don’t purchase without a discount coupon
  3.  Say no to impulse buying If you see something you want, put it aside and think about it for at least a couple of days. Chances are, the impulse should pass
  4. Wait for prices to fall to a discounted rate before buying (applies especially to electronics items)
  5. Don’t buy an item just because it is on sale unless you need it
  6. If you do eat out, buy gift certificates for half price meals same thing applies on movies use your master card, visa card to buy 1 ticket and get 1 free
  7. Get at least 5-6 quotes when shopping
  8. Save money when buying clothes for the following year at the end of the season / during the off season. You can get great mark down prices
  9. Don’t buy any Computer software unless you need it check indiafreestuff.in periodically and you can get many genuine licensed softwares for free
  10. Pay your bills online this will save your time and fuel
  11. Read your local newspapers online
  12. When you receive a gift that you are sure you won’t use, re-gift or sell on ebay.in
  13. Save money when shopping next time at the supermarket like Reliance mart and Bigbazaar by remembering to check the lower items nearer to floor level as they are often much cheaper than those at eye level
  14.  For your friends and family who do not feel slighted by this, send e-mail cards for holidays, birthdays and as thank you cards. In addition, e-mail family and friends who live far away, instead of calling long distance, you can also use free zoomin postcards
  15. Send sms from online sites which offer free sms and save money
  16. Make sure you never use a credit card unless you plan to pay off the entire balance each month. If you owe money on any card, cut it up and throw it away

Tata to enter spices market under Tata Sampann brand


R. Mukundan, managing director, Tata Chemicals

 

All its existing products, such as I-Shakti besan and pulses, will now come under the Tata Sampann brand, except the iconic Tata Salt 

Tata Chemicals Ltd, maker of branded salt and pulses, on Thursday announced its entry into the spices business, as part of its aim to treble revenues from the consumer products business to Rs.5,000 crore in the next four years.
The Tata group company is launching its spices under a newly created umbrella brand— Tata Sampann. All its existing products, such as I-Shakti besan (gram flour) and pulses, will now come under the Tata Sampann brand, except the iconic Tata Salt.
“All our future products in the consumer products and food segment will be launched under Tata Sampann, which will be addressing the need gaps in the Indian consumer market over a period. One of the key categories is the ready-to-assemble food segment,” said R. Mukundan, managing director, Tata Chemicals.
Tata Chemicals plans to focus on quality assurance and play in the “above mass-market space with better value propositions”, said Mukundan.
Besides 100-gram packs, Tata Sampann is launching single-use sachets of spices (five small sachets of 20gm each in a 100gm packet) that the company thinks will offer better value. Initially, it is launching chilli, turmeric and coriander powders and a few mixed spices.
“Tata Sampann will focus on offering everyday nourishing foods that form a part of the Indian thali, as they enable delivery of health and wellness to a wide cross-section of consumers,” Richa Arora, chief operating officer (consumer products business), Tata Chemicals, said.
Tata Chemicals has been selling pulses since 2010 under the I-Shakti brand that is available at over 70,000 retail outlets.
The same network will be used for spices and products that the company will launch in the future.
Pulses, according to industry estimates, account for over Rs.100 crore of the company’s business.
Tata Chemicals has a strong presence in fertilizers, chemicals, crop-protection chemicals, speciality fertilizers and branded food products and food additives. Its consolidated revenue for fiscal year ended 31 March was Rs.17,202 crore, according to filings with the BSE.
The overall food market in India, according to Mukundan, is estimated at about Rs. 6 trillion crore. The packaged food market was estimated at $20 billion (Rs.1.29 trillion) in 2014, according to a study by retail consulting firm Technopak Advisors.
“This is a huge opportunity for us,” added Mukundan.
The spices market in India is estimated at Rs.40,000 crore. Of this, just about 15% is branded, dominated by brands such as Catch, Everest, MDH and Ramdev, among others, according to a study by Technopak Advisors.
Tata Chemicals engages with 150,000 farmers across four states for sourcing pulses, in an initiative led by Rallis India Ltd, a Tata enterprise. “We monitor the entire supply chain—from farm to consumers in order to ensure quality,” said Mukundan.
Tata Chemicals is expanding its retail footprint to about 2.5 million outlets, from the current 1.43 million.
However, other fast moving consumer goods(FMCG) and packaged foods companies have wider retail presence.
ITC Ltd products are available at 4.3 million retail outlets, Hindustan Unilever Ltd reaches about 6.3 million outlets and Swiss packaged food company Nestle India Ltd’s total reach is 4.5 million stores.

