Header Ads Widget

Amazon’s secret strategy to dodge India e-commerce regulations


Before the meeting, Amazon employees prepared a draft note for Carney. The note, reviewed by Reuters, advised Carney what to say - and what not to say.

He should highlight the fact that Amazon had committed more than $5.5 billion in investment in India and how it provided an online platform for 400,000-plus Indian sellers. But he was cautioned not to divulge that some 33 Amazon sellers accounted for about a third of the value of all goods sold on the company's website. That information, the note advised, was "Sensitive/not for disclosure."

Other company documents reveal equally touchy information: Two more sellers on the e-commerce giant's India platform - merchants in which Amazon had indirect equity stakes - accounted for around 35% of the platform's sales revenue in early 2019. That meant some 35 of Amazon's more than 400,000 sellers in India at the time accounted for around two-thirds of its online sales.

DISCOUNTED FEES'
Amazon has repeatedly said it has no role in pricing goods sold online in India and that prices are decided by sellers. The new 2016 government rules explicitly stated that "e-commerce entities providing [a] marketplace will not directly or indirectly influence the sale price of goods or services and shall maintain [a] level playing field."

Following the rule change, however, Amazon lowered the fees it charged some big sellers on its platform to enable them to offer more competitive prices. "We adjusted our business model by activating a fee incentive program (Platinum Seller Program or PSP) to provide discounted fees to a subset of large managed sellers (Platinum Sellers) to help them match" prices of e-commerce rivals, said the global regulatory update document.

In addressing the 25%-of-sales cap on a single seller, Amazon also proposed having a second special merchant, in addition to Cloudtail. It estimated the two special merchants would together account for about half of the sales on its platform.

In 2017, a new special merchant named Appario - referred to as "SM2" in an internal document - was created. This time, Amazon entered into another joint venture, with an entity backed by the family of Ashok Patni, a pioneer in the Indian IT outsourcing sector.

One internal Amazon document from 2019 states that the two special merchants get "subsidized fees" and access to Amazon global retail tools. These tools are used for things like inventory and invoice management.

Amazon said its marketplace fees depend on the category of product and the season of the year, and are "uniformly applicable to all like sellers."

Appario and a Patni representative did not respond to requests for comment.

Even after India implemented new investment rules in 2016, relations between Bezos and the Modi government seemed good. That June, the Amazon boss received a business leadership award from Modi at a U.S.-India Business Council event in Washington. Bezos told the audience how small sellers were benefiting from Amazon's India marketplace. He announced he planned to invest a further $3 billion in the country.

In 2016, Amazon launched its Prime Video streaming service in India and introduced its voice-recognition speakers the next year. It has also ventured into food retail and expanded its cloud-computing business.

In late 2018, Amazon's major annual online sales promotion, the Great Indian Festival, was a smash. During the big sale, India head Agarwal rejoiced in an internal email to employees.

The first 36 hours of the sale "surpassed every event in our history," he wrote. "We had our biggest day ever for Smartphones, with estimated 3 out of every 4 smartphones sold in the entire country (online or offline) purchased on Amazon.in - this is truly phenomenal."

NEW RESTRICTIONS
With a national election looming in April 2019, the Modi government struck again. In December 2018, it announced new restrictions that prohibited vendors in which marketplaces such as Amazon have an equity interest from selling products on these marketplaces. The aim, government officials told Reuters at the time, was to deter deep discounting by big online retailers.

The new limits forced Amazon to restructure its relationships with Cloudtail and Appario, the two special merchants in which it held indirect stakes. As company documents showed, the two then accounted for around 35% of Amazon's online sales.

The regulatory change was widely seen in India as a move by Modi to pacify small traders, a critical part of his party's electoral base. It was this change to the foreign investment rules that Amazon executive Jay Carney wanted to discuss with the Indian ambassador at the time, Harsh Vardhan Shringla, in Washington. Shringla is now India's foreign secretary.

Asked about the Carney meeting, Amazon said, "we cannot comment on specifics of the meeting as those are confidential."

Shringla's office said in a statement: "The meeting in question was at Amazon's request." It didn't provide any detail on what was discussed.

In the early hours of Feb. 1, 2019, thousands of products being sold by Cloudtail and Appario vanished from Amazon's website in compliance with the deadline for the new rules. But days later, the products were back as Amazon reduced its equity stake in the parent companies of the two sellers. This maneuver, the company believed, made it compliant with the new rules, according to the internal document from 2019.

Amazon's relationship with the Indian government was growing more contentious.

In June 2019, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal dressed down e-commerce executives, including Amazon's Agarwal, telling them in a meeting they must comply with the new rules. Goyal was blunt, said one executive who was there.

"We will not let e-commerce impact small shopkeepers... I know there have been many issues of non-compliance," the executive said, summarizing Goyal's remarks. "So think about it, set it right. If you don't, we will make things public, it will be put in the public domain and you will be embarrassed."

Then came the news of the antitrust probe into Amazon and Flipkart in January 2020, the same month Bezos was making another trip to India. Traders staged small street protests, holding up placards with a red "X" emblazoned on a picture of the Amazon CEO's face and the words, "Jeff Bezos Go Back!"

Commerce Minister Goyal diminished the company's announcement of a further $1 billion of investment. "It's not as if they are doing a great favor to India," he said.

There was another salvo in August: A group of more than 2,000 online sellers filed an antitrust case against Amazon and Cloudtail, alleging Amazon favors some retailers whose online discounts drive other vendors out of business. Amazon and Cloudtail have both said they comply with all laws; the Competition Commission of India has yet to decide whether to order an investigation into the matter.

And there is another threat: Mukesh Ambani, India's richest man and chairman of Reliance Industries, one of the country's biggest conglomerates, is expanding his e-commerce business. Reliance did not respond to a request for comment.

Despite the challenges, Amazon continues to grow. Last year, it began offering auto insurance and announced it was launching an online pharmacy service.

It also continues to tout itself as a platform for the little guy. For its big annual sale in October, it ran a front-page newspaper ad that read: "Celebrating India's Small Businesses and Entrepreneurs."

Special thanks to' Jeffrey Dastin and lussen Seen in San Francisco contributed to this story.

Post a Comment

0 Comments

'; (function() { var dsq = document.createElement('script'); dsq.type = 'text/javascript'; dsq.async = true; dsq.src = '//' + disqus_shortname + '.disqus.com/embed.js'; (document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0] || document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0]).appendChild(dsq); })();