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Jio Mart Amul Ghee

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Earthomaya Pure & Organic Aloevera Ghee & A2 Cow Ghee Manufacturer

Earthomaya is producing a different type of herbal ghee that includes Aloe vera ghee, A2 Desi Cow ghee which helps people to live a healthy life. Earthomaya Ghee is a rich source of vitamins, antioxidants, and healthy fats. While fat should be consumed in moderation, studies show that eating fatty foods such as ghee can help the body absorb some essential vitamins and minerals.

Website at https://www.jiomart.com/images/product/original/490001521/amul-pure-ghee-1-l-tin-0-20210716.jpg

Amul Pure Ghee 1 L (Tin)
Ghee is a class of clarified butter that originated in ancient India. It is commonly used in Indian cooking. Amul Pure Ghee can be swapped for vegetable oil or coconut oil in baked goods or can be used for sautéing and deep-frying. Or simply melt it and spread it on roti, or pour it on vegetables/dal before serving. So go ahead and buy this product online today!

Manufactured By:
Bhavnagar Distric Co-Operative Milk Products Union Ltd. Sarvottam Dairy At. Sihot. Bhavnagar, Rajkot Road. Dist Bhavnagar - 364240 India

Customer Care Number & Email:
18002583333 customercare@amul.coop

SEE MORE
Features & Details
Can be consumed directly or can be swapped for oil/butter
Product Information
Brand Amul
Manufacturer GCMMF Limited
Country of Origin India
Food Type

Disclaimer:
Despite our attempts to provide you with the most accurate information possible, the actual packaging, ingredients and colour of the product may sometimes vary. Please read the label, directions and warnings carefully before use.

ERROR: The request could not be satisfied

"The request could not be satisfied. Request Blocked" is an error from the client. This error can occur due to AWS Web Application Firewall (AWS WAF) rules associated with the CloudFront distribution. To troubleshoot this error, first check the AWS WAF default action that is set on the associated web access control list (web ACL). Then, try the following troubleshooting steps based on the default action:

If the default action is set to Allow
If the default action is set to Allow, then the request that returns the "Request Blocked" error likely matches a rule that has Action set to Block.

To resolve the error when the default action is Allow, follow these steps:

Review requests to be sure that they don't match the conditions for any AWS WAF rules with Action set to Block.
If valid requests match the conditions for a rule that blocks requests, update the rule to allow the requests.
If the default action is set to Block
If the default action is set to Block, then AWS WAF blocks requests in the following scenarios:

The request matches the conditions of a rule that has Action set to Block.
The request doesn't match the conditions of any rule that has Action set to Allow.
To resolve the error when the default action is Block, follow these steps:

Review requests to be sure that they match the conditions for any AWS WAF rules with Action set to Allow.
If valid requests don't match any existing rules that allow requests, create a rule that allows the requests.
Note: To troubleshoot further, you can use the AWS WAF console to review a sample of requests that match the rule that might be causing the "Request Blocked" error. For more information, see Viewing a sample of web requests.

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JioMart WhatsApp Ordering Service Launched: How to Order Groceries? | Zingoy Blog

JioMart Whatsapp online ordering service is live. Now you can book your essential items and groceries in your nearbuy areas through JioMart.