Flipkart co-founders Bansals new billionaires: Forbes

    
Flipkart co-founders Bansals new billionaires: Forbes
Sachin Bansal with Binny Bansal, co-founders of Flipkart,
 
Leading Indian e-retailer Flipkart's co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal are the latest billionaires in the country, with $1.3 billion (Rs.8,582 crore) net worth each, according to leading business magazine Forbes India' rich list released on Wednesday.

"Indian e-commerce has added its first billionaires with Flipkart's founders (Bansals) making debut on our rich list at number 86, with $1.3 billion net worth each," the magazine said in a statement in Mumbai.

Though Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) chairman Mukesh Ambani tops the rich list for the ninth consecutive year, his net worth, however, declined $4.7 billion to $18.9 billion (Rs.127,700 crore) from 2014 owing to lower oil prices that hit his oil and petrochemicals giant.

Sun Pharmaceutical's Dilip Shanghvi also retained the second spot, with $18 billion net worth, acquisition of drug major Ranbaxy Industries for $4 billion by his company notwithstanding.

Wipro chairman Azim Premji also retained the third spot in the list, with a net worth of $15.9 billion though $500 million less than in 2014.

"The generous billionaire has pledged 18 percent of his stake in Wipro to his charitable trust, in addition to a 21 percent stake already given," the statement noted.

"The combined wealth of India's 100 richest remains largely unchanged at $345 billion, as compared to $346 billion in 2014," it added.

Similarly, wealth of 10 tycoons slumped by $1 billion over the year owing to global and domestic factors, including a volatile stock market and currency fluctuations.

Fortune of steel magnate L.N. Mittal (65) declined by $4.6 billion to $11.2 billion and his ranking in the rich list slipped to eight from five year ago, as his and world's largest steel major ArcelorMittal was hit by imports from China.

"India is facing a reality check in 2015 after the euphoria in 2014. Though it has impacted several big fortunes in the top 100, the country's entrepreneurial spirit remains buoyant, as evident from a dozen new faces on the list," said Forbes Asia's India editor Naazneen Karmali.

Other top 10 billionaires are Hinduja brothers ranked fourth with $14.8 billion net worth; Pallonji Mistry (86), fifth, $14.7 billion; Shiv Nadar (70), sixth, $12.9 billion; Godrej family, seventh, $11.4 billion; Cyrus Poonawalla (74), ninth, $7.9 billion and Kumar Mangalam Birla (48) tenth, $7.8 billion.

Gujarat-based Adani group's founder chairman Gautam Adani (53) is ranked 11th with net worth of $7 billion and Kotak Mahindra Bank vice-chairman and managing director Uday Kotak (56) is 12th with $6.5 billion net worth.

Only two women figure in the top 100 billionaires' list - Leena (Gandhi) Tewari (58 years), chairman of drug major USV Ltd, is ranked 54 with $1.9 billion net worth, while Indu Jain (79 years), chairperson of the country's largest media group Bennett, Coleman & Co Ltd, is ranked 57 with $1.85 billion net worth.

Five co-founders of global software major Infosys Ltd figure in the rich list- N.R. Narayana Murthy (69) ranked 53, $1.92 billion; S. Gopalakrishnan (60), 67, $1.67 billion; Nandan Nilekani (60), 69, $1.61 billion and K. Dinesh (61) 96, $1.19 billion.

Mahindra group chairman Anand Mahindra (60) is ranked at 99 with a net worth of $1.12 billion.

The rich list also has 12 new comers, including IndiGo budget carrier co-founder Rakesh Gangwal at 70 with $1.6 billion net worth, while his friend and co-founder Rahul Bhatia moved up 12 positions from last year to 38 with $2.4 billion net worth.

The biggest gainer is Poonawalla, the vaccine magnate, whose fortune increased to $7.9 billion from $6.2 billion in 2014 and entered the top 10 list at nine. He recently bought heritage property Lincoln House in Mumbai for $110 million.

"This year's list reflects the churn in the global economy and the growing clout of emerging sectors like ecommerce in India," Forbes India editor Sourav Majumdar added.

