Trent is restructuring its business.
The retail arm of the Tatas is closing stores in its loss-making value fashion format, Fashion Yatra, and is reworking its operations in Sisley brand.
According to two persons aware of the developments, Trent has closed some stores of Fashion Yatra and converted these into stores of its popular department store, Westside.
The company is also reviewing its five-year-old franchisee agreement with Benetton for Sisley, according to a senior executive.
"There would be changes in how the stores are run, what kind of people will manage the stores and the margins to be shared between and others," the executive said.
"Basically, both will work to bring shoppers back to the stores."
The agreement Trent (which runs eight stores of Sisley) has with Benetton is coming to an end by this March, according to Trent's 2010-11 annual report.
"We have an equal joint venture with Zara," said a senior executive with the Tatas.
"We have signed another agreement with Inditex group to bring Massimo Dutti here. We will focus on bigger businesses and exit from smaller, loss-making ventures."
Trent runs 61 Westside department stores and a dozen hypermarkets under the Star Bazaar brand.
It also runs Landmark book-stores and stores of Spanish brand Zara.
The company plans to hit the 100-store mark in Westside in the next four years.
It want to take the Star Bazaar count to 50 in the next couple years, which will help it to achieve scale and profitability.
A Trent spokesperson said the firm was continuing its pact with Benetton for Sisley, but there would be a "substantial restructuring" in the operations.
"We are winding down Fashion Yatra within this financial year depending on a store-to-store basis. We are not converting them into Westside stores," he added.
A mail Business Standard sent to the Benetton group elicited no response.
It was in September 2007 that Trent was appointed as the master franchisee for the Benetton Group's Sisley for five years.
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As per the undestanding, Trent was supposed to set up 20 to 30 stores in eight major cities in India, apart from running three Sisley stores existing in the country.
Trent had plans to invest around Rs 50 crore (Rs 500 million) in the business in the next five years.
Though Sisley was targeted at the luxury goods shoppers, it faced challenges owing to high import duties, fierce competition from other brands and changing consumer preferences, according to retail consultants.
Trent vice-chairman Noel N Tata said the entity had difficulty in matching the Sisley supply chain to customer demand and, in particular, the opening of stores.