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4 June 2021 1
Retail
Grocery Retail - Changing landscape
Competition in the Online Grocery space coming to the forefront
Unlike most other Retail categories, Grocery has remained largely insulated from the
Online disruption. However, the prominence of Online players and their growing scale in
the last few years makes us sit up and take notice. In this report, we discuss the growing
scale of Online players, market opportunity, challenges, evolving business models, and the
competitive position of offline retailers.
e-Grocers turn sizeable, no more minnows
Historically, e-Grocery hardly garnered single-digit share of the overall grocery market
in India and globally, with multiple players trying to make inroads with limited success.
In the last few years, the growth of e-Grocery players have certainly made us sit up
and take notice. While penetration remains low, the online grocery market has grown
30x in the last 7-8 years to reach USD3b. Viewed differently, it is cumulatively the
third largest Modern Retail player in the market behind DMart and Reliance Retail.
This space is now expected to grow over 59% CAGR to USD18b by CY24E. India has
154m online transacting households in CY20, with 130m already using e-Grocery
platforms or willing to try, creating an addressable market of a whopping USD293b. Of
this, ~55% of the addressable market lies beyond Tier II cities, so e-Grocers will
increasingly move to smaller towns, a region that has low coverage so far. COVID-19
led lockdown has certainly helped e-Grocers, with CY20 monthly exit run-rate almost
2x that of Jan’20 GMV and largely sustaining the surge seen during the lockdown as
evident from our app visit analytics. Over this period, Big Basket/Grofers witnessed a
4x/3x surge in daily orders, with a steady rise in AOVs.
Value v/s convenience buyer – a key driver of profitability
In India, a large (65%) quantum of the e-Grocery addressable households are price
sensitive (low gross margin) value first customers (average income of 0.3-0.6m p.a),
prioritizing discounts over limited variety, longer waiting time, or an inconvenient
experience. This is against the higher margin convenience first customers (average
income of 1.2-1.4m), who prioritize a shopping experience and prefer purchasing
from a wider product assortment/availability in one place and lesser crowds/waiting
time. Unit economics of value first customers appear promising with key
determinants of profitability like bulk purchases, higher private labels, low delivery
cost, and customer stickiness. e-Grocers increasingly target them to drive
profitability as in the case with modern retailers.
Logistic cost and inventory management remain a key hurdle; needs a
differentiated approach to tackle
The Grocery market has been historically dogged down by wafer thin (15-20%) gross
margins, higher (20-25%) logistics cost, and complex inventory management, making
it difficult to achieve sustainable profits and compete with the traditional
retail/distribution channel, which operates on 15% cumulative margin in the value
Sector Update | 4 June 2021
Retail
Research Analyst: Aliasgar Shakir (Aliasgar.Shakir@motilaloswal.com)
Suhel Shaikh (Suhel.Ahmad@MotilalOswal.com)
Investors are advised to refer through important disclosures made at the last page of the Research Report.
Motilal Oswal research is available on www.motilaloswal.com/Institutional-Equities, Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, Factset and S&P Capital.
Motilal Oswal values your support in
the Asiamoney Brokers Poll 2021 for
India Research, Sales, Corporate Access
and Trading team.
We request your ballot.
4 June 2021 2
Retail
chain. But the path to scale and profitability, with multiple levers and a stronger
balance sheet, is now becoming clearer for e-Grocers. These players have started
targeting bulk purchase to leverage cost, limit assortment (thus aiding inventory
control), pushing margin accretive private labels, saving acquisition cost due to
customer stickiness, and charging delivery cost below a threshold of AOV (average
order value), thus creating a favorable equation of higher gross margins and
reducing cost/order. Our channel checks suggest Big Basket and Grofers have taken
a more rational approach, pushing 30-40% private labels in the overall mix, higher
AOV, and limiting discounts, which has led to the recent improvement in
profitability. The one-year old JioMart has kept delivery free without any minimum
AOV threshold, while Flipkart/Amazon has targeted a wider network of cities to
push revenue growth. In terms of price competitiveness, JioMart is the lowest price
player, followed by DMart Ready. Our app visit analytics suggest that JioMart/Big
Basket/Grofers enjoys higher app visits, while Dunzo/JioMart enjoys the lowest
bounce rate, implying more page visits.
Multiple players with varied models taking a shot
Multiple platforms are disrupting the grocery space with innovative models. These
are: a) e-Grocery specialists, along with early morning meat and dairy specialists
that enjoy higher customer recall, b) market place players leveraging deep customer
analytics and offering quick deliveries to a wide network of locations, and c) offline
retailers who have started venturing into omnichannel offerings in select locations.
These retailers operate through differentiated models to achieve scale and
profitability: a) inventory model, which allows them to control the quality and price,
but has higher logistics cost, b) hyperlocal model, which is increasingly seeing higher
acceptance by many e-grocers, with back-end inventory control to address faster
turnaround and logistics cost, and c) hybrid model that leverages their own stores to
provide a smoother last-mile delivery. With increasing scale, we see a foolproof
integrated approach, which will enhance profitability.
Brick and mortar stores have a cost advantage, but consumer convenience
will soon compel them
The fear of online grocery retailers is turning real as a majority of e-Grocery growth
has predominantly come from regions, which is the key market of modern retailers.
Offline retailers presently hold an edge due to varied factors like DMart’s ownership
model and cost competency. Rent though 5-7% of sales, makes up nearly one-third
of gross margin. Despite the high capital intensive model, it creates a strong cost
competency, which drives productivity and scale. Similarly, Reliance Retail’s edge
lies in its deep store network, its evolving hyperlocal model, and backward
integrated B2B Grocery model, which, when combined, could certainly provide a
logistics edge. However, our case study explains on e-Grocers explains higher private
labels, lower customer acquisition, supply chain and marketing cost has enabled
them to turn profitable. As the customer is gradually being habituated to online
grocery shopping, it is imperative to build an omnichannel network to ensure
business continues to meet customer requirements.
Expect share of Private labels to touch
45% for e-Grocery players in CY22E
Source: Online private label growth
paradigm CY20, MOFSL
Transportation cost could increase to 28%
of order value
Source: e-commerce retail
logistics – May’18, MOFSL
App traction of e-Grocery players
Countries Online penetration
India 0.3%
China 6%
UK 4%
US 8%
Majority of Online sales are from the
metros (%)
Source: RedSeer and Big Basket
4 June 2021 3
Retail
Valuation and view
DMart
We expect DMart to deliver FY20-23E revenue/EBITDA CAGR of 23%/21%, factoring
in -5%/50% SSSG (two-year SSG over the low base of FY21) and 30/40 store
additions in FY22E/FY23E. Its continued cost/price competitiveness should hold the
company in good stead. However, a) growing scale of Online retailers, and b)
potential moderation in growth and return profile may restrict a re-rating. We value
DMart at a 20% discount to its three-year average EV/EBITDA multiple of 58x on a
FY23E basis, valuing it at INR2,850, implying a 8% downside. Retain Neutral.
Reliance Retail Ventures (RRVL)
RRVL has maintained its strong performance in the last five years. The recent fund
raise of INR377b would further strengthen its physical and online presence. We
expect 19% revenue/EBITDA CAGR each over FY20-23E to touch INR2.2t/INR166b by
FY23E. We value the company on a SoTP basis, valuing its core business at 31x FY23E
EV/EBITDA and connectivity business at 4x FY23E EV/EBITDA to arrive at our TP of
INR745, implying INR670 (for its 90% stake). Our premium valuation multiple
captures the opportunity for rapid expansion in its Retail business and the
aggressive rollout of the JioMart platform.
e-Grocery addressable wallet by
category
Source: RedSeer report
4 June 2021 4
Retail
Story in Charts
Exhibit 1: Modern Retail/Online to contribute 7.3%/2.8% of total F&G market in
CY25E
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 2: Key formats in Organized Retail stores
Format Hypermarkets Hybrid supermarkets Modern convenience stores
Average store size  30,000-60,000 sq. ft.  10,000-25,000 sq. ft.  1,500-3,000 sq. ft.
Focus category mix  F&G: 30-35%
Non-Food FMCG: 15-20%
General merchandise: 10-14%
Apparel: 20-25%
Furniture and Furnishing:
2-6%
 F&G: 45-50%
Non-Food FMCG: 20-25%
General merchandise:
10-15%
Others: 10-25%
 F&G: 65-70%
Non-Food FMCG: 20-25%
General merchandise: 5-10%
Key
differentiating
factors
 Destination format for
planned visits
 Emphasis on shopping
experience and a wide
variety of products
 Smaller than
hypermarkets in terms of
retail space and category