No. of new rich to grow fastest in India, says study



The number of new rich in India will almost double over the next five years, posting the fastest growth of 47%, a latest study says. In comparison, the number of such individuals with a wealth of over $1,00,000 will grow 7% globally and 10% in Asia by 2020, the study says. The study , conducted by EIU and commissioned by Citibank, for the first time focuses on new wealth builders (NWBs) -a term used to describe self-made individuals who are either salaried, self-employed professionals or entrepreneurs in new-age startups. In India, the number of such new wealth builders is expected to be close to five crore and the total value of their financial assets is expected to be $879 billion in 2020 -almost double of what it was a decade ago.
According to the report, the NWBs represent a new breed of self-generated suc cess, are humble and focus on making progress for those around them. “Nearly eigh in 10 NWBs acquired most o their wealth in the past 10 ye ars. Almost none attribute current wealth to inheritan ce,“ the report said.
According to Kartik Kaushik, Citi India global he ad of consumer banking two additional trends for In dia were that there was a ve ry high savings rate and a majority of them would be young -in their mid-20s to 30s. He said the growth of this segment provides a big opportunity for banks like Citi. “Until now we had nothing in between Suvidha, Citibanking and Citi Gold.To address this category, we are launching Citi Priority as an integrated offering for those who maintain a Rs 15 lakh relationship with the bank,“ said Kaushik. He explained that this was not a bundling of separate services but a comprehensive product where the customer gets debit card, credit card and other services as part of the offering.

Paytm, redBus founders back Innerchef

Paytm, redBus founders back Innerchef



Gurgaon-based ready-to-cook meals delivery startup, Innerchef, has raised Rs 11crore in its first round of funding from a clutch of high profile entrepreneur angels like Vijay Shekhar Sharma of Paytm, Phanindra Sama of redBus, and Anupam Mittal of Shaadi.com, along with two fund houses, valuing it at $10 million. Innerchef 's other angel investors in the new financing round include Murugavel Janakiraman, founder of Bharat Matrimoney , Dinesh Agarwal of Indiamart, Hungama's Neeraj Roy , Vishal Gondal from GOQii, among others. Japan's Netprice, M&S Fund's Hiro San and T A Venture have also participated in the series A round, said a company executive, at a time when food-delivery startups are struggling to raise new capital and signs of early consolidation are surfacing in the sector.
“We will use this cash to expand. We have two food kitchens at the moment and we are planning to add 10 more. Next month, we would enter Bengaluru while Mumbai would see our entry in November.One more kitchen will be opened in Noida,“ Rajesh Sawhney , co-founder of Innerchef told TOI.

E-comm chat co MagicTiger gets funding

E-comm chat co MagicTiger gets funding



Chat commerce startup, MagicTiger, promoted by Growthstory , the entrepreneurship platform of husband-wife duo, K Ganesh and Meena Ganesh, will be raising $10 million in Series A funding over the next three months. The app, which has 5,000 users already , is in the process of being rolled out in major cities.
MagicTiger will enable the user to order anything through the simplicity of a chat. In short, the user can use the chatting platform to type out what he or she needs.
The startup is co-founded by Pratyush Prasanna, who earlier founded cross-messaging platform Plustxt, Arun Kumar, one of the cofounders at Portea Medical, and serial entrepreneur Srinivas Anumolu. It is also being backed by marquee investors including Paytm founder and chairman Vijay Shekhar Sharma.

Top 20 intraday trading ideas by experts in a volatile markets

Volatility remains the order of the day on Dalal Street, with the S&P BSE Sensex recouping some losses after falling as much as 302 points; and in early trade the index was up about 250 points.

ET Now spoke to various experts, and here's what they have to recommend for today's trade:

Ashwani Gujral of ashwanigujral.com

M&M Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 1265 and a stop loss of Rs 1200

Asian Paints Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 815 and a stop loss of Rs 760

Colgate Palmolive Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 2120 and a stop loss of Rs 2040

Cipla Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 715 and a stop loss of Rs 688

Mitesh Thacker of miteshthacker.com

Coal India Ltd is a 'SELL' call with a target of Rs 350 and a stop loss of Rs 370

Reliance Industries Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 495 and a stop loss of Rs 416

State Bank of India is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 290 and a stop loss of Rs 273

Adani Enterprises Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 760 and a stop loss of Rs 709

Sandeep Wagle, Founder & CEO, Power My Wealth

UPL Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 543 and a stop loss of Rs 513

Cipla Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 720 and a stop loss of Rs 678

Union Bank of India is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 171 and a stop loss of Rs 154

Prakash Gaba, CFT, prakashgaba.com

MCX td is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 1102 and a stop loss of Rs 1037

Syndicate Bank is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 110 and a stop loss of Rs 104

M&M Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 1248 and a stop loss of Rs 1200

Kunal Bothra, Head Advisory, LKP

DB Realty Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 70 and a stop loss of Rs 65

JSW Energy Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 114 and a stop loss of Rs 105

Dish TV Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 82 and a stop loss of Rs 75

Gaurav Ratnaparkhi, Technical Analyst, Sharekhan

Allahabad Bank is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 109 and a stop loss of Rs 99.50

Asian Paints Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 820 and a stop loss of Rs 760

JSW Energy Ltd is a 'BUY' call with a target of Rs 118 and a stop loss of Rs 105

(Views and recommendations expressed in this section are the analysts' own and do not represent those of EconomicTimes.com. Please consult your financial advisor)

Flipkart taps smaller brands Believes e-commerce will reflect offline clothes sales trends; working with small entrepreneurs and weavers to bring them on board

Flipkart believes online retailing will reflect the offline trend of smaller apparel brands making up the lion's share of future sales.

