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Posts Tagged ‘Kishore Biyani’

Future Group hopes to sail thru difficult times in Q4

Posted by retailigence on January 2, 2009

MUMBAI: Retail chains may be struggling in the face of the economic slowdown, but Kishore Biyani’s Future Group seems to be buoyant in the New Year, expecting to do well in the quarter ending March 2009.

“I don’t see a problem in this quarter. February and March are traditionally good months for us…and with interest rates coming down, we hope to do well (in the quarter),” Future Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Kishore Biyani said.

With regard to Future Retail, Mr Biyani said October and November were “two good months” for them in terms of sales. Then in December, it announced the three-week long Great Indian Shopping Festival, which would end on January 4. “We have had requests to extend the shopping festival. We are thinking about it,” he said. “Most formats have done well, save for the home segment,” he said and attributed the reason to the realty sector having been through volatile times.

Overall, he termed quarter three as having done well, but did not give details on the sales clocked or a comparative view on performance year-on-year. “We are trying to boost consumption. We are working on something else (on similar lines as the GISF). We have something lined up in February and March across all segments,” he said but refused to reveal more. The group has another shopping bonanza plann ed for January 26 as well, he said. – PTI

Sources- The Hindu

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FutureBazaar selects CyberSource for anti-fraud solution

Posted by retailigence on December 10, 2008

Driven by Indian B2C eCommerce sales, that is expected to grow at 195 per cent between 2008 and 2011 (eMarketer, Asia-Pacific B2C E-Commerce, January 2008), FutureBazaar India, the online shopping portal of Pantaloon Retail, one of India’s leading retailers, has selected CyberSource Ltd’s Decision Manager anti-fraud solution.

FutureBazaar offers a wide range of home products online including toys, clothing, books, consumer electronics, and larger items such as kitchen appliances. CyberSource Ltd is a subsidiary of UK-based CyberSource.

On the development, Virendra Chhatbar, chief finance officer, FutureBazaar, said, “As eCommerce continues its rapid growth in India, retailers large and small must be increasingly vigilant to the threat of fraud. CyberSource’s proven risk management solution gives us that greater level of intelligence. CyberSource has considerable experience working in the Indian online environment, a factor that strongly influenced our decision.”

Using Decision Manager, FutureBazaar can now access over 150 global validation tests to screen for fraud and determine in real time whether online transactions should be accepted, rejected or marked for further review, said a company press release.

Sources:— IndiaRetailing Bureau

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Biyani rolls out ethnicity, denies retail slowdown

Posted by superstar23 on October 24, 2008

The Future is changing track. The pioneer of organised retail in India, the Kishore Biyani-promoted Future Group has altered its strategy. From mass to class, the aspirational top-end consumers, to be specific. The undisputed king of Indian retail tells ET that he will focus more on the group’s fashion-driven retail formats like Pantaloon and the latest, Ethnicity, to achieve a turnover of Rs 10,000 crore in 2008-09. Mr Biyani insisted that slowdown is not reflecting from consumer spend. Excerpts:

Despite retail slowdown, you have launched yet another format Ethnicity. What makes you so sure that the concept will click?

Who says there is a slowdown? Although the environment looks gloomy, the Indian consumer is spending on FMCG, consumer durables and garments. Sales do not drop even if the sentiment is negative. Roti, kapda, makaan are essentials and consumer does not stop buying them.

Ethnicity is targeted at the aspiring urban Indian consumer who is looking for exclusive ethnic product-mix during marriages and festivals. It is an attempt to go back to our roots and create a niche category of ethnic wear and products like mojris, semi-precious jewellery, handbags, home decor products, handicraft, etc.

With brands deserting Ahmedabad and two Big Bazaar outlets closing down, are the times too challenging? Do you see a retail graveyard here?

It is a wrong presumption. With Nano happening in Gujarat, there is so much positivity around the state. If Nano can happen, so can Ethnicity. As it is, the success rate of any brand is 20-30%. While we had to wrap up one of the stores because of high rentals and another because we targeted the wrong consumer, we are expanding other formats (in Ahmedabad).