mix
 Similar to supermarkets, but the
focus is more on fast moving
products with
emphasis on neighborhood
requirements
 Have low inventory levels as
compared to supermarkets
Key players  Big Bazaar, Spencer’s, etc.  DMart, Q Mart, Spencer’s,
Star, Reliance Fresh, Food
Bazaar, etc.
 Easy Day, Heritage, Nilgiris, M.K.
Retail, Ratandeep and other regional
players
Source: MOFSL
Exhibit 3: e-Grocery household segment details
Particulars Value first households Convenience first households
Average annual
income (USD)
7,000 16,000
Key grocery purchase
priorities
Lowest prices Wide assortment/variety of options
Discounts Availability of desired products in one
place
Cash backs/offers Emergency/unplanned needs
Sale events Low waiting time
Good returns/exchange policy Quality/hygiene
Quality/hygiene Exotic options
Customer support service
Purchase behavior Buy groceries in bulk and at times
defer purchases to get best-priced
products
Prefer to top up basket as per needs,
and purchase from places where
desired assortment is available
without any hassle
Source: RedSeer report
96.5% 94.9%
89.9%
3.4% 4.8%
7.3%
0.3% 2.8%
2016 2019 2025E
Traditional retail Modern retail Online
USD295b
USD5b
USD577b
USD24b
USD2b
USD722b
USD50b
USD18b
4 June 2021 5
Retail
Story in Charts
Exhibit 4: e-Grocery market trend in CY20
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 5: App traction of e-Grocery players
Company Visits in Mar’21 (m) Average visit duration Pages per visit Bounce rate
Big Basket 7.15 3.22 4.99 64.2%
Grofers 1.85 4.22 5.44 53.5%
JioMart 7.8 2.09 8.36 42.1%
Supr Daily 0.1 4.01 3.72 62.6%
Licious 0.89 2.52 4.01 54.8%
Dunzo 0.3 4.01 4.79 46.4%
Nature’s Basket 0.25 2.35 2.88 59.5%
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 6: Detailed working on logistic cost (assuming AOV OF INR1,300)
Source: e-commerce retail logistics – May’18, MOFSL
Forward Logistic (FLC)
Cost = INR130
(10% of order value)
Cash on delivery (COD)
Cost = INR65
(50% of FWC)
Opted for COD
Cost = INR195
(INR130+65)
Return logistic
Cost = INR169
(~30% higher than
FWL)
Opted
Cost = INR364
(INR130+65+169)
Not opted
Cost = INR195
Not opted for
COD
Cost = INR130
Return logistic
Cost = INR169
(~30% higher
than FWL)
Opted
Cost = INR299
(INR130+169)
Not opted
Cost = INR130
4 June 2021 6
Retail
Evolving models for Grocery retailing
Huge opportunity to scale up
e-commerce market to exceed USD18b in CY24E
The USD600b Indian Food and Grocery (F&G) retailing market has historically seen
limited (a mere 1%) penetration from e-commerce players in India. This is in line
with global markets like China/the UK/the US, which also have single-digit ecommerce contribution (a mere 6%/8%/4%). The e-commerce market in most other
retail categories like Consumer Durables, Mobile Phones, and even Fashion and
Lifestyle has grown exponentially. In the last few years, given the scale of the
market opportunity and low base, Online Grocery players have adopted innovative
models to penetrate the F&G market. This has resulted in the Online F&G market
growing 30x in the last 7-8 years to ~USD3b in FY20. Seen differently, the combined
revenue of Online F&G players (viz. Big Basket, Grofers, JioMart, Amazon, and
Flipkart) has become the third largest Modern Retail player (~INR3b in FY20) after
DMart and RRVL. The same is expected to grow by 59% CAGR over CY19-24E to
USD18b.
Modern Retail v/s e-commerce scale
The first wave of disruption in the traditional Grocery space was led by Modern
Retail. But despite its evolution since the last two decades, it is merely 5% of total
Grocery spends in India. Contrary to this, the same in US/UK/China stands at
92%/94%/57% of the total F&G market. This is because Modern Retail has
predominantly grown in metro and Tier I cities because of multiple operational
challenges like higher operating cost, lower gross margin, lack of skilled manpower,
regional/local limitation, and the mighty scale of India’s Grocery Retail market.
Overall market size
The Indian F&G retailing market (estimated to be 60-65% of the total Retail market)
has seen strong interest from domestic and global players in recent times. Growing
at ~12% CAGR over the last 8-10 years, the market has been historically dominated
by the traditional retail channel, which constitutes 96% of the market. Organized
retail has grown at 31% CAGR to USD24b, with just 4% penetration, offering huge
scope to large Modern Retail and online players. Over the next 4-5 years,
Modern/Online Retail is expected to garner 16%/59% CAGR to USD50b/USD18b,
increasing its share to 8-9% of the total F&G market.
4 June 2021 7
Retail
Exhibit 7: Modern Retail/Online to contribute 7.3%/2.8% of total F&G market in
CY25E
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 8: Key formats in Organized Retail stores
Format Hypermarkets Hybrid supermarkets Modern convenience stores
Average store size  30,000-60,000 sq. ft.  10,000-25,000 sq. ft.  1,500-3,000 sq. ft.
Focus category mix  F&G: 30-35%
Non-Food FMCG: 15-20%
General merchandise: 10-14%
Apparel: 20-25%
Furniture and Furnishing:
2-6%
 F&G: 45-50%
Non-Food FMCG: 20-25%
General merchandise:
10-15%
Others: 10-25%
 F&G: 65-70%
Non-Food FMCG: 20-25%
General merchandise: 5-10%
Key
differentiating
factors
 Destination format for
planned visits
 Emphasis on shopping
experience and a wide
variety of products
 Smaller than
hypermarkets in terms of
retail space and category
mix
 Similar to supermarkets, but the
focus is more on fast moving
products with
emphasis on neighborhood
requirements
 Have low inventory levels as
compared to supermarkets
Key players  Big Bazaar, Spencer’s, etc.  DMart, Q Mart, Spencer’s,
Star, Reliance Fresh, Food
Bazaar, etc.
 Easy Day, Heritage, Nilgiris, M.K.
Retail, Ratandeep and other regional
players
Source: MOFSL
Exhibit 9: Region-wise presence of RRVL’s stores
Geographic Region Grocery stores
North 108
South 337
West 261
East 91
Total 797
Source: Company
Exhibit 10: Scale of Modern Grocery retailers
Company Stores Presence in cities
RRVL 797 Over 180
DMart 234 70
FRL (acquired by RRVL) 1350 400
Spencer’s Retail (including
Nature’s Basket) 191 42
Star Bazaar 57 7
Source: Media articles, company
Exhibit 11: Scale of operations of e-Grocery players
Big Basket Grofers DMart Ready JioMart Amazon
Pantry
Particulars FY19 FY21E FY19 FY21E FY19 FY20 FY21E FY21E FY21E
Revenue (INR m) 23,810 1,19,005 836 99,645 1,436 3,540 59,400
Number of cities 35 27
Five (220
delivery
points)
200 300
Average basket size (INR) 1,482 1,820 550
Daily orders (’000s) 220 150 400 150
App downloads (m) 26 23 Over five Over 10
Source: Media articles, company, MOFSL
96.5% 94.9%
89.9%
3.4% 4.8%
7.3%
0.3% 2.8%
2016 2019 2025E
Traditional retail Modern retail Online
USD295b
USD5b
USD577b
USD24b
USD2b
USD722b
USD50b
USD18b
4 June 2021 8
Retail
Exhibit 12: Online penetration in the Grocery segment globally
Countries Online penetration
India 0.3%
China 6%
UK 4%
US 8%
Source: RedSeer report
An opportunity of 130m households
Out of 670m internet users in India, 400m use the internet actively (social media
and search engines). About 75% of active internet users are estimated to have
transacted online for service/products that translates into 154m online transacting
households in India in CY20. This has a potential to reach 233m by CY25, led by
internet penetration and increase in online transactions. Of these 154m, 130m have
already used e-Grocery platforms, or were aware/willing to try e-Grocery platforms,
creating an addressable market of USD293b against the current Online market size
of a mere USD3b. At present, majority of the e-Grocery market is concentrated in
metro/Tier I cities. However, nearly 55% of the addressable market lies in over Tier II
cities, which could expand to 61% in CY25.
Value v/s convenience buyer
e-Grocery households can be categorized as: a) value first, or b) convenience first
customers. Value first customers are conscious about pricing, discounts, and
return/exchange policies, while convenience first customers seek a wider product
basket in one place, lesser crowds/waiting time, and product quality/assortment. In
India, a much larger (65%) quantum of the e-Grocery addressable households are
value first. These value first households have lower income and therefore cannot
prioritize wider/exotic assortment and faster access. Hence, they prioritize, best
priced products under discount, cash back offers, and sales, even if there is limited
variety, longer waiting time, or an inconvenient experience.
Value first retailers have favorable unit economics
The huge addressable market underscores the opportunity, but it is difficult to run a
profitable operation sustainably, given the lower margin and high fixed cost nature
of the business. Convenience first customers typically generate higher margin given
their tendency to shop for higher-priced products, but they increase the cost of
doing business due to their requirement of wider product SKUs/basket, limited
crowding/waiting time, and better product quality/assortment. Against this, most of
the determinants of profitability – bulk purchase, assortment, private labels,
delivery cost, and stickiness – are in favor of value first households when compared
with convenience first households. Hence, the unit economics of serving a value first
household are very promising. An e-Grocery platform serving the value first
household could lose out on gross margin, given their nature of spending on low
price products, but it could offset the impact by: a) increasing share of private