The Bengaluru-based e-tailer has launched an exclusive Handloom Store for saris and related products and is working with small entrepreneurs and weavers to bring them on board.

"If you look at offline retailing of fashion products and apparel, branded goods are a small fraction of the market. A lot of sales comes from small entrepreneurs, manufacturers, and weavers," said Ankit Nagori, senior vice-president, marketplace, at Flipkart.

"With our fashion business scaling up so fast, it is important that we start replicating the offline mix," he told Business Standard.

India has close to 20 million small and medium entrepreneurs manufacturing products that can be sold through e-commerce. According to Nagori, only about 30,000 small sellers retail online.

Brushing aside concerns of quality of unbranded products, Nagori said Flipkart ran two levels of checks, proactive and reactive, to ensure consumers received what they ordered. Flipkart audits each seller before bringing it on board by checking capabilities and quality of offerings. It is building a system to predict seller behaviour. Higher than acceptable faults will result in action to protect consumer interests.

"There is no reason why unbranded products cannot sell online. Product reviews and ratings make buying decisions easier. Specific sellers will become brands on their own because they sell great quality for less," Nagori said.


Flipkart taps smaller brands

Believes e-commerce will reflect offline clothes sales trends; working with small entrepreneurs and weavers to bring them on board
 
 
In September 2014, Flipkart launched its exclusive Handloom Store, where it brought on board weavers from Varanasi. The company began with 20 sellers and is looking to expand to 100 soon.

Nagori said handicraft and hand-woven products would be cheaper online than at emporiums because of the exclusion of middle-men. He expects the descriptions and detailing of products on Flipkart's website to encourage consumers to buy them. Return policies will also reassure customers.

Flipkart is running several training programmes across the country to bring more small entrepreneurs on board. It is also partnering industry and government bodies to reach more sellers.

BEING INCLUSIVE

    A lot of sales comes from small entrepreneurs, manufacturers, and weavers, according to Ankit Nagori, senior vice-president, marketplace, Flipkart
    Flipkart aims at replicating this trend in online retail
    In September 2014, it launched its exclusive Handloom Store, where it brought on board weavers from Varanasi
    It is running several training programmes across the country to bring more small entrepreneurs on board
    To address concerns of quality of unbranded products, Nagori said the company ran two levels of checks to ensure consumers received what they ordered

Here's why Rakesh Jhunjhunwala is right about the e-commerce bubble

Here's why Rakesh Jhunjhunwala is right about the e-commerce bubble

None of the e-commerce companies have managed to handle growth and profitability at the same time

 "Where is Flipkart's complete business model? Forget about valuation. I want to know Flipkart’s business model. I want to know how you will be profitable?" thundered Rakesh Jhunjhunwala in an interview to CNBC-TV18 with fellow investors Ramesh Damani and N Jayakumar.

The discussion was on irrational valuations of e-commerce companies. When Jayakumar asked if these valuations is similar to the 2000 dot com party, Jhunjhunwala smirked and replied ‘You have any doubt’.

So why are smart investors shying away from investing in e-commerce companies like Flipkart, while private equity players are willing to bet on them?

In the CNBC interview, Jhunjhunwala raised questions on the completed business model. A business model is complete only when the company posts cash profit and becomes self-sustaining. Flipkart and other e-commerce companies are surviving on private equity money. None of them are profitable and nowhere close to being profitable in the near future. Jhunjhunwala is right in questioning the astronomical valuations commanded by these companies.

Flipkart raised nearly $2 billion in 2014 with the final tranche of $700 million being raised at a valuation of $11-12 billion. Flipkart’s valuation had zoomed in 2014 among the private equity players. The company raised $210 million in May 2014 at a valuation of nearly $3.5 billion, its second funding of $1 billion in July 2014 was done at a valuation of $7billion and the last one in December 2014 was around $11-12 billion. Valuations have jumped 3-4 times in a span of one year.

During this entire period, the company has shown no signs of becoming profitable. However, to its credit the company has grown rapidly in terms of gross merchandise value (GMV). Between 2013 and 2014, Flipkart has grown five times in volume terms and currently does a GMV of $4 billion. The company intends to double this to $8 billion (Rs 50,000 crore) by December 2015.

But does it make money. The answer is a clear no. As per data from the Registrar of Companies accessed by Mint,  Flipkart India entities did business of Rs 3,035.8 crore and reported a loss of Rs 719.5 crore for the year ended March 2014. In FY13, these entities had posted a revenue of Rs 1,195.9 crore and loss of Rs 344.6 crore.