We have plans to set up eight Ethnicity stores across India in the next two years at Rs 8 crore per store spread over 25,000-30,000 square feet. Considering the urban poor customer is devoid of aspiration, a Big Bazaar would not click with them. At the same time, we have realised that we have to focus more on fashion even in Big Bazaar outlets to draw the aspirational `India One’ customer. (Future has re-categorised its target segment under India One, India Two and India Three.)

You are known to experiment with different retail formats. Which one has been your favourite?

All formats launched by the group are close to my heart. At this point in time, Ethnicity and Pantaloon are my favourite formats. That’s where the money is. Pantaloon is overachieving its target. We expect to record a turnover of Rs 10,000 crore in 2008-09 compared to Rs 6,500 crore in the last fiscal.

Ethnicity alone would fetch us revenues worth Rs 25 crore in the first year of operation.

How have real estate prices hit you?

Real estate scenario in a city like Ahmedabad is not inhibiting. In fact, realtors are so welcoming that they let us set shop without expecting any rentals for the first six months. We will add 5-6 million square feet of retail space in the near future.

There was a simultaneous boom in retail and aviation sectors. Now that the crisis looms over aviation sector, do you expect retail to be hit sometime soon? Could retail sector expect lay-offs?

Growth is important to avoid such stagnation. We believe that retail is booming and so there is no question of lay-off at this point. While investors like lay-offs (as it cuts down on the expenditure), promoters believe otherwise. One has to strike the right balance between the capitalist and socialist ideologies. I am a mix of both. A socialist-capitalist and vice-versa.

After Ethnicity, what next?

We are going to open the first stand-alone outlet of John Miller in Mumbai on Friday. The outlet will be located at Kala Ghoda and at the same store where I had started my first journey as an apparel supplier.

source:- economic times.com

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Future Group partners Axiom for mobile retail

Posted by retailigence on October 22, 2008

In a leap forward achievement, Kishore Biyani-led Future Group has entered into a strategic partnership with Middle East-based Axiom Telecom to retail latter’s products in India. As part of the partnership, both the companies came together to form Future Axiom Telecom Ltd, which will open over 500 stores and touch points in 58 cities in the country under the brand name Mobile Bazaar and Mport respectively, said an official press release.

Announcing the venture, Ashy Sehgal, CEO, Future Axiom Telecom Ltd, said, “Future Axiom is all set to venture in the Rs 500 billion mobile retail industry. We will operate in more that 500 stores and touch points in 58 cities in the country and will be revealing the new brand and store format shortly. We plan to open 1,500 hundred stores by the end of December 2009.”

Elaborating Axioms scope in the Indian market, Faisal Al Bannai, founder, Axiom Telecom, said, “We recognised India as the land of opportunities and are delighted to become a partner with the Future Group for operations in India. This partnership will help our expertise in the mobile retail space grow and set new benchmarks with Future Group’s reach and understanding of the Indian consumer.”

With an initial investment of about USD 40 million, the 50:50 JV will retail and distribute mobile handsets and accessories and set up service centres in India, said the release.

Sources :- Indiaretailing

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Pantaloon Retail posts 39 per cent increase in net sales in Q1

Posted by retailigence on October 22, 2008

Pantaloon Retail India Ltd, part of the Kishore Biyani-led Future Group, has declared its unaudited financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2008.

Wherein the gross turnover (Rs 1,511.21 crore) for the quarter increased by 39 per cent; profit from operations before other Income and interest (Rs 122.97 crore) increased by 53 per cent.

Pantaloon Retail, India’s leading retailer, operates multiple retail formats in both the value and lifestyle segment of the Indian consumer marker. Headquartered in Mumbai, the company operates 8.6 million square feet of retail space.

Sources :- indiaretailing

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Big Bazaar – India’s Real Retail Story

Posted by superstar23 on October 4, 2008

Big Bazaar, the flagship retail chain of the Future Group, is on the verge of achieving a unique milestone in the History of World Retail – by being the first hypermarket format in the globe to rollout fastest 101 stores in a short span of seven years.

