US retail giant Walmart is learnt to be in talks with Sunil Mittal-led Bharti group to explore ways to exit the six-year-old 50:50 joint venture in cash-and-carry (wholesale) business.
This could mean an end to the talks for a possible partnership between the two firms in the multi-brand retail space -- less than a year after 51 per cent foreign investment was allowed in the sector.
A corporate lawyer close to the development said the American retailer was discussing the sale of its equity in the JV with Bharti.
According to him, buyback of Walmart shares by Bharti was imminent.
“Walmart is not happy with the way the JV is progressing,” he said.
According to a source in the know, the ongoing Enforcement Directorate probe into Walmart’s $100-million March 2010 investment in buying compulsory convertible debentures in Cedar Support Service, a company owned by Bharti Enterprises that controlled Bharti Retail, is seen as the biggest hurdle for the JV.
Walmart’s investment in Cedar is being investigated for alleged violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, as FDI in multi-brand retail was not allowed in 2010.
Without getting a clean chit on the ED probe, it’s tough for the Walmart-Bharti JV to proceed, it is believed.
Replying to a Business Standard questionnaire, a Walmart India spokesperson said: “We’ve made no announcements and don’t comment on rumours or speculation.”
She added India was an important market for Walmart, “and we continue to study the implications of the new FDI policy on our business”.
The spokesperson was replying to specific questions on whether Walmart was talking to Bharti to exit the cash-and-carry JV and if the two had decided to part ways in multi-brand retail, too.
A Bharti group spokesperson said: “The company does not comment on speculation.” Group chairman Sunil Mittal did not reply to a text message sent to him.
A person familiar with the workings at the organisation pointed to the top changes at both Bharti Retail and Walmart India as indicative of things to come.
The strength of Ramnik Narsey, who was recently named the interim chief of Walmart India, replacing Raj Jain, is finance, and not operations. Even Viresh Dayal, who has been running the show at Bharti Retail after COO Mitch Slape returned to Walmart US, is a commercial/finance person.
“That may be a sign of battle lines being drawn. Perhaps, the talk is more on valuation, returns and sale, rather than on expanding the business and opening stores,” he said.
In fact, the Bharti-Walmart cash-and-carry JV, branded as ‘best price modern wholesale’, has not opened even a single outlet in 2013.
It has 20 stores across the country and was running losses pegged at Rs 372 crore (Rs 3.72 billion) as of December 2012.
Bharti group’s retail venture EasyDay, to which Walmart gives back-end