But for Flipkart, making losses was a conscious decision. In an interview to Business Standard (Read here), the company’s promoters said “Profitability is not a focus area. It’s a strategic decision. We can be profitable from today if we want. We can stop investing in one area and start making profits; it’s definitely possible. But we don’t want to remain as a small profitable company.”

This seems to be easier said than done. The company is now looking at tapping the equity markets for raising money and needs to tighten its belt and turn profitable. For this, the company has recently recruited Sanjay Baweja as its CFO. The former Tata Communications CFO has already got into the cost cutting mode to streamline its operations. In an interview he said that the company is moving in a cost containment mode where their fixed costs will become smaller. The aim being to make most of the cost variable.

A back of the envelope calculation based on the numbers with the Registrar of Companies and the GMV data shows that Flipkart earns around 10-12 per cent of the GMV as revenue. But it’s cost of handling these goods are around 15 per cent. Since volumes are only ensured by huge discounts and high advertisement cost, cutting costs will not be easy.

The company will need serious cost cutting just to turn profitable. As Rakesh Jhunjhunwala said in the interview, the real companies who have given returns to investors had been built by the cash flows generated by the business and not by spending investor’s money. Flipkart has a long way to go.

Unfortunately, none of the  e-commerce companies have managed to handle growth and profitability at the same time. The cash burn model of Flipkart is good to raise valuation in the opaque private equity market but in the real world (read equity markets), the company will have to show real profits and give returns to investors to raise more funds.

Since Flipkart’s model is a money guzzler, the real test of the company and the model will be post listing of the IPO. Had Flipkart been listed a few years back, they would not have been able to raise money as frequently as they did last year. Perhaps, we are nearing the doomsday when either the bubble will burst or we will have some rationality and fewer discounts in the e-commerce space. "Where is Flipkart's complete business model? Forget about valuation. I want to know Flipkart’s business model. I want to know how you will be profitable?" thundered Rakesh Jhunjhunwala in an interview to CNBC-TV18 with fellow investors Ramesh Damani and N Jayakumar.

The discussion was on irrational valuations of e-commerce companies. When Jayakumar asked if these valuations is similar to the 2000 dot com party, Jhunjhunwala smirked and replied ‘You have any doubt’.

So why are smart investors shying away from investing in e-commerce companies like Flipkart, while private equity players are willing to bet on them?

In the CNBC interview, Jhunjhunwala raised questions on the completed business model. A business model is complete only when the company posts cash profit and becomes self-sustaining. Flipkart and other e-commerce companies are surviving on private equity money. None of them are profitable and nowhere close to being profitable in the near future. Jhunjhunwala is right in questioning the astronomical valuations commanded by these companies.

Flipkart raised nearly $2 billion in 2014 with the final tranche of $700 million being raised at a valuation of $11-12 billion. Flipkart’s valuation had zoomed in 2014 among the private equity players. The company raised $210 million in May 2014 at a valuation of nearly $3.5 billion, its second funding of $1 billion in July 2014 was done at a valuation of $7billion and the last one in December 2014 was around $11-12 billion. Valuations have jumped 3-4 times in a span of one year.

During this entire period, the company has shown no signs of becoming profitable. However, to its credit the company has grown rapidly in terms of gross merchandise value (GMV). Between 2013 and 2014, Flipkart has grown five times in volume terms and currently does a GMV of $4 billion. The company intends to double this to $8 billion (Rs 50,000 crore) by December 2015.

But does it make money. The answer is a clear no. As per data from the Registrar of Companies accessed by Mint,  Flipkart India entities did business of Rs 3,035.8 crore and reported a loss of Rs 719.5 crore for the year ended March 2014. In FY13, these entities had posted a revenue of Rs 1,195.9 crore and loss of Rs 344.6 crore.

But for Flipkart, making losses was a conscious decision. In an interview to Business Standard (Read here), the company’s promoters said “Profitability is not a focus area. It’s a strategic decision. We can be profitable from today if we want. We can stop investing in one area and start making profits; it’s definitely possible. But we don’t want to remain as a small profitable company.”

This seems to be easier said than done. The company is now looking at tapping the equity markets for raising money and needs to tighten its belt and turn profitable. For this, the company has recently recruited Sanjay Baweja as its CFO. The former Tata Communications CFO has already got into the cost cutting mode to streamline its operations. In an interview he said that the company is moving in a cost containment mode where their fixed costs will become smaller. The aim being to make most of the cost variable.

A back of the envelope calculation based on the numbers with the Registrar of Companies and the GMV data shows that Flipkart earns around 10-12 per cent of the GMV as revenue. But it’s cost of handling these goods are around 15 per cent. Since volumes are only ensured by huge discounts and high advertisement cost, cutting costs will not be easy.

