Monday, 4 April 2016

100% FDI In E-Commerce: Curse or Boon for Marketplace?





 The government approved foreign direct investment (FDI)  in online marketplaces, experts says many e-commerce companies will have to revise their already complex corporate structures, adding that there was little clarity on the impact of new regulations on Internet companies.
The government on Tuesday allowed 100% FDI in online retail of goods and services under the so-called marketplace model through the automatic route.
Under the inventory model, the e-commerce firm buys, stocks and sells goods, while in the marketplace model, it simply acts as a platform connecting buyers and sellers.
Few clauses & conditions are attached to the government’s approval, however, could either tingle e-commerce companies or force them to find unique ideas to execute them.
As per media inputs, no group company or seller on a marketplace can contribute more than 25% of the sales generated. Two, marketplaces cannot influence product prices. Three, small sellers will now have to take responsibility of quality of goods and after sales support.
The biggest drift would be for those who implement a mix of inventory and marketplace. These companies may be forced to revamp their businesses to abide by the law.
Fashion retailers such as Myntra and Jabong are moving to a marketplace model but currently depend on one seller for most sales. While Myntra gets over 90% of its sales from Vector e-commerce, Jabong’s sales largely depend on Xerion Retail.
Several lawyers and industry experts point out that the companies which till now have been swinging between a marketplace and inventory led business will have to take a clear stance soon.
“The new law is effective since yesterday and hardly gives breathing time to companies to implement the changes. However, if these companies continue to operate under ambiguity, they can be severely penalized by the government,” said Akash Gupt, partner and leader regulatory at PwC India.
While e-commerce giants such as Flipkart and Amazon will have to find new sellers to reduce dependence on large sellers, marketplaces such as furniture retailers Fabfurnish and Pepperfry will have to obey with the law by clearly providing seller name and details.
The new regulations leave less room for firms to violate law through alternate structures. The clear definition of e-commerce marketplace, inventory led business and the 25% sale norm will stop companies from disguising their businesses under marketplace model while they are doing inventory led business
Several e-commerce companies started operations with inventory-led models. However, since FDI wasn’t allowed in direct online retail, these companies had to be restructured to accommodate foreign money. Most companies moved to a two-layered structure with a wholesale trading arm that got all the foreign capital and an independent customer-facing entity that ran the online platform and sold to the customer directly.
While the regulations around the wholesale trading and B2C e-commerce model have remained unchanged, companies find little or no value in this model and prefer to run a marketplace.
The second condition on after sales and warranty clearly re-emphasize the role of the inventory model. “There will be several unintended consequences of these regulations. For instance, small vendors who only came on to online platforms because of the comfort that post sale issues would be handled by the e-commerce marketplace may no longer be willing to trade on these marketplaces.”
The third condition is the ban on influencing product prices, among other riders for approving FDI in e-commerce marketplaces.
“E-commerce entities providing marketplace will not directly or indirectly influence the sale price of goods or services and shall maintain level playing field. However, it’s difficult to say how the new rules will be implemented and to what extent these will be followed.
The end of discounting, if it happens, would significantly hurt the high valuations of India’s top e-commerce firms— Flipkart ($15 billion), Snapdeal ($6.5 billion) and Paytm (more than $3 billion)—as well as the rapid sales growth of Amazon India.
Online retail grew rapidly to $14 billion last year from $1 billion in 2012 fueled by venture capital investors, who pumped in more than $9 billion over the past two years alone. A huge chunk of this money has been spent on luring customers through advertising and, more importantly, discounts.
Many experts, however, said companies will find new ways to fund discounts though no one had clarity on the specifics.
Conclusion:- I believe! the new FDI policy will surely consolidate the brick & mortar marketers. There is no doubt, that the e-commerce marketplace will try to gain more and more vendors across India, for fulfilling there customer demand. Snapdeal has already declared that they are going to increase there number of sellers across India. It is a win- win situation for both entities. But, the newly imposed FDI policy will fail to brace the 'Make in India' vision of Prime Minister-Modi. The inventory model could have motivated small manufactures to manufacture their products in India, and sell on e-commerce platform. 


No comments:

Post a Comment