labels, b) significant savings owing to an efficient supply chain as they are mostly
reliant on scheduled deliveries, and c) leverage costs with higher AOVs. The value
first addressable market should grow faster than the convenience first market over
the next five years.
4 June 2021 9
Retail
Exhibit 13: Majority of Online sales are from the metros (%)
Source: RedSeer and Big Basket
Exhibit 14: About 61% of the addressable wallet are from
value first customers (total: USD293b)
Source: RedSeer
Exhibit 15: e-Grocery household segment details
Particulars Value first households Convenience first households
Average annual
income (USD)
7,000 16,000
Key grocery purchase
priorities
Lowest prices Wide assortment/variety of options
Discounts Availability of desired products in one
place
Cash backs/offers Emergency/unplanned needs
Sale events Low waiting time
Good returns/exchange policy Quality/hygiene
Quality/hygiene Exotic options
Customer support service
Purchase behavior Buy groceries in bulk and at times
defer purchases to get best-priced
products
Prefer to top up basket as per needs,
and purchase from places where
desired assortment is available
without any hassle
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 16: e-Grocery addressable wallet by city type
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 17: e-Grocery addressable wallet by basket type
Source: RedSeer report
88%
11%
1%
Metro
Tier 1
Tier 2 180
113 Value first
Convenience first
42% 51%
58% 49%
Value first Convenience first
Metro/tier 1 Tier 2+
43%
27%
42%
57%
15% 16%
Value first Convenience first
Stock up Non-daily top up Daily top up
4 June 2021 10
Retail
Exhibit 18: e-Grocery addressable wallet by category
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 19: Profiles of value first customers
Particulars Housewife-led family Traditional budget
conscious family Young bachelors
Cohort (%) 50% 35% 15%
Age group 25-40 35-50 21-30
Annual household
income INR0.6-0.8m INR0.4-0.8m INR0.3-0.6m
Household size 3-5 3-5 1-3 (bachelors)
Living setup Married couple with young
kids, with or without parents
Married couple with parents,
with or without grown up kids Alone/flatmates
Cooking ownership Self Self Maid
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 20: Profiles of convenience first customers
Particulars Quality seekers Affluent foodies Young busy
couples
Cohort (%) 58% 22% 20%
Age group 30-40 Over 35 25-35
Annual household
income INR1.2-1.4m Over INR1.4m INR0.9-1.2m
Household size 3-5 4-6 2
Living setup Married couple with young
kids, with or without parents
Married couple with parents,
with or without grownup kids
Married couple
without kids
Cooking ownership Maid + self Maid + self Maid
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 21: e-Grocery household: Attribute comparison and impact on profitability
Particulars Value first
households
Convenience first
households Impact on profitability
Demand for lower
price/high discounts High Moderate Discounts reduce net income
Bulk purchase behavior High Moderate Bulk purchase increase AOV, which
reduce fulfillment cost/order
Assortment need Limited Very wide
Limited assortment offers a better
ability to negotiate margins with
brands
Private label openness High Moderate Private labels provide a high gross
margin
Fast delivery demand Low High Low fulfillment cost in scheduled
delivery v/s on demand
Stickiness to one platform Moderate - high Moderate - high High stickiness reduced marketing
spend
Source: RedSeer report
52% 47%
35%
32%
7%
12%
2% 5%
2% 2% 3% 1%
Value first Convenience first
Fresh Staples Packaged foods Beverages Home Care Personal Care
4 June 2021 11
Retail
Exhibit 22: Comparison of unit economics by household type and impact on profitability
Particulars Value first
households
Convenience first
households Impact on profitability
Commission/margins 15% 22%
High margins obtained from private
labels are passed on to value first
households, which reduces margin
Cashback (-) 2% (-) 2% Both households are interested in
discounts rather than cashbacks
Supply chain cost (-) 10% (-) 20%
Supply chain cost is high in the case
of convenience first households due
to on demand delivery with low
AOVs
Payment gateway cost (-) 1.5% (-) 1.5% Varies by platform
Marketing expense (-) 4% (-) 4% Varies by platform
Contribution margins (-) 2.5% (-) 5.5%
Source: RedSeer report
COVID-19 boosted Online Grocery sales
The COVID-19 led nationwide lockdown provided a much needed boost to Online
Grocery sales. It did to e-grocers what demonetization did for online payment
platforms. During the peak of COVID-19 in 2QCY20, panic led stocking by first-time
shoppers drove AOVs. The market reached 1.6x of Jan’20 GMV in Jun’20 and exited
CY20 with almost 2x Jan’20 GMV, largely sustaining the surge seen during the
lockdown. During this time, Big Basket/Grofers witnessed 4x/3x daily orders of preCOVID times at 300k/190k. AOV saw a 15%/25% jump to INR1,500/INR1,820.
Players saw higher customer retention, which shifted the base upwards in average
daily orders for Big Basket/Grofers to 220k/150k. A number of new players entered
the e-Grocery space during the ensuing COVID-led lockdown in CY20. For instance,
Swiggy and Dunzo expanded into e-Grocery and JioMart launched its e-Grocery
business in May’20. Amazon Pantry expanded to over 300 cities in Jun’20. This has
widened the reach of e-Grocery players.
e-Grocery players registered enormous growth in comfort/health food and hygiene
products owing to the shift in consumer preference to a healthy lifestyle. The Snacks
and Branded Food segment registered 75% QoQ growth in 2QCY20 v/s 5% prior to
the COVID-19 outbreak. Within this, Biscuits and Cookies grew the highest. Similarly,
Beverages, mainly Tea and Fruit Juice, witnessed 50% growth in same period v/s 2%
prior to COVID-19 outbreak. Even Personal Care Products/Home Utilities grew
24%/11% v/s 5%/6% prior to COVID-19 outbreak.
Exhibit 23: Growth in e-Grocery segments prior to and during COVID-19
Source: Media articles, MOFSL
5%
75%
2%
50%
5%
24%
6% 11%
Growth during pre COVID Growth during COVID
Snacks and branded food Beverages Personal care products Home utilities
4 June 2021 12
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Exhibit 24: Average daily orders (INR) on Big Basket/Grofers
Source: Media articles, MOFSL
Exhibit 25: Daily order trend (k) on Big Basket/Grofers
Source: Media articles, MOFSL
Exhibit 26: e-Grocery market trend in CY20
Source: RedSeer report
1,300 1,450 1,500
1,820
Pre COVID During COVID
Big Basket Grofers
80
300
220
60
190 150
Pre COVID During COVID Post COVID
Big Basket Grofers
4 June 2021 13
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Competitive landscape
In order to tap the huge potential in the market and attract customers, multiple new
players have ramped up their Online Grocery business. The competitive intensity
has increased rapidly in recent times. Players are competing on two counts – pricing
(discount on delivery charges) and convenience (flexible delivery time, wider
product assortment, and delivery locations).
 Product pricing: Our channel checks indicate that JioMart is the lowest price
player, followed by DMart Ready – JioMart/DMart price points are 9%/4% lower
than Big Basket. For Staples and Food products, price points are 11%/8% lower.
In the case of HPC products, prices are 6% lower for JioMart, while other players
are offering similar prices. JioMart typically maintains a 7% off on MRP. On the
other hand, Big Basket’s product offering is at the highest level, which is
understandable as it caters to high-end customers in metros/Tier 1 cities, with a
wider product assortment and new categories, some of which are scarcely
available on other player’s shelves.
 Delivery charge/time: Online Grocery players incurs higher logistic cost, which is
traditionally passed on to customers for AOVs below a certain threshold. To
accelerate growth, Big Basket has initiated free delivery above INR1,200 AOV,
while Grofers/Amazon has a minimum order requirement of INR500/INR799.
DMart offers pick up points – ‘DMart Ready stores’ – for free delivery, with a
minimum threshold of INR1,000, while it charges 3% of the order value, or INR49
(whichever is higher), for home delivery. JioMart has the most aggressive
promotion, offering free delivery without any minimum delivery requirement to
boost the number of orders. In addition to delivery charges, players are offering
flexibility in delivery timelines to customers to attract convenience conscious
customers (viz., standard delivery and delivery in 1-2 days) and charge a
premium accordingly to increase profits.
 Product offerings: Players are offering various product categories to cater to
various kind of customers. Value players keep smaller SKUs with lower margins.
On the other hand, convenience focused players keep wider SKUs that offers
higher margins. As per our analysis, Big Basket has the widest SKUs, followed by
Grofers and Amazon – Big Basket/Grofers offer the widest product categories
that include eggs, chicken and meat products, and pet care products. Players are
leveraging private labels to create unique products and to increase repeat
purchases. New players, catering to niche product markets, are emerging such as
Licious that offers only chicken, meat, and egg products, while Milkbasket and
Supr Daily offers fixed morning deliveries of only dairy and bakery products.
 Delivery locations: To increase the scale of operations, players are looking to
expand their serviceable areas to Tier II/III cities, which have limited penetration