Currently, Big Bazaar has 98 stores in the country, including the recently opened store in Mysore on September 26th 2008. Further to this, Big Bazaar will be opening three more stores in a single day – i.e. 30th September 2008, which will take the eventual count to 101 stores in the country. These three stores opening shortly in Pune (Kalyani Nagar), Cuttack (Darga Bazaar) and Delhi (Rajouri Garden).

Big Bazaar’s journey began in October 2001, when the young, first generation entrepreneur Kishore Biyani opened the country’s first hypermarket retail outlet in Kolkatta (then Calcutta). In the same month, two more stores were added – one each in Hyderabad and Mumbai, thus starting on a successful sojourn which began the chapter of organized retailing in India.

Speaking on this momentous occasion and remembering the days of conceptualising the hypermarket idea Mr. Kishore Biyani said, “We initially decided to name the format as “Bazaar” because we had designed the store keeping the Indian mandi style in mind. Since the size of the hypermarket was big than an average mandis, the thought came to name it as “Big Bazaar”. However, we had freezed on the punch line “Isse Se Sasta Aur Achha Kahi Nahi” much before we met the creative agency to design the final logo of Big Bazaar.”

Though, Big Bazaar was started purely as a fashion format including apparel, cosmetics, accessory and general merchandise, the first Food Bazaar format was added as Shop-In-Shop within Big Bazaar in the year 2002. Today, Big Bazaar, with its wide range of products and service offering, reflects the aspirations of millions of Indians.

The journey of Big Bazaar can be divided into two phases – one pre and the other post January 26th, 2005, when the company rewrote the retail chapter in India, with the introduction of a never-before sales campaign “Sasbe Sasta Din”. In just one day, almost the whole of India descended at various Big Bazaar stores in the country to shop at their favourite shopping destination.

Further, what followed was the time and again rewriting of the Indian Retail experience, wherein understanding of the Indian consumers reflected in the products and services offered, creating innovative deals, expanding in the tier II and tier III towns, tying up with branded merchandise to offer exclusive products and services to its customers.

Big Bazaar is present today in 59 cities and occupying over 5 million sq.ft. retail space and driving over 110 million footfalls into its stores. The format is expecting the number of footfall in the stores to increase by over 140 million by this financial year. Over the years, Mr. Biyani for his vision and leadership, and Big Bazaar for its unique proposition to its customers’, have received every prestigious consumer awards both nationally and internationally.

Says Rajan Malhotra, President, Strategy & Convergence, Big Bazaar, “What is important in our journey is not the number of stores, but the customers’ faith in us. It’s the India and the Indians, which have helped us, reach this feat in such a short time span and today our country is creating a history in the World organized Retail.

Rajan Malhotra, who is also the first employee of Big Bazaar, joining the organization in early 2001 adds, “Since beginning, we have kept Big Bazaar as a soft brand, which reflects the India and the Indianess. We believed in growing with the society, participating and celebrating all regional and local community festivals, giving customers preferences above everything else.”

Every Big Bazaar is a small family by its own and the head of the family – Karta – is the store manager. Kishore Biyani, the CEO of the Future Group, has a vast understanding of the consumer’s insight, has inculcated the habit of ‘observing, understanding  customers’ behaviour’, in every employee of the group.

Future Group is confident of the Indian Retail Story. The Group has not slowed down its expansion plans despite the fiscal woes in the economy present today. Future Group plans to have 300 stores and is expecting revenues of Rs 13,000 crore by year 2011.

source:- money control.com

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Biyani moves on with 4 new stores in 5 days

Posted by superstar23 on October 4, 2008

Kishore Biyani’s, and Big Bazaar’s, march comes at a time when several new retailers are slowing expansion.

Mumbai: Other companies and entrepreneurs who entered the organized retail business in India may be slowing, but not the man who sees himself as India’s Sam Walton.

