Metro AG to retrench and refocus on Europe

German retailer Metro AG’s global reach across 30 countries was supposed to insulate it from market swings. Instead, turmoil around the world has battered the company, forcing the chain to retrench and refocus on Europe.

With a retail empire of more than 2,000 wholesale, food retail, consumer-electronics stores in Europe, Asia and Africa, Metro has a big presence in emerging markets. But crises in many of these countries, including Russia, Greece, Egypt, over the past few years have hurt its results.

The Russian market has been the key market to Metro AG. In 2013, almost 90% of income came from this region. Up to 2014 the share of the Russian division accounted for a quarter of total operating income of the group. However, after the imposition of sanctions by the European Union and the beginning of the economic crisis in Russia, the situation changed dramatically. After the introduction of the food embargo, Russia Metro could quickly replace some banned products with Russian goods, but because of the collapse of the ruble, Metro’s loss was about €1 billion.

According to Olaf Koch, Metro AG CEO, in 2016 a priority market for the company will be Germany, which last year accounted for 38% of group revenues. In Germany, from January to November 2015 Metro sales grew by 2.8% – that is the maximum growth since 1994.

Money from the sale of assets (Galeria Kaufhof, units in Vietnam, Denmark and Greece) will go to the development of online trading according to Koch.

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First Moscow Auchan opens in former Real hypermarket

The French grocery retailer Auchan has opened its first hypermarket in Moscow in premises previously occupied by a Real store. The Russian Real stores, previously owned by the German Metro Group, were sold along with the Real establishments in Poland, Romania and Ukraine. The Russian transaction was concluded in May this year.
The new Auchan outlet takes up 7,400 m2 in Signalny Lane and offers 25,000 SKUs. This is the 60th of the chain’s hypermarkets in Russia. The remainder of the 16 Real hypermarkets in Russia, bought by Auchan, are to be rebranded by the end of this year.

Source: www.russiaretail.com

Metro Cash & Carry earns €4.12bn in Russia in 2012

Metro Cash & Carry, a German grocery retailer (and part of the Metro Group), reported sales in Russia of €4.12bn in fiscal 2012, against €3.42bn in 2011 (a 20.4% y-o-y increase).

During the last year the company opened six hypermarkets in the country, and by the end of 2012 Metro Cash & Carry operated 68 outlets.

What is more, another grocery brand in the group, Real, increased its sales in Russia from €722m in 2011 to €859m last year (19% y-o-y growth). However, Real chain is to be acquired by the French Auchan, and the deal is to be completed this year.

Source: www.russiaretail.com

Logistics key to retail expansion

Thanks to relative political stability and strong oil and gas prices, Russia’s retail turnover more than quintupled from 2001 to 2011 and now exceeds US$600 billion annually. Data suggest that this sector is entering the steepest part of its growth curve. How will Russia’s retailers face the challenges of this critical period of expansion? Will foreign retailers manage to get a slice of this growing pie?

Russia’s enormous size and level of economic development mean that the retail market is currently divided among many players. While large retail chains dwarf the majority of competitors in market capitalization, their market share is relatively small. The X5 Retail Group, the largest food retailer, for example, controls only 5.6% of the market, and the top 10 food retailers comprise less than 20% of the market. This is in stark contrast to the developed markets of Western Europe, where leading food retailers hold a quarter of the market or more e.g., Tesco (30% market share) in the U.K. and Edeka (26% market share) in Germany.

This opportunity for consolidation is fueling a pitched battle among Russia’s retail chains to establish regional and national market share. Which chain prevails as top dog will depend on how well it can confront the logistical challenges of the country’s decaying infrastructure, responsibly manage expansion and successfully navigate an uncertain regulatory environment.

Russia’s road network stands at 610,000 miles, of which only 482,000 miles are paved. (In comparison, the U.S. has four million miles of roads, of which 2.7 million are paved.)

In addition, there is a lack of quality warehousing in the country. Colliers International reported that there are 81 million square feet of industrial space in all of Russia, while the Chicago market alone houses 537 million square feet, according to real estate service firm Newmark.

All the leaders in Russia’s retail sphere are rapidly modernizing their logistical operations. Retail chain Magnit is currently recognized as the cutting-edge logistics innovator. As a result, it is rapidly closing in on X5’s lead as Russia’s largest retailer in terms of revenues. Its profits more than doubled in the first half of 2012 compared to the previous year, while X5’s profits over the same period dropped 20.6%. X5 appears to be playing catch-up in logistics. During this period, its margins were hit by the high costs of opening a new distribution center and the set-up costs related to adopting a direct-import model.

Magnit’s main advantage over its competitors has been its effectiveness in bringing the supply chain completely in-house and cutting out the middle men who previously added costs and delays. Today, Magnit runs a fully independent supply chain, with over 3,900 of its own vehicles and a proprietary network of 15 distribution centers totaling close to 3.9 million square feet. It continues to expand this network, opening a new facility in late December 2012 to serve the Volga region and Ural region.

The Russian retail market is heavily saturated, and barriers to entry are high. The two foreign chains that have found success have one thing in common: They struck when the iron was hot. German retailer Metro and the French chain Auchan entered the Russian market in the early 2000s, before competitors became well-established. Of the top-10 leading food retailers, Metro and Auchan have been the only non-Russian firms to command a leading position in the retail sector.

Walmart is looking at a second attempt to access this market, having recently hired former X5 CEO Lev Khasis and appointing him senior vice president for international operations. Khasis was key in positioning X5 as the Russian market leader and grew the company to annual revenues of US$15 billion. He will likely be the strategic player for Walmart’s eventual entrance into the sector.

Source: www.freshplaza.com

Second Metro Cash&Carry in Voronezh

Metro Group is planning to open the second Metro mall in Voronezh region.

The second Metro mall may be built by the frist quarter of 2014.

Oksana Tokareva, director of corporate and external communications of Metro Group, explained that in Russia the average investment into the building of a Metro Cash&Carry mall is about 20 billion euro.

Source: www.retailer.ru

Russian retail may face another merger soon

The German Metro Group has put on hold negotiations on sale of Real hypermarkets chain, but may resume them after resignation of its Head Eckhard Cordes. Among the companies interested in acquisition of Metro active assets, including 16 stores in Russia, is the French Auchan, running 46 hypermarkets in Russia.

As per Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) Metro Group has put on hold sale of the Real chain (424 stores in Germany, Poland, Russia etc.). Metro confirmed that at the moment there are no active negotiations.ail

Source: www.retail.ru