Nation Correspondent, London
Giant
US supermarket Walmart is having difficulties entering the Kenyan
market. Competition for a slice of Kenyan retail “is so fierce that
Walmart is already locked out of Nairobi’s next two big mall
developments,” the Hub and Two Rivers Lifestyle Centre, a report in
UK-based Financial Times has said.
“We should have been
here a while ago but we just couldn’t get the deal right —
unfortunately it’s taken us too long,” says Mr Mark Turner, marketing
director at Massmart, the South African group in which Walmart bought a
controlling stake in 2011.
Walmart, through its Game
franchise has an outlet in Garden City on Thika Road but it will be
dwarfed by new malls, one of which, Two Rivers will be the biggest in
sub-Saharan Africa. The target market is Kenya’s growing middle class,
who have been growing to an estimated 350 million people across
sub-Saharan Africa.
“The middle class in Kenya is
growing. It’s more appealing, it’s more sophisticated and it’s ready for
formal retail,” said Mr Turner.
But competition is fierce, with French retail chain Carrefour and local supermarket giant Nakumatt offering rivalry to Walmart.
But competition is fierce, with French retail chain Carrefour and local supermarket giant Nakumatt offering rivalry to Walmart.
ANCHOR TENANT
In
both the new malls, Carrefour, the world’s second-largest retailer,
will be the anchor tenant. All the malls are likely to have a far
greater security following the 2013 terrorist attack on Westgate mall.
The
FT says that Walmart’s move into Kenya “highlights the sea change in
the continent, as a nascent consumer class expands and draws in foreign
investors, who had previously overlooked the African middle class.”
“Although
Kenya is richly coveted by retailers and the foreign investors who back
them, entry into the sector is notoriously difficult, thanks to a
series of tightly held family-owned supermarket chains and a dearth of
affordable space,” says the report.
Walmart spent years
trying to buy Naivas, Kenya’s fourth-biggest chain, before shareholder
wrangling saw family members sue each other, putting a stop to the deal
last year.
Walmart prefers greenfield retail space,
and its presence in Garden City, which was designed by the same team
that created west London’s Westfield shopping centre is a result of a
$250 million development from private equity house Actis, which has a 60
per cent stake, along with CDC, the UK’s development arm, with 31 per
cent, and the World Bank’s IFC.
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