And so, Kishore Biyani’s Future Group will on 30 September open Big Bazaar stores in Pune, Delhi and Cuttack. With Friday’s launch of a store in Mysore, that will make four in the space of five days, and Biyani’s handlers are touting it as the fastest roll-out in the retail industry.

There’s another numerical significance to these four stores. With them, the number of Big Bazaar stores in the country will grow to 101. Biyani, never one to lose an opportunity to advertise, announced this fact to the world at large from a makeshift stage in the middle of Mumbai mall High Street Phoenix on Thursday evening.

“The story is not about us, but this story is about the people who visit our stores. This is a proud moment for India.”

Biyani’s, and Big Bazaar’s, march comes at a time when several new retailers are slowing expansion, reducing the number of outlets, effecting layoffs, even exiting the business. Basmati exporter REI Agro has shuttered dozens of the more than 200 grocery stores it opened; Indiabulls Retail Services Ltd has closed several of its hypermarkets; Mumbai-based HyperCity Retail has abandoned plans to open 250 grocery stores by 2012; Ludhiana textile firm Oswal Group has downed shutters on its two-dozen-store-strong lingerie chain; and Reliance Retail Ltd has fallen short of its September target of 2,000 stores of all formats by more than half.

But even as other entrepreneurs who have made a mark on Indian retail such as Subhiksha Trading Services Ltd’s R. Subramanian and Vishal Retail Ltd’s Ram Chandra Agarwal are slowing, Biyani is pushing ahead.

By 2011, he claims, there will be 300 Big Bazaars, and Pantaloon Retail (India) Ltd, his flagship, will have revenue of Rs13,000 crore. The company ended 2007-08 with Rs5,048 crore in revenue.

“We were not caught in the euphoria,” he said.

These facts haven’t missed the attention of analysts.In a 22 September research report to clients, Vandana Luthra, Manish Sarawagi and Anuj Bansal of Merrill Lynch wrote: “We like Pantaloon’s speed in store roll-outs across formats, management’s long term focus on property lock-ins and industry-wide peaking of rent and salary costs.” But they still had an “underperform” rating on the company.

“We remain negative (because of): sharply higher interest costs, dull FY09 earnings and likelihood of sharp consensus downgrades.”

Restructuring and revaluation

It isn’t that everything Biyani touches turns to gold. But he has 25 retail formats to juggle with, and juggle them he does, tweaking and refining his portfolio till he has the right store for the right market.

In New Delhi, for instance, in the Raja Nagar area, he is converting an existing Pantaloon (apparel) store into a Big Bazaar. He’s doing the same thing in Ahmedabad.

And in a research report dated 21 September, CLSA’s Anirudha Dutta and Prakhar Sharma wrote that Pantaloon had moved out of its airport retailing joint venture with Alpha Airports and managed to book a profit of Rs29.8 crore in the process.

The analysts added that Pantaloon’s sales growth of 35% was below expectations (45%) and that Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization —a measure of operating profitability) growth was higher (than expectations) at 149%.

Still, the analysts put out an “underperform” rating on the stock. Biyani, however, is unfazed by these ratings. He isn’t keen on talking about Pantaloon’s financials or fund-raising plans (there is some speculation that Pantaloon may tap the markets for some money). The Merrill Lynch report said: “We forecast Pantaloon’s interest cost to grow 2.7 times over financial year 2008-10 thus limiting bottom line growth to sub-10%.”

If the numbers worry Biyani he doesn’t show it. Instead, he is keen to talk about the people who helped him grow Pantaloon. On Thursday, Biyani was flanked by some of the executives who have been with him since he launched the first Big Bazaar in 2001—in Hyderabad.

“The team is intact,” beamed Biyani.

Beaming beside him were Rajan Malhotra, who heads the Big Bazaar format and Hans Udeshi, CEO, general merchandise of Pantaloon.

Malhotra remembers the many trips he and others made to small stores in the back lanes of Chennai and Hyderabad, understanding consumer behaviour by watching them buy everything from groceries to innerwear.

That was seven years ago, but one question from those days that still greets Biyani is whether he plans to sell out.