The company will need serious cost cutting just to turn profitable. As Rakesh Jhunjhunwala said in the interview, the real companies who have given returns to investors had been built by the cash flows generated by the business and not by spending investor’s money. Flipkart has a long way to go.

Unfortunately, none of the  e-commerce companies have managed to handle growth and profitability at the same time. The cash burn model of Flipkart is good to raise valuation in the opaque private equity market but in the real world (read equity markets), the company will have to show real profits and give returns to investors to raise more funds.

Since Flipkart’s model is a money guzzler, the real test of the company and the model will be post listing of the IPO. Had Flipkart been listed a few years back, they would not have been able to raise money as frequently as they did last year. Perhaps, we are nearing the doomsday when either the bubble will burst or we will have some rationality and fewer discounts in the e-commerce space.

5 things you didn't know about India's e-commerce industry

The Singles' Day sale was originally named because the date Nov. 11 has four singles (11/11)—was started as a joke between university students, but Alibaba.com later converted it as a day when singles can shop.
 
Late on Tuesday, came close to generating double digit sales on Singles Day, clocking an impressive $9 billion (Rs 55,000 crore), and beating its own record of $5.9 billion last year. 
 
But to really put those numbers in context, consider this: India’s entire industry was worth only $11 billion in 2013. Of this, a mere $2 billion was from sales of physical goods, whereas most of Alibaba’s $9 billion in sales came from actual goods rather than services.
 
In a report on e-commerce, however, broking firm Motilal Oswal says that this is just the start of a multi-year growth for the e-commerce sector in India. Indian retailers, therefore, do not have to be too concerned as despite strong growth in USA and China, e-tailing is still only 5-6% of total retail sales there.
 
Here are five interesting insights from the report.
 
1. India is almost 10 years behind China in the e-commerce space. China’s inflection point was reached in 2005 when its size was similar to India’s current market size. Thankfully for India the dynamics currently are similar to what existed in China then – growing broadband penetration, acceptance of online marketplaces, and lack of physical retail infrastructure in many places.
 
2. Forget the Flipkarts, Snapdeals and Amazons. Travel is where the real money in India’s e-commerce is. Online travel accounts for nearly 71% of e-commerce business in India. This business has grown at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 32% over 2009-13. E-tailing, on the other hand, accounts for only 8.7% of organised retail and a minuscule 0.3% of total retail sales. Even within sales of physical goods, books are a mere 7% of total book sales, mobile phones are 2% of all handsets sold, and fashion goods sold online are just 1%. Online jewellery sales account for only 0.2 per cent of all jewellery sold. Motilal Oswal, however, expects e-tailing to pick up with a focus on fashion.
 
3. Alibaba is an outlier when it comes to margins and making money in the e-commerce ecosystem. The Chinese company makes an operating profit of 40% compared to industry standard (US and China) of 8-10%. Travel sites typically make 2.3%. Amazon, the industry pioneer, is yet to achieve healthy profitability even after two decades of dominance. Indian players, the report points out, are not even thinking of profitability yet. It’s a game of market share and market penetration, causing all serious players to have a war chest ready for when the industry scales multiple times.
 
4. For every Rs 100 spent on e-tailing, Rs 35 is spent on supporting services like warehousing, payment gateways, and logistics, among others. Delivery costs a platform owner 8-10% implying significant burn. Though 50-60% of delivery logistics today are handled by large e-tailers themselves, this proportion may reduce going forward as the participation of lower tier cities picks up. Presently, aggressive pricing in India is leading to e-tailers making losses on every segment. For a Rs 100 sale of a book, the e-tailer incurs a loss of Rs 24, a loss of Rs 13 in mobiles, and Rs 8 in apparel. 
 
5. Demand in India exists across 4,000-5,000 towns and cities, but there is no significant presence of physical retail in almost 95% of these. High real estate cost is one of the main reasons why organised retail is unable to expand at speeds expected earlier. Real estate as a percentage of sales is 14 times higher than in the US. For large retailers in India, it is 7% of sales as compared to 0.5% for Walmart.

SEBI bars Utkarsha Plotters from raising money from public

Pulling the plug on yet another illicit investment scheme, SEBI on Wednesday prohibited Maharashtra-based Utkarsha Plotters &  Multi Agro Solutions India Ltd from raising funds from the public with immediate effect.


SEBI
Besides, the market watchdog directed the company not to launch any new scheme. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) found that Utkarsha was running 'collective investment schemes' (CIS) without obtaining registration from the regulator.
  
