French group Carrefour, second largest retailer in the world after Walmart, is getting ready to open stores in India, it is learnt.
The company is engaged in talks with potential partners, including Kishore Biyani’s Future group, with which it was close to inking a deal a little more than two years earlier, a source said.
Another person in the know said Carrefour had recently held discussion with the K Raheja Corp-owned Hypercity, a subsidiary of Shoppers Stop Ltd, for a possible alliance.
In multi-brand retailing, a foreign chain cannot hold more than 51 per cent stake. Currently, Carrefour operates five cash and carry or wholesale outlets in India.
This is a category where up to 100 per cent foreign investment is allowed.
Carrefour is likely to move forward with an application to invest in multi-brand retail stores in India, depending on how the government responds to the application of UK-based Tesco.
Earlier this week, Tesco sent a proposal to the government to invest $110 million in Tata Group’s Trent and run multi-brand stores in Karnataka and Maharashtra.
The Foreign Investment Promotion Board might take up the Tesco-Trent proposal by the end of this month.
Responding to a Business Standard questionnaire on whether the French chain was preparing to file an application for multi-brand retailing in India and if it was partnering the Future group, the largest retailer of the country by revenue, a Carrefour spokesperson said, “At this point of time, we will not be able to comment on anything.”
A Future group spokesperson said, “We don’t