Not here to sell

The frequency and pitch of that question have increased in recent times, after companies such as Reliance Retail, Bharti Enterprises Ltd and Aditya Birla Retail Ltd announced their entry into the business of organized retail. Some of these firms, and some others, have also formed partnerships with foreign retail firms. The Tata group that owns retail firm Trent Ltd has a partnership with Tesco, and Bharti with Wal-Mart Stores Inc.

“It is insulting,” Biyani replied calmly when asked whether he will look to partner with global retail firms.

“We will achieve scale (without partnering with a global firm),” said Biyani.

“We connect well with the Indian customer.”

“We have become the natural choice.”

“We built this retail model from scratch.”

“Why should we tie up with them? We can source it (merchandise) ourselves and we too can have a large scale.”

Last year, almost 112 million people walked into Pantaloon’s various store formats. This year, according to Malhotra, the number will be close to 120-130 million, almost 10-12% of the Indian population.

Some of those people looked on curiously on Thursday as Biyani and his executives took the stage.

High Street Phoenix stands where a textile mill once used to. Today, it is one of Mumbai’s most popular malls. And Pantaloon is the anchor tenant, the main draw. Biyani said real estate developers were keen to have his stores as anchor tenants because they “act as the glue to attract other tenants and shoppers”.

And his stores are loved, he added.

No opposition

Other retail firms may have faced opposition from small store owners and local politicians but not Pantaloon, Biyani said, because it believes in “preserving the ecosystem”.

His stores, he added, haven’t faced “any opposition from anybody from anywhere even for a single day”.

“Opposition may be in the minds of some people, but it never came to the fore. We believed in a model, where we never sold any product below the cost price.”

When Pantaloon opened its fourth store, its market capitalization was just around Rs200 crore. At its peak, Pantaloon’s market value was around Rs12,000 crore. On Friday, it was around Rs4,400 crore.

The fundamentals, however, are still strong, Biyani said.

And the allure of the retail business in India remains what it was seven years ago.

“Nearly 1.2 billion people in one part of the world were aspiring to shop. Then the story began and people began to believe in us and that’s how our financial journey started.”

source:-livemint

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Pantaloon Says India Malls Waiving Rents as Supply Slows Demand

Posted by retailigence on October 2, 2008

By Saikat Chatterjee

Pantaloon Retail India Ltd., the nation’s biggest publicly traded retailer, said malls are waiving rents and offering to pay for interior decoration as excess supply and slowing economic growth erodes demand.

Developers are ready to “pay us for coming into the malls,” Kishore Biyani, founder and managing director of Pantaloon, said in a telephone interview from Mumbai, where the company is based. “They need anchor clients like us to bring in other clients.”

India’s shopping centers are facing excess supply and slowing demand after mall rents almost doubled in two years. Malls in India’s top eight cities have about 20 percent of their total 40 million square feet (3.7 million square meters) of space vacant, according to real estate broker Cushman & Wakefield Inc.

Malls are offering rent moratoriums for six months and free interior fixtures, Biyani said. The company, which soon plans to sign such agreements with mall developers, is also scrutinizing its own spending and costs more carefully.

“Every proposal and capital expenditure is being carefully examined and we are not getting into anything that may be marginal,” Biyani said.

Retail rents rose sharply in the past two years as Reliance Industries Ltd., the nation’s most valuable company, and Bharti Group, which runs India’s biggest mobile-phone operator, started running stores.

India’s $1.2 trillion economy, Asia’s third-largest, expanded 7.9 percent in the three months ended June, the weakest pace since the last quarter of 2004.

It’s “premature” to say whether and how much India will be affected by the credit crisis as “there’s no clarity” on how that will affect consumer behavior in India, Biyani said.

Consumer spending and same-store sales will continue to grow and Pantaloon will stick to its target of adding as much as 16 million square feet of store space in the 12 months ending June next year, he said.

Pantaloon Retail said same-store sales in August rose 13 percent to 5.24 billion rupees from a year earlier. Total sales in August rose 53 percent to 7.17 billion rupees, according to the company.

Source: Bloomberg

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