Bloomberg
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. agreed to buy e-commerce startup Jet.com Inc. for about $3.3 billion and put founder Marc Lore in charge of the combined company’s online operations, marking the retail giant’s strongest bid yet to compete with e-commerce leader Amazon.com Inc. The deal includes $3 billion in cash and $300 million in shares that will be paid over time, the world’s largest retailer said Monday in a statement. With Lore taking over all of Wal-Mart’s online business, the retailer’s current head of e-commerce, Neil Ashe, will step down.
The move is Wal-Mart’s biggest attempt to date to chase down Amazon, which has dominated e-commerce in much the same way that Wal-Mart has ruled brick-and-mortar retail.
Wal-Mart had spent billions expanding its online operation, including
hiring thousands of workers, opening two offices in Silicon Valley, and building large e-commerce distribution centers. It also started a subscription service similar to Amazon Prime, at half the price, but still trails the e-commerce behemoth in online sales. Jet.com gives Wal-Mart a website
that achieved a $1 billion gross merchandise run rate in a little more
than a year and is adding 400,000 shoppers monthly.
“Wal-Mart has definitely put its stake in the ground saying, ‘We’re going to be winning in e-commerce,’” said Joseph Feldman, an analyst at Telsey Advisory Group. “Amazon should be concerned about what Wal-Mart is doing.â€
Shares of Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart fell 0.6 percent to $73.35 at 2:56 p.m. in New York. The stock had gained 20 percent this year through the end of last week. Seattle-based Amazon slipped 0.1 percent to $765.01.
GAIN SHARING
Jet.com has distinguished itself in e-commerce through “gain sharing,†luring buyers to add items to their orders to reduce shipping costs, and to pay with debit instead of credit cards to reduce transaction fees. Traditional store-based mass retailers such as Wal-Mart, Target Corp. and Costco Wholesale Corp. have been struggling to fend off Amazon’s momentum in online shopping.
The deal gives Wal-Mart control over Jet.com’s proprietary technology and its customer database. Wal-Mart’s online sales were about $14 billion last year, 14 percent of Amazon’s product and service revenues of $99 billion. Wal-Mart Chief Executive Officer Doug McMillon said last month that the company’s online operation has taken too long to grow. Wal-Mart and Hoboken, New Jersey-based Jet will maintain distinct brands, with Wal-Mart focusing on its strategy of offering goods at low prices every day, the companies said. Jet will continue providing a more “curated†assortment of products through a more unique customer experience.
The acquisition of Jet.com is Wal-Mart’s largest ever deal in the U.S. and marks a shift in tactics for the retailer, which has typically built operations from within over its history. Wal-Mart is betting that if anyone can help it catch up to Amazon, it’s Jet.com founder Lore.