Walmart is Exiting From Japan By Selling It's Stakes in Seiyu Supermarket Chain

Walmart Inc is selling a majority stake in Japanese supermarket chain Seiyu to investment firm KKR and e-commerce company Rakuten for over $1 billion, after suffering years of poor profitability amid stiff competition.

author-image
SMEStreet Edit Desk
New Update
Walmart, Retailers, CCI

The global retail market gets significantly affected by the movement of global retail giants like Walmart. In a development, Walmart has decided to take an-almost-exit from Japanese market by selling it's majority stakes in Japanese Supermarket chain- Seiyu. However, Walmart is selling it's stakes to Investment firm- KKR and e-commerce giant Rakuten. The deal, which values Seiyu at 172.5 billion yen ($1.65 billion) including debt, comes after on-off speculation about the world`s biggest retailer looking to exit Japan. It is below the 300-500 billion yen it reportedly sought a few years ago.

KKR will buy 65% of Seiyu and Rakuten will acquire a 20% stake while Walmart will retain 15%, the companies said in a joint statement on Monday. Walmart first entered the Japanese market in 2002 by buying a 6% stake in Seiyu, and gradually built up its stake before a full takeover in 2008. But it has struggled in Japan, like other foreign entrants such as Tesco PLC and Carrefour SA who were lured by the high spending power of Japanese consumers but were frustrated by tough competition.

This is reported by the world's leading news agency Reuters.

The Seiyu deal is the latest divesture of underperforming assets by Walmart, following its exits in Britain and Argentina, as it struggled to compete with nimble local rivals. In Asia, it pulled out of South Korea in 2006 and shifted focus in China to expanding members-only warehouse chain Sam`s Club as competition from online marketplaces such as Alibaba intensified.

Walmart is expanding in India, though, with its $16 billion purchase of e-commerce provider Flipkart. Japanese media reported two years ago that Walmart was seeking to sell Seiyu for around 300 billion to 500 billion yen. Sources said at the time that it failed to find a buyer. Addressing reports that it was looking to leave Japan, Walmart announced last year that it aimed to list Seiyu and retain a majority stake in the business.

But Monday`s announcement also comes as Seiyu is starting to show signs of improvement, with its relatively early start in e-commerce finally yielding results, helped by a 2018 partnership with Rakuten. Walmart Japan, mainly the Seiyu business, booked a net profit of 47 million yen in 2019 after reporting losses in most previous years. Seiyu told Reuters earlier this year that the coronavirus pandemic had bolstered interest in online grocery shopping in Japan.

For Rakuten, the deal with Seiyu helps it compete against rival Amazon. Large Japanese supermarkets such as Aeon Co Ltd and Seven & I Holdings Co Ltd`s Ito-Yokado have also been stepping up their investments in e-commerce as Japanese consumers, long wary of buying food online, are starting to use online grocery services.

e-commerce Amazon Retail walmart KKR Seiyu Supermarket