Retreat of the supermarket giants
Updated: 2013-08-16 09:05
By Lyu Chang (China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
After nine years in China, Tesco is on the point of scaling down and handing its Chinese business to China Resources Enterprise. Provided to China Daily |
British chain Tesco has been forced to take a new tack with its China operations
Though Tesco's spacious stores are well-lit and spotlessly clean with wares tastefully displayed, Helen Wang seldom shops there. Wang, 32, of Beijing, prefers to buy most of her groceries at Wumart, a Beijing-based chain, where she can easily find fresh delicacies including raw chicken feet, which are always heaped on a table, or cheap vegetables.
"It is close to home, food is fresh and prices are wonderfully low," says Wang, on her way home after work and shopping. "For large daily necessities I always shop online," she says.
Shoppers like Wang are making life extremely difficult for big international retailers like Tesco, and the rapid rise of e-commerce firms in China has compounded their problems in a market once seen as full of potential.
Since the early 1990s, foreign supermarket chains from Carrefour to Wal-Mart have entered the country, desperate to win over its burgeoning middle class, but lacking local expertise or short of capital.
After nine years of independent operations in China, Tesco, Britain's largest retailer, announced on August 9 that it was in exclusive talks with the state-owned China Resources Enterprise for a joint-venture agreement merging their Chinese operations.
The proposed deal, following Tesco's decision to quit the US and Japan, represents a significant scaling down of the British company's Chinese operations. Under the deal, Tesco's 131 supermarkets, hypermarkets and shopping mall businesses in China would be combined with the Hong Kong-listed CRE's almost 3,000 stores.
CRE, a major supermarket operator in the country that includes the Vanguard chain, would control about 80 percent of the venture; Tesco, the world's third-largest retailer, would have the rest.
It would bring together "a deep understanding of local customers, an established nationwide infrastructure and proven track record with Tesco's global retail expertise, international sourcing scale and supply chain capabilities", CRE said.
Retail analysts say the decision seemed to be good for both sides, but it was essentially a lost battle for Tesco, which failed to make much headway in the Chinese market.
Oceanne Zhang, head of Market Insights China, a division of the consulting and research firm Kantar Retail, says the root of Tesco's retreat from China was a failure to understand how to build strong relationships with suppliers and give first-class customers a unique shopping experience.
"Chinese retailing is very different to markets elsewhere, and it is very fragmented," Zhang says. "Chinese consumers want high-quality, cheap products but they also want convenience."
The difference between the shopping habits of Chinese and Westerners is that the former buy their food daily rather than weekly, she says.
"But Tesco, with its supermarket stores and hypermarkets, are sometimes too spacious and have for years paid concentrated too much on perfecting the mix of items, which makes it difficult to change direction when needed."
For example, store displays should be such that Chinese customers can easily find what they want rather than having to wade through myriad goods; snacks should mean chicken feet, not sausage rolls; and wet-market sections should allow customers to pick out fish from a tank.
"Foreign retailers need to be more flexible because large scale is no longer a recipe for sustainable growth," Zhang says.
Tesco has been in China since 2004 and until recently had very aggressive expansion plans. In fact, in the past couple of years it said it would spend billions of pounds and open about 300 stores and scores of shopping malls.
But those plans crumbled as it slashed its exposure in China following big losses. It closed four stores last year and another this year. Last year its sales were about 1.4 billion pounds ($2 billion), a small slice of China's 190-billion-pound modern grocery market, an earlier report by the Financial Times said.
Tesco is now the world's third-largest retailer by revenue behind Wal-Mart of the US and Carrefour of France. Observers forecast that the new venture that combines both formidable scale and local access will enable CRE to imitate the multi-format model of Walmart and Carrefour.
The deal also comes as Asia's richest man, Li Ka-shing, considers selling his Hong Kong supermarket business, worth up to $4 billion. Walmart plans to put in a bid, Reuters has reported.
The glory days when Walmart stores drew more than 80,000 shoppers on the opening day of its first supermarket in China in the 1990s are well and truly gone. Many other foreign supermarket chains have also lost money in the world's most populous country, territory that once seemed to hold the prospect of rich and easy pickings for the top global retailers.
Under a major assault from e-commerce firms, the profit margin of the physical retail market in China fell from 5 percent in 2005 to nearly 2.5 percent last year. Tesco, Carrefour SA and Wal-Mart Stores Inc have all remained below that benchmark, a Kantar Retail report says.
After two years of testing, Metro AG of Germany said in January that it was pulling out of the Chinese consumer-electronics business under the Media Markt brand, and Home Depot Inc announced last year that it would shut all seven of its big-box home improvement stores.
Earlier, the Southern Metropolis Daily reported that last year Carrefour shut two stores and Walmart, five.
Against a backdrop of declining sales of big foreign retailers last year, Chinese supermarket operators have been aiming high, and have had strong performances in recent years.
Yonghui Superstores Co Ltd, the Fuzhou-based supermarket chain, said earlier that it plans to have 350 stores and 50 billion yuan ($8.1 billion) in sales revenue in China by next year.
In its first-quarter report, net profit attributable to shareholders surged 133.5 percent year-on-year to 276.14 million yuan. Operating revenue for the first three months grew 20.79 percent year-on-year to 7.52 billion yuan.
Liu Hui, chief consultant in the Beijing Uni-Retail Business, says that the last few years have been tough for foreign supermarket chains faced with fierce competition from Chinese domestic rivals, which have gained rapidly by drawing on advantages in sourcing and distribution.
"Because of soaring operational costs such as rent and personnel, foreign retailers have been losing money in the market," Liu says. "On the other hand, domestic companies have better weathered the downturn. With subsidies and favorable conditions given by local government such as better locations and low rent, domestic supermarket chains such as Yonghui and Wumart have been able to promote growth very quickly."
Sun Art, a joint venture between Ruentex Group of Taiwan and the privately held French retailer Group Auchan SA, now has a 13.6 percent market share in China, generating high profit on its expertise in maintaining competitive prices with local suppliers.
CRE and Walmart each have about 10.9 percent, Carrefour has 6.9 percent and Tesco 2.4 percent.
lvchang@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily European Weekly 08/16/2013 page20)
Today's Top News
List of approved GM food clarified
ID checks for express deliveries in Guangdong
Govt to expand elderly care
University asks freshmen to sign suicide disclaimer
Tibet gears up for new climbing season
Media asked to promote Sino-Indian ties
Shots fired at Washington Navy Yard
Minimum growth rate set at 7%
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Xinjiang scores on the national stage at last |
Happily ever after until the divorce |
Cure sought for the medical sector's ills |
Hanban shops around for a wider choice |
Africa looks to the Orient for lessons |
Urban push |