in the e-Grocery market. Marketplace players like Amazon/Flipkart are enjoying a
competitive edge as they could leverage their e-commerce capabilities to service
more areas. Apart from these, JioMart could also leverage its higher physical
presence to significantly increase its serviceable areas. Big Basket/Grofers are
present in comparatively lower numbers in metro/Tier I cities, while DMart has
restricted its online presence to a few metro cities, with limited serviceable
areas.
4 June 2021 14
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Exhibit 27: Product pricing of e-Grocery players (INR)
Food products Quantity JioMart DMart
Ready Big Basket Grofers Amazon
Pantry
Ashirwad Atta 10kg 369 369 369 369 394
Fortune Sunflower Oil 1ltr 799 825 871 821 819
Saffola Gold cooking oil 1ltr 151 145 155 139 122
Dawaat Biryani Basmati 1kg 165 165 179 165 170
Devaaya rice 5kg 399 375 463 399 386
India Gate Classic basmati 5kg 859 942 1,041 899 875
Toor dal (private label) 1kg 114 114 125 125 118
Masoor dal (private label) 500gm 47 48 56 56 55
Amul Cow Ghee pouch 1ltr 450 465 500 482 500
Amul Ghee pouch 1ltr 434 450 485 462 450
Gowardhan ghee Jar 1ltr 495 495 521 531 537
Branded Sugar 1kg 47 47 47 47 52
Amul Taaza tetra pack 1ltr 61 61 63 64 64
Brooke Bond Red Label 500gm 244 244 290 270 265
Tropicana Orange Juice 1ltr 73 79 95 110 120
Bournvita 750gm 255 265 269 287 286
Amul butter 500gm 225 225 235 230 225
Haldiram bhujia 1kg 168 170 214 170 215
Parle - G 800gm pack 59 62 59 69 59
Total 5,414 5,546 6,037 5,695 5,712
Surf Excel Easy Wash 4kg 355 399 462 366 390
Rin Detergent Powder 7kg 480 455 485 434 454
Arial Front Load 4kg 825 1015 825 900 1045
Vim Dishwash bar 200g
(Pack of three)
39 42 39 39 35
Lux soap 3150g 89 94 97 97 102
Dove Soap 3
100g 115 129 101 140 125
Pears Pure and Gentle soap 3*125 103 112 138 140 123
Clinic Plus Long and Health Shampoo 340ml 179 131 175 152 143
Head & Shoulder Cool Menthol shampoo 650ml 389 415 438 456 377
Parachute hair oil 1ltr 360 349 323 430 323
Bajaj Almond drops hair oil 500ml 243 262 246 238 246
Harpic Plus toilet cleaner 1ltr 148 157 153 152 156
Lizol Lavender floor cleaner 975ml 165 165 178 179 161
Colgate Dental Cream 500g 177 177 184 158 158
Colgate Max Fresh 300g 109 109 145 145 147
Total 3,776 4,011 3,989 4,026 3,985
Grand Total 9,190 9,557 10,026 9,721 9,697
Source: Company, MOFSL
Exhibit 28: Delivery charge of e-Grocery players
Company Price range Delivery charges
Big Basket
Over 1,200 0
600-1199 30-35
Less than 600 50
Grofers Over 250 0
Less than 250 49
DMart Ready
Minimum order is INR1,000. Free at DMart Ready pick up
points. Home delivery is chargeable at INR49, or 3% of the
order value, whichever is higher
JioMart 0
Amazon
Pantry
Over 799 0
Less than 799 59
Source: Company, MOFSL
4 June 2021 15
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Exhibit 29: Product offerings of e-Grocery players
Jio Mart DMart Ready Big Basket Grofers Amazon
Fruits and Vegetables Y Y Y Y Y
Dairy and Bakery Y Y Y Y Y
Staples Y Y Y Y Y
Packaged Foods Y Y Y Y Y
Beverages Y Y Y Y Y
Personal Care Y Y Y Y Y
Home Care Y Y Y Y Y
Baby Care Y Y Y Y Y
Kitchen Ware Y Y Y Y Y
Eggs N N Y Y Y
Chicken, Meat, and Fish N N Y Y N
Pet Care N N Y Y Y
Source: Company, MOFSL
App visit analytics: JioMart garners better traction
To gauge customer adoption of e-Grocery apps, we mapped the traction of apps
from Similarweb. Monthly data from Jul’20 to Mar’21 shows that app visits have
been lower from Jul’20 as the economy opened up with the lifting of the nationwide
lockdown, but it still remains strong. JioMart/Big Basket/Grofers enjoy higher app
visits owing to their higher popularity and wider presence, while other apps
garnered lower visits due to lesser serviceable areas and niche product offerings.
Grofers/Dunzo garnered the highest average duration per visit; while Dunzo/JioMart
enjoyed the lowest bounce rate, implying longer stays or more page visits on the
app.
Exhibit 30: App visit trend on JioMart
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 31: App traction of e-Grocery players
Company Visits in
Mar’21 (m)
Average visit
duration
Pages
per visit
Bounce
rate
Big Basket 7.15 3.22 4.99 64.2%
Grofers 1.85 4.22 5.44 53.5%
JioMart 7.8 2.09 8.36 42.1%
Supr Daily 0.1 4.01 3.72 62.6%
Licious 0.89 2.52 4.01 54.8%
Dunzo 0.3 4.01 4.79 46.4%
Nature’s
Basket 0.25 2.35 2.88 59.5%
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 32: Grofers’ app visit trend
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 33: Big Basket’s app visit trend (k)
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
11.3 12.3
9.45 10.4 9.75 9.5
8.2
7
7.8
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
JioMart (m)
2.65 2.7
1.95
2.25 2.05
1.7
2.05
1.6
1.85
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Grofers (m)
7.8
6.85
5.9 5.9 5.55 5.85 6.1 5.95
7.15
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Big Basket (m)
4 June 2021 16
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Exhibit 34: App visit trend for Nature’s Basket
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 35: Dunzo’s app visit trend (k)
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 36: Supr Daily’ app visit trend
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Exhibit 37: Licious’ app visit trend (k)
Source: Similarweb, MOFSL
Deep pocket players could change the industry standing
Despite its huge market potential, the e-Grocery space is getting crowded, as new
players with different operating models are entering this space. Currently, Big
Basket and Grofers are enjoying the highest market share. However, this could
change given the increased focus of e-commerce giants like Amazon/Flipkart in this
space and the recent entry of Indian Retail giant RRVL. Though
Amazon/Flipkart/RRVL are new to the e-Grocery business, they have already
ramped up significantly on the back of aggressive offerings, offline/online network,
and sufficient funds to bear losses in the near term.
RRVL, Amazon, Flipkart committed big money
RRVL has recently committed INR247b to acquire the retail assets of the Future
group, which would significantly enhance its Retail presence. This would increase its
Retail Grocery presence to 2,150 stores from 797 in FY20. Amazon, the US ecommerce giant, had invested USD6.5b in the Indian e-commerce market and is
currently increasing its focus on e-Grocery space, given its huge potential and higher
customer stickiness. Another US retail giant Walmart acquired 77% stake in Flipkart,
an Indian e-commerce player, for USD16b, and announced an investment of USD2b
in the Indian e-commerce market. Apart from these investments, these players have
enough funds to infuse additional capital in the Indian market. RRVL has recently
sold 10% stake for ~INR470b and could raise further capital by selling additional
stakes. Amazon India’s US parent can infuse additional capital required to gain
share, while Flipkart’s parent Walmart could infuse internal capital or could
0.4
0.33
0.27 0.26
0.21 0.23 0.25 0.21 0.25
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Naturesbasket
0.29 0.28
0.24
0.29 0.27 0.25
0.3
0.24
0.3
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Dunzo (m)
0.1
0.075 0.07
0.045 0.04 0.04
0.075
0.11
0.1
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Super Daily (m)
0.72
0.62 0.6 0.56 0.57
0.66 0.71 0.67
0.89
Jul'20
Aug'20
Sep'20
Oct'20
Nov'20
Dec'20
Jan'21
Feb'21
Mar'21
Licious (m)
4 June 2021 17
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potentially look to list the company to garner additional funds. Given the huge
growth potential in the Grocery space and increasing interest of foreign players in
the Indian Grocery market, there is a place for different players with innovative
models and consolidation is still far away.
Challenges in Online Grocery retailing
The e-Grocery Retail business faces three key challenges: a) low margin, b) higher
logistics cost, and c) complex inventory and supply chain management at both the
buyer and seller end. The wafer-thin margin of the business, along with a vast
number of SKUs and perishable nature of the inventory, makes it difficult to manage
operations. This is further aggravated due to the need to fulfill the quick delivery
requirement of customers, while bearing the higher logistics cost of the business.
Diverse eating habits and preferences across different regions/states in India,
increases inventory and supply chain woes.
Food Delivery v/s e-Grocery delivery
In comparison to the food delivery business, where margins/AOV are high and the
product size is compact, which ensures lower logistics costs, Online grocery players
are burdened with lower margins and higher logistics costs owing to lower AOV and
bulky order quantity (for the same price as in food delivery). Further, food delivery
does not offer a return option, thus saving on reverse pick up cost, which is ~10% of
the order value. The target consumer availing Food Delivery is from a relatively
higher income bracket and is willing to pay for delivery, whereas the value first eGrocery shopper would prefer online v/s offline Grocery, largely due to pricing
instead of convenience.
Traditional FMCG v/s e-Grocery logistic cost
To understand the difference between distribution cost in the traditional FMCG
business and e-commerce logistic costs, we have compared the distribution margin
of large FMCG players with the logistics cost of online grocery players. Our workings
indicate that distribution/retailing margin in the traditional FMCG business is ~15%