It found that the company was carrying on CIS under the garb of purchase/sale/development of plot of land. "The activity of fund mobilisation by Utkarsha under the scheme/plans for allotment,development and maintenance and subsequent transfer of land, with a resultant promise of return," prima facie satisfies the features of CIS, SEBI Whole Time Member S Raman said in an order.

Accordingly, SEBI directed Utkarsha and its directors -- Mithalal Gurav, Mitharam Chhagan Gurav and Pravin Chhagan Gurav--"not to collect any fresh money from investors under its existing schemes" and also asked them "not to launch any new schemes or plans or float any new companies to raise fresh money."
  
Additionally, the company and its directors have been directed not to dispose any assets obtained from funds collected, while the entities also cannot divert money raised from the public.
  
Further, the entities have been asked to "immediately submit the full inventory of the assets including land obtained through money raised by Utkarsha " as well as furnish withing 15 days details related to the scheme.

These directions shall take effect "immediately and shall be in force until further orders in this regard.

Sebi cautions against repeat ponzi operators; names 51 firms

भारतीय प्रतिभूति एवं विनिमय बोर्ड :सेबी: ने शुक्रवार को निवेशकों तथा आम लोगों को धन जुटाने की गैरकानूनी योजनाओं के प्रति आगाह करते हुए कहा कि वे इन इकाइयों के ऊंचे रिटर्न के वादे के लालच में न आएं। 

नियामक ने धन जुटाने की अवैध योजनाएं चलाने वाली 63 कंपनियों की सूची भी सार्वजनिक की है। 

इससे पहले सेबी ने दिसंबर, 2014 में ऐसी 51 इकाइयों के नाम सार्वजनिक किए थे। सेबी ने यह चेतावनी इसलिए जारी की है, क्योंकि ऐसे मामले सामने आएं हैं जबकि कुछ इकाइयां गैरकानूनी निवेश योजनाओं के जरिये अभी भी धन जुटा रही हैं, जबकि नियामक ने उनसे और धन न जुटाने व कोई नई योजना पेश नहीं करने का निर्देश दिया है।


Concerned over a number of ponzi operators continuing to collect funds even after being barred to do so, regulator Sebi today cautioned investors and general public against dealing with such entities and not be lured by promises of high returns.

Making public a list of 51 entities, which included many from West Bengal, the capital market watchdog asked investors not to invest in their illegal schemes that claim to offer much higher returns than banks and other registered entities.



Further, Sebi has asked the investors to report such unauthorised money pooling activities to the market regulator, state authorities including police "immediately, along with appropriate details/documents".

The list of 51 entities banned by Sebi from raising funds include names like Saradha Realty India, Rose Valley Real Estate & Constructions, Sai Prasad Properties, Sun-plant Agro, NGHI Developers India and MPS Greenery Developers.

"It has come to the notice of Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) that certain companies/entities unauthorisedly, without obtaining registration and illegally are collecting/mobilising money from the general investors by making false promises, assuring high return, etc," the market regulator said.

"Investors are advised to be careful if returns offered by the person/entity is very much higher than the return offered by regulated entities like banks, deposits accepted by companies, registered NBFCs, mutual funds etc," Sebi said.

The regulator further said it "does not regulate any scheme or arrangement made or offered by Cooperative Society, Deposits accepted by Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs), among others, and investors should not invest in any company that is not registered and regulated.

Companies blacklisted by Sebi also include PACL, Sumangal Industries, MVL Ltd, KBCL India, Nicer Green, Alchemist Infra Realty, HBN Dairies, Kim Infrastructure & Developers, Green Ray International, Royal Twinkle Star Club, Ecogreen Realestate (India) Ltd, Peers Allied Corporation, Green Buds Agro Farm.

Collectively, these entities are estimated to have raised over Rs 1 lakh crore from the public.

Sebi said it has observed that certain entities were mobilising money under investment schemes even after the market regulator "directed the entity not to collect any further money, not to launch any new schemes etc, which is unauthorised and illegal".

The market regulator, since January 01, 2011, has passed orders against 51 entities and their respective directors carrying on unregistered 'Collective Investment Schemes (CIS).

Out of these, orders have been passed against 32 entities in 2014 itself.

Sebi said it does not regulate entities in businesses like chit funds, pension schemes, as also banned activities like multi-level marketing and pyramid schemes.

It also asked investors to bring such schemes to the notice of various agencies such as RBI, CBI, Ministry of Corporate Affairs, PFRDA, IRDA, state and police authorities, besides Sebi.
Sebi has been given greater powers to deal with the ponzi menace, which typically involves money being raised from investors with promise of high returns and old investors being given returns from funds collected from new subscribers to such schemes.


