王先庆:韩国乐天百货收购中国零售商控股权
(2011-08-19 08:39:46)
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韩国wal-mart乐天控股权王先庆育儿 |
South Korean
retail chain Lotte Mart has denied reports that it intends to move
its headquarters to China.
Kim Min-suk, a company spokesperson, told the Global Times Thursday
the company had no such plans.
There have been media reports that Lotte Mart Chief Executive Noh
Byung-yong expressed his desire for a potential move to China in a
recent meeting with company officials.
"The CEO may
have wanted to emphasize the growing importance of the overseas
market, and we do see the potential of the market in China," Kim
said.
Lotte Mart has 107 overseas stores, with 82 in China, 23 in
Indonesia and two in Vietnam.
The company's overseas sales last year were 2.6 trillion won ($2.4
billion), with its sales up to 1.7 trillion won in China, compared
to its domestic sales of 5.9 trillion won. "So there is still great
potential in the Chinese market," said Kim.
"It is understandable that overseas companies have seen the great
potential of the Chinese market. The retail business in South Korea
has kind of stalled in recent years," Wang Xianqing, director of the Institute of Economics
with the Guangdong University of Business Studies,
told the Global Times Thursday.
Wang said Lotte aimed to expand its market share overseas to gain
more profit, but rather than being a hostile move, it could be
beneficial in terms of contributing to optimum competition in the
retail market in China. He also said it would not influence
domestic retail companies strongly.
"It will still take time for Lotte to gain market share in China,
and the situation currently with the retail business will not be
changed in a short time," Cui Xingfang, a retail industry analyst
with Beijing Shangpu Information Consult Co, told the Global Times
Thursday.
Cui said Chinese consumers are sensitive to prices. The foreign
supermarkets may have a better environment but their prices are
usually higher when they first enter the Chinese market.
"So they have to maintain their own characteristics while standing
in the Chinese market," Cui noted.
Retail chain giants Carrefour and Wal-Mart both failed with their
ventures in South Korea.
French retail group Carrefour sold its South Korean stores in 2006
to the local fashion retailer E-Land for 1.75 trillion won. Less
than a month later, Wal-Mart sold its 16 Korean stores to the
country's biggest discount chain, Shinsegae.
Park Gayoung contributed to the story
来源:Korean retailer eager to expand overseas sales

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