and it could be higher for some smaller and premium products. Discounts and
promotional offers provided by companies to distributors/wholesalers is ~5%. So,
the overall margin, after the company’s cost of product development, is largely
~20%. Against this, the logistic costs borne by e-Grocery players is 20-28% of the
order value, which leaves limited room for profitability.
Exhibit 38: Hindustan Unilever’s margin distribution
HUVR (Jun'20) Soap Lux soap Detergent Surf Excel Skin Care Fair & Lovely
Largest selling SKU % INR10 SKU % INR10 SKU % INR54 SKU
MRP 10.00 10.00 54.00
Cost to retailer 8 9.25 8 9.25 8 49.90
Promotions and schemes (%) 3% on an
average
N.A. 3% on an
average
N.A. 5% on an
average
N.A.
Cost to distributors 5 8.77 5 8.77 7 46.53
Promotions and schemes (%) Changes 0.00 Changes 0.00 Changes 0.00
Cost to company post GST 8.77 8.77 46.53
GST (%) 18 1.34 18 1.34 18 7.10
Cost to company pre-GST 7.43 7.43 39.43
Source: MOFSL, Company
4 June 2021 18
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Exhibit 33: Margin distribution for Colgate-Palmolive India
CLGT (Jun'20) Toothpaste CDC Toothbrush Brush Super Flexi
Largest selling SKU % 100gm % INR20 SKU
MRP 52.00 20.00
Cost to retailer 10 47.27 35 14.81
Promotions and schemes (%) 10% N.A. 10% N.A.
Cost to distributors 5 44.90 6 14.00
Promotions and schemes (%) Changes 0.00 Changes 0.00
Cost to company post GST 44.90 14.00
GST (%) 18 6.85 18 2.14
Cost to company pre GST 38.05 11.86
Source: MOFSL, Company
Exhibit 39: Margin distribution for Britannia Industries
BRIT (Jun'20) Biscuits Good Day
Largest selling SKU % 58gm
MRP 10.00
Cost to retailer 10 9.09
Promotions and schemes (%) 1-2% 0.15
Cost to distributors 5 8.65
Promotions and schemes (%) None 0.00
Cost to company post GST 8.50
GST (%) 18 1.30
Cost to company pre GST 7.20
Source: MOFSL, Company
Exhibit 40: Grocery supply chain – 12-15% margin leakage at local Kirana shops
Source: MOFSL, Company
4 June 2021 19
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Logistic cost – a major burden for e-grocers
 Delivery failure, returns, and cash on deliver increases the cost burden: Our
workings indicate that transportation logistic cost could be ~28% of the total
order value, including the cost of reverse pickup (R) and cash on delivery (COD),
which together constitute over 15% of AOV. Total logistic cost could touch up to
40% of total order value, including other components such as warehousing,
freight forwarding, and other value-added logistics. This makes the operating
model unviable for the e-grocers as the industry offers wafer-thin margins. Of
total online orders, ~20% are returned and 50-55% of orders are COD. This
increases the settlement period, lengthens the cash conversion process, and
increases the risk of rejections.
 Last mile a key pain point: The e-commerce segment incurred logistic cost
towards four major segments: transportation, warehousing, freight forwarding,
and value-added logistics. Transportation constitutes the lion’s share of total cost
and ~60% of total logistic cost for online players, while the rest is contributed by
other segments. Within transportation, these two processes contribute majority
of the cost (~90%).
 Line haul constitutes 40-45% of total transportation cost. Delivery through
surface or air is dependent on delivery timelines – airline is 3-4x costlier
than surface, but delivery timelines are lower. As per a KPMG report, 21% of
line haul were through air in CY18. This is poised to decrease in the long run
as players are looking to turn profitable and reduce their logistics costs.
 Another major component of transportation cost is last-mile delivery, which
forms 45-50% of total cost. In developed countries, this stands at 25-30%. In
the longer term, this should reduce.
 Lastly, processing and first mile is ~10% of total transportation costs.
 Focus on cost cutting: Players are increasingly focused on reducing their logistic
cost. They have started shifting line haul to rail and road from air. This would
significantly reduce line haul costs. However, in e-Grocery, where inventory is
perishable and requires quick delivery, it would be difficult for players to shift the
entire line haul to surface. Retailers are increasing their footprint through
fulfillment centers/dark stores to store inventory locally. This should increase the
turnaround time and reduce last-mile delivery costs. With the reduction of these
two major components, transportation cost could fall significantly.
Exhibit 41: Split in e-commerce transportation cost (%)
Source: e-commerce retail logistics – May’18, MOFSL
Exhibit 42: Line haul split (%)
Source: e-commerce retail logistics – May’18, MOFSL
2% 8%
40-45%
45-50%
Processing
First mile
Line Haul
Last Mile
21%
79%
Air
Surface
4 June 2021 20
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Exhibit 43: Transportation cost could increase to 28% of order value
Source: e-commerce retail logistics – May’18, MOFSL
Exhibit 44: Detailed working on logistic cost (assuming AOV OF INR1,300)
Source: e-commerce retail logistics – May’18, MOFSL
Private labels – the next focus area of online players
Move to own the value chain
In line with the strategy followed by offline retailers, online grocery players are
foraying into the private labels, which should act as the next big growth driver. As
per industry reports, 50% of repeat purchases on e-Grocery platforms could be
attributed to private label sales. Revenue share of private labels for e-Grocery
platforms have increased to 40% in CY19 v/s 32% in CY16 and are expected to reach
45% in CY22E. Private label helps e-Grocery players through multiple ways.
 Owning the supply chain: It allows them to own the entire value chain from
sourcing, manufacturing, and distribution of final products to customers, thus
improving inventory/supply chain management.
 Targeting the untapped market: By leveraging insights from data gathered on
their online platform, these players develop products with high demand for the
untapped market segment. Despite competing with the established brands, eGrocery players gain market share by developing unique products based on
price, nutritional value, taste, etc., while ensuring product quality. In a diverse
market like India, players develop private label products based on regional
preference, which are often overlooked by national brands given its limited
market size.
10%
15%
23%
28%
Neither COD nor R COD but no R No COD but R COD and R
% of Order Value
Forward Logistic (FLC)
Cost = INR130
(10% of order value)
Cash on delivery (COD)
Cost = INR65
(50% of FWC)
Opted for COD
Cost = INR195
(INR130+65)
Return logistic
Cost = INR169
(~30% higher than
FWL)
Opted
Cost = INR364
(INR130+65+169)
Not opted
Cost = INR195
Not opted for
COD
Cost = INR130
Return logistic
Cost = INR169
(~30% higher
than FWL)
Opted
Cost = INR299
(INR130+169)
Not opted
Cost = INR130
4 June 2021 21
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 Improve customer stickiness: The unique brand positioning helps improve
customer stickiness. This, along with better customer service, leads to repeat
purchases on the platform and ensures sustainable growth.
 Better margin: This enables e-grocers to generate better margin as it removes
intermediary margins and leakages in the value chain. Private labels offer 1.5-2x
margin over branded products. In grocery retailing, the margin on in-house
products lies in the 10-14% range v/s 7-10% on branded products.
Exhibit 45: Expect share of Private labels to touch 45% for e-Grocery players in CY22E
Source: Online private label growth paradigm CY20, MOFSL
Specialist players have a higher share of in-house brands
E-Grocery specialists like Big Basket and Grofers were earlier movers into private
labels and are enjoying a higher share than their marketplace counterparts like
Amazon and Flipkart. Specialists are garnering 25-40% of their revenue share from
in-house brands v/s 5-10% for marketplace players. This is further substantiated by
the fact that Big Basket and Grofers offer private label products across all grocery
segments, whereas offerings are restricted to 3-4 segments in the case of
marketplace players.
Grofers has a total of eight in-house brands, which constitute 40% of its revenue.
The company is looking to increase its share to 60% in the near future. It is looking
to invest USD15m in its own brands in CY21 as it plans to ramp up its private label
offerings in baking essentials, immunity products, and ready-to-eat category. It is
looking to launch newer product categories such as health supplements, general
merchandise, and fashion.
Big Basket currently garners one-third of its sales from private labels. It is integrating
backward into the supply chain by partnering with farmers to expand in-house
brands – BB and Fresho portfolio – to its staples, fruits, and vegetables category. To
serve premium health conscious customers, it has an in-house brand, GoodDiet,
which generate higher margins. Flipkart has also made an investment into Ninjacart,
a Fruit and Vegetable supply chain Agri startup.
32%
40% 45%
CY16 CY19 CY22E
Share of private labels (%)
4 June 2021 22
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Exhibit 46: e-Grocery players’ product portfolio of private labels
Categories Big Basket Grofers Amazon Flipkart
Fruits and Vegetables Fresho G Fresh NA NA
Foodgrains, Oil, and
Masala
BB Popular, BB Royal, Fresho, Fresho
Organic, Fresho Signature, and
GoodDiet
Grofers Mother's Choice,
and Grofers Happy Day Vedaka FlipKart
Supermart