As part of interim directions, Sebi directs the entities and its directors to stop collecting further money under any schemes, not to launch any new scheme or float any new companies/firm to raise fresh moneys, not to divert or alienate any assets or money collected.

Through its final directions, Sebi debars the company and its directors from accessing the capital markets, the regulator said, while explaining its enforcement procedures against such entities.

Sebi further said that Gift Collective Investment Management Company Ltd is the only company registered with it to undertake CIS activities.

Source Link - www.sebi.gov.in 

S.No. Case Name Date of SEBI Order
1 Sunplant Agro Ltd 03-05-2011
2 NGHI 06-11-2012
3 MPS Greenery 06-12-2012
4 Nicer Green Forest Ltd 12-03-2013
5 Maitreya Services Pvt. Ltd 25-03-2013
6 Osian's Connoissurers of Art Ltd 15-04-2013
7 Saradha Realty India Ltd 23-04-2013
8 Alchemist Infra Realty Ltd 21-06-2013
9 Sumangal Industries Ltd 09-07-2013
10 HBN Dairies & Alled Ltd1 02-07-2013
11 Sai Prasad Foods Ltd. 17-07-2013
12 Sai Prasad Properties Ltd 17-07-2013
13 Maitreya Plotters & Structures Pvt. Ltd 30-08-2013
14 Samruddha Jeevan Foods India Ltd 31-10-2013
15 Servehit Housing & Infrastructure India Ltd 31-10-2013
16 Orient Resorts (India) Pvt. Ltd 26-11-2013
17 Green Ray International Limited 03-02-2014
18 Royal Twinkle Star Club Ltd. 07-03-2014
19 Peers Allied Corportaion Ltd 23-04-2014
20 Green Buds Agro Farm I Ltd 16-05-2014
21 M/s. KBCL India Ltd 26-05-2014
22 Adel Landmarks Ltd (Era Landmarks Ltd) 05-06-2014
23 JSR Dairies Ltd 05-06-2014
24 Nikhara Bharath Construction Company Ltd. 12-06-2014
25 Haldhar Realty and Enterprises Ltd 17-06-2014
26 Rose Valley Real Estate & Constructions Ltd. 18-06-2014
27 Beetal Livestocks & Farms (Pvt) Ltd 25-06-2014
28 Ramel Industries Ltd 11-07-2014
29 Remac Realty India Ltd 15-07-2014
30 Sunshine Agro Global Ltd (Sunshine Forestry Pvt. Ltd) 15-07-2014
31 Ally Multi-Trade India Pvt. Ltd. 22-07-2014
32 Sai Prasad Corporation Ltd 22-07-2014
33 Nicer Green Housing and Infrastructure Developers Ltd 28-07-2014
34 Dhanolty Developers Ltd 30-07-2014
35 JSV Developers India Ltd. 31-07-2014
36 HNC Infrastructures and Shares India Ltd 05-08-2014
37 Shubham Kroti Foods Pvt. Ltd 08-08-2014
38 Viswas Real Estates and Infrastructure India Ltd 08-08-2014
39 IHI Developers India Ltd 11-08-2014
40 PACL 22-08-2014
41 Step Up Marketing Pvt. Ltd. 22-08-2014
४२ SPNJ Land Projects and Developers India Ltd 17-09-2014
43 G N Dairies Limited 31-10-2014
44 Sheen Agro and Plantation Ltd 14-11-2014
45 Garima Real Estate and Allied Ltd. 24-11-2014
46 Raghav Capital & Infrastructure Ltd. 24-11-2014
47 Shree Sai Space Creation Ltd 24-11-2014
48 Arise Bhoomi Developers Ltd 02/12/2014
49 Sai Multi Services (Prop. Sanjay B Tenginkai) 02/12/2014
50 Vee Realties India Limited 02/12/2014
51 Kim Infrastructure & Developers Ltd 08-12-2014
52 KMJ Land Developers India Ltd 09/12/2014
53 Kalbut Real Estate Ltd 10/12/2014
54 Wisdom Agro Tech India Ltd 10/12/2014
55 Blessing Agro Farm India Ltd 15/12/2014
56 Skylark Land Develpers Ltd 15/12/2014
57 Ken Infratech Ltd 17-12-2014
58 MVL Limited 19-12-2014
59 Ecogreen Realestate (India) Limited 26-12-2014
60 Sai Prakash Propertis Development Ltd 26/12/2014
61 Karmbhoomi Real Estate Ltd 30/12/2014
62 G.C.A. Marketing Private Limited 30/12/2014
63 Sai Prakash Organic Food Ltd. 06/01/2015 - See more at: http://www.prompttimes.com/prompttimes/5444/State/PB/1/News#sthash.ZLxs8Amy.dpuf