Bakery and Dairy Fresho, Fresho Organic, and Fresho
Signature Grofers Happy Day NA NA
Beverages BB Royal Grofers Happy Day NA FlipKart
Supermart
Snacks and Branded
Foods
BB Royal, Fresho Signature, and
GoodDiet
Havemore, and Grofers
Happy Day Solimo NA
Cleaning and
Household BB Home Grofers Happy Home, and
Savemore Presto NA
Eggs, Meat, and Fish Fresho and Fresho Signature NA NA NA
Healthy Food BB Royal Organic, and GoodDiet Grofers Mother's Choice,
and Grofers Happy Day Solimo, Vedaka FlipKart
Supermart
Source: Company, MOFSL
Different kinds of players operating in the Online Grocery space
Multiple platforms are disrupting this emerging space with innovative models. There
are e-Grocery Specialists that have created solid service standards by specializing in
early morning deliveries or specific product categories like meat or hyperlocal
(connecting consumers to local Grocery stores) delivery, and market place players
who have launched grocery as an additional category on their e-commerce
platforms. There are three kinds of players operating in the e-Grocery space: a)
market place, b) specialist, and c) offline players moving to omnichannel.
 Market Place: To tap the humungous opportunity in the e-Grocery space,
general e-commerce Market Place players like Amazon and Flipkart are entering
into Online Grocery. Amazon is leveraging both inventory-led and the hyperlocal
model to serve this category via three channels: a) Amazon Pantry, b) Amazon
Fresh, and c) Amazon Now. Flipkart caters through two channels: a) Flipkart
Supermart and b) Flipkart Quick. It uses the inventory model for the Supermart
platform and hyperlocal model for Quick.
 Specialists (Verticals, Micro Delivery verticals, Super Verticals, and Hyperlocals):
These players operate only in the e-Grocery segment and enjoy strong customer
recall.
 Verticals: Legacy players like Big Basket and Grofers are focusing on an
inventory-led model.
 Hyperlocals: New entrants like Dunzo and Swiggy are leveraging the
hyperlocal model given its lower capex requirement.
 Micro Verticals: Niche players operate in this space and serve some product
categories. For instance, Milkbasket and Supr Daily cater to dairy and select
products in limited regions, and Licious in meat products.
 Offline players move to omnichannel: Currently, offline players like RRVL,
DMart, Spencer’s Retail, and Star Bazaar are entering this growing space. To
cater to this segment, RRVL launched its online platform JioMart and DMart
rolled out DMart Ready stores in selected cities. Among brick and mortar players,
JioMart have been the most agile and aggressive to tap this huge growth
opportunity. It can leverage its strong offline presence to act as a distribution
center. DMart Ready has an online presence in select cities and is still miniscule
in term of overall business.
4 June 2021 23
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In the last three years, each business model has played a key role in addressing
specific needs. For example, specialist have expanded to 25-30 cities, market places
ramped up their grocery product basket as they already have a wide reach, and
micro delivery players too addressed a key market requirement of dailies.
Online players have grown significantly over FY16-19 and have now emerged a
major force in the organized F&G retailing industry. Big Basket clocked 65% revenue
CAGR over FY16-19, while Grofers’ net sale has grown by 107%. With this enormous
growth, the online market (including Big Basket, Grofers, Amazon, Flipkart, and
JioMart) has turned to be the third largest player in Organized Retail after DMart
and RRVL.
Exhibit 47: Cumulative Online Grocery Retail is the third largest Modern Retail channel and the largest by revenue (INR m)
Company FY19 FY20 FY21
DMart 199,163 246,750 237,872
Reliance Grocery (est. excluding wholesale) ~140-150k ~200k-210k ~200k-210k
Future Retail (F&G) 67,216 67,061 NG
Revenue of the third largest Online Grocery retailer 48,810 NG 218,650
Source: Company, MOFSL
e-Grocery operating models
 Inventory-led model: Since the inventory is sourced, procured, and stored by the
player, this model requires a higher initial investment. However, it offers a better
margin potential as players are buying inventory themselves. Players can offer a
wider product range, with stringent quality checks, to attract customers and
reduce delivery timelines. However, the perishable nature of products and higher
SKUs limit viability of this model. Currently, most players like Big Basket, Grofers,
DMart Ready, and JioMart utilize this model.
 Hyperlocal model is being utilized by new entrants such as Dunzo and Swiggy.
JioMart is planning to utilize this model to increase its reach in smaller towns.
The player partners with local stores to offer last-mile delivery from these stores
and outlets. This allows it to maintain a capex light model as players are not
required to purchase inventory. The model enjoys higher customer confidence as
they know from where the products are being sourced. However, it offers lower
margin and quality checks, with product offerings limited by local availability.
 Hybrid model offers features of both inventory and a hyperlocal model as
players purchase inventory and store it locally in dark stores, and provide lastmile delivery. This offers better inventory control, higher margin, stringent
quality checks, and reduced delivery timelines. This allows e-grocer’s to stock
products as per local taste and provides a trust factor for customers. e-Grocery
players like Flipkart and Big Basket are opening dark stores to leverage this
model. Many offline players are also linking their brick and mortar stores with
inventory online, which could offer a huge growth potential via this omnichannel.
4 June 2021 24
Retail
Exhibit 48: Comparison of business models of F&G Online players
Particulars Inventory-led Hyperlocal Multi-channel
Inventory storage Inventory heavy model involves
outright purchase of inventory
Inventory light model as it provides
only infrastructure and logistic
support
The hybrid model combines
features of inventory and
hyperlocal model
Capital requirement Capital intensive Capital light Moderate capital
SKUs High Low Moderate
Lead time High Low Moderate
Margin potential High Low Moderate
Quality checks High Low Moderate
Source: Media articles, MOFSL
Exhibit 49: Operating models of e-Grocery players
Source: RedSeer and Big Basket
Hyperlocal model gaining traction
Benefits and challenges
Globally, e-commerce players have seen limited success in ramping up scale and
profitability in the Grocery space due to: a) difficulty in managing quality and scale
of inventory, b) heterogeneous nature of the product, and c) lower margin and
higher logistics cost. The conventional market place or inventory model addresses
only part of the problem, and therefore has found it difficult to achieve scale and
profitability.
The hyperlocal model has evolved, where online players partner with local Kiranas
to offer last-mile delivery service from the latter’s stores. So, players can use their
platform to accept customer’s orders and fulfill it through local stores. In this way,
they own the customer, while providing the trust factor of a local store. The
advantages of this model are: a) utilizes inventory of local Kirana stores. As it does
not require e-grocers to invest in inventory, it is capex light and increases flexibility
4 June 2021 25
Retail
of the e-commerce platform. So, players can expand without incurring significant
capex. b) It addresses the issue of logistic cost and significantly reduces delivery
time – a key problem in the case of the inventory model, owing to the perishable
nature of the inventory. c) Given the different tastes and preference in India, this
model allows e-grocers to serve a heterogeneous market as local stores would stock
inventory as per regional taste. Retailers like JioMart operate the B2B model,
supporting inventory sourcing for Kiranas, thus owning the entire value chain,
ensuring inventory quality, as well as retaining margins.
But there are a few challenges associated with a hyperlocal model. a) The major
drawback of this model is that it restricts inventory check as it is delivered from
Kirana store to customer location. b) It also offers lower margin due to the Kirana’s
margin. c) Online players could face resistance from local stores due to lack of trust.
d) Kirana stores also provide delivery through their own personnel in smaller cities,
leaving limited benefits of partnering with e-Tailers. But these issues can be resolved
by adopting a hybrid model, wherein e-grocers would provide local delivery, but
from their own dark stores/fulfillment centers, to ensure quality and better margin.
Exhibit 50: Hyperlocal model
Source: Technopak Report CY17, MOFSL
Exhibit 51: Hybrid model
Source: Technopak Report CY17, MOFSL
4 June 2021 26
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Gaining prominence
 Online players: Owing to the inherent benefits of the hyperlocal model, egrocers are making adjustments to their operating model. As per media articles,
Flipkart is opening various F&G specific dark stores (spread over 3,000-4,000 sq
ft) in metros to deliver locally. It launched Flipkart Quick, its hyperlocal service, in
Jul’20 in Bengaluru to deliver products within two hours. Another e-Grocery
major, Big Basket is also looking to open smaller warehouses in major cities it has
a presence in. It is planning to open one dark store in 50 smaller cities, which
would enable it to deliver hyper locally and serve neighboring cities.
 Offline players: JioMart is best placed to enter into e-commerce via this model. It
can utilize the hyperlocal model, given its huge physical presence (over 12k
stores and ~800 Grocery stores as on Mar’20). It can leverage its own stores as
fulfillment centers to deliver products locally. DMart, on the other hand, has a
limited geographic presence, with the highest concentration in Maharashtra and
Gujarat. It could utilize its physical presence to implement the hyperlocal model
in those areas.
 Digital apps are foraying into this space: Apart from e-commerce and retail
players, digital apps are also adopting hyperlocal models, given its huge market
potential and lower capex requirement. In Mar’19, food delivery player Swiggy
entered into this space and commenced operations from Gurugram by
partnering with 3,500 stores. Dunzo, backed by Google, is another player
operating via the hyperlocal model in the e-Grocery space. It had raised
~USD70m in two rounds. This space is attracting foreign investors, and new
players with a hyperlocal model could enter in the near to medium term.
4 June 2021 27
Retail
Strategy deployed by each player
DMart’s ownership model allows it a competitive edge at the
store level
With e-Grocery gaining strong traction, DMart’s focus remains on physical stores. Its
ownership model against the general practice of leasing stores may hamper the
pace of store addition. Grocery is a low margin business, with almost 5-7% rental
cost, i.e. 30-50% of the gross margin. The rental cost saving significantly increases
the ability to drive cost advantage, which can be passed on to the customer and
build cost competitiveness in the market. In a value-centric market, this helps drive
scale and productivity. Our workings of a typical store’s business economics over a
10-year cycle underscores that it take 4-5 years to drive scale benefits and RoCE. But
over a 10-year period, it drives a huge value proposition. DMart generates 40%/68%
RoCE from Tier I/II stores over 10 years of operations. The management is looking to
open larger stores in smaller towns. We view this as a justifiable approach given the
higher RoCE of these stores.
Exhibit 52: DMart’s RoCE generation over a store lifecycle
Year of operation 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Sales capacity
(new store trajectory)
40% 60% 80% 100% 110% 113% 118% 124% 131% 138%
Sales 388 582 776 970 1,067 1,096 1,144 1,203 1,271 1,338
Gross margin (%) 14% 14% 14% 15% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16% 16%
Gross margin 53 81 111 147 170 177 185 196 208 220
Operating cost 54 56 58 61 63 66 68 71 74 77
Growth in operating expenses 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4%
EBITDA (excluding rent) (1) 25 53 86 107 111 117 125 134 144
Margin 0% 4% 7% 9% 10% 10% 10% 10% 11% 11%
Pre-tax cash RoCE – Tier I 0% 7% 15% 24% 30% 31% 33% 35% 37% 40%
Pre-Tax cash RoCE – Tier II -1% 12% 25% 41% 51% 53% 56% 59% 64% 68%
Source: Company, MOFSL
Treading cautiously online through DMart ready stores
While other players are aggressively moving into the e-Grocery space, DMart is
treading cautiously online through its DMart ready stores. Online players are largely
present in metro/Tier I cities, where DMart already has physical stores. It is
leveraging this presence with delivery/pick up options at an attractive pricing (refer
Exhibit 5) through DMart ready. The management is confident that it can compete
with bigger players on pricing through operational efficiencies.
DMart ready: Store economics
We calculated the store economics of DMart ready stores based on inputs from our
channel checks. Our workings indicate that a typical store generates an annual
revenue of INR9m at 17 daily orders worth INR1,500. At 13% gross margin, this
should deliver a gross profit of INR1.2m. Apart from that, a store has an operational
expense of INR1.4m, assuming three employees/store at a monthly charge of
INR23k, monthly rent of INR150/sq ft for a 250sq ft area store, and
utilities/marketing expense of INR4k/INR5k per month. The company posts an
operational loss of INR0.2m at the store level, i.e. -2% margin. To be profitable, a
store needs to service about 20 daily orders worth INR1,500, or its average order
4 June 2021 28
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value should increase to INR1,750 at the current level of 17 daily orders to achieve a
revenue of ~INR11m.
Delivery cost a bone of contention
The company delivers orders in two ways: a) pick-up points, and b) home delivery. It
utilizes DMart ready stores as pick-up points, wherein customers can place an order
and receive it at a scheduled time. The company doesn’t charge for the pick-up
service. However, it has a minimum order prerequisite of INR1,000. For home
delivery, the company charges INR49, or 3% of the order value, whichever is higher.
Currently, it has over 220 DMart ready stores in Mumbai and has expanded in Pune,
Bengaluru, and Ahmedabad. It is utilizing fulfillment centers to service its online
orders – orders are shipped directly from fulfillment centers to DMart Ready stores
or the delivery location (DMart Ready stores are not utilized for home delivery). This
helps in saving overheads and logistic costs by utilizing these stores. As a result, its
e-commerce operations enjoy superior supply chain efficiencies.
Exhibit 53: DMart Ready store economics
Particulars Annual amount (INR)
Daily order (no.) 17
Order size 1,500
Annual revenue 91,80,000
COGS 79,86,600
Gross margin 13%
Gross profit 11,93,400
Employee cost 8,28,000
Rent 4,50,000
Others 1,08,000
Operational expense 13,86,000
EBITDA (1,92,600)
Margin (%) -2.1%
Source: Company, MOFSL
RRVL is leveraging JioMart for its online foray
Strongest offline player – deepest connectivity
RRVL is the strongest offline player with the deepest physical penetration. It has
over 12k stores, with a presence in over 6,600 towns, of which more than two-thirds
are in Tier II/III/IV cities. As on Mar’20, it has 3,684 stores, excluding Jio points, and
797 grocery stores, with a presence in all geographic regions (higher in south and
west India). With the completion of the Future group acquisition, it would add 1,350
stores to its network, with a presence in 400 cities. It has a strong private label
portfolio in the grocery, apparel, and consumer electronics among other categories,
which allows it to provide exclusive products, leverage its supply chain, and garner a
better margin profile.
4 June 2021 29
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Exhibit 54: RRVL’s store network as on Mar’20
Geographic region Fashion and Lifestyle Grocery stores Consumer Electronics
North 566 108 2022
South 932 337 2094
West 538 261 2343
East 350 91 2142
Total 2386 797 8601
Source: Company, MOFSL
RRVL operates via multiple models
RRVL operates through three models: a) offline B2C, b) B2B through Reliance
Market, and c) online through JioMart.
 B2C: RRVL has the deepest footprint in grocery retail, with 797 stores in over 180
cities. It serves customers through three store formats: a) Reliance Fresh, which
is a neighborhood store and offers daily needs and essential items across fresh
food, staples, FMCG, home, and personal care. b) Reliance SMART, which is a
destination store and offers a variety of products across fresh food, staples,
FMCG, home and personal care, beauty and cosmetics, value apparel, and
footwear and general merchandise. c) Reliance SMART Point which is a smaller
version of SMART stores and situated in residential neighborhoods to offer
grocery, pharmacy, and digital assistance. Its business scale has continuously
improved over the last five years.
 B2B: Reliance Market is RRVL’s wholesale cash and carry store that caters to
kirana stores, hotels, restaurants, catering businesses and B2B member partners.
As on Mar’20, it has 52 stores across 46 cities.
 JioMart: RRVL launched the beta version of its e-commerce website in May’20,
followed by the launch of its app in Jul’20. Since the launch of its beta version,
the company has accelerated operations aggressively and currently receives the
highest daily orders (500k daily orders). JioMart’s policy of 5% minimum discount
on MRP and no minimum order requirement, along with free delivery, led to
significant growth. Its app downloads crossed over 10m on Google Play Store and
it is witnessing 0.7-0.8m weekly app downloads as per media sources. It was in
the top three downloaded e-commerce apps in Aug’20, just behind Amazon and
Flipkart. In terms of geographic reach, it is second to only Amazon, which has a
presence in 300 cities as against JioMart’s presence in 200 cities. JioMart’s
customer reviews has improved in terms of product quality. However, other
issues relating to delivery timelines, refund, and customer support still persists.
Though improving product quality is a good step, RRVL needs to resolve other
delivery issues. As per mouthshut.com, Amazon leads in customer service
reviews, followed by Big Basket, Grofers, and JioMart.
4 June 2021 30
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Exhibit 55: RRVL clocked 26% revenue CAGR in the Grocery business over FY15-20
Source: Company, MOFSL
Exhibit 56: JioMart’s daily orders touched 500k
Source: Media articles
Exhibit 57: JioMart’s App downloads crossed 10m
Source: Media articles
Exhibit 58: JioMart was the third highest downloaded ecommerce app in Aug’20
Source: Media articles
Exhibit 59: JioMart’s association with Kirana stores
Source: Media articles
95 86 108 139 234 346 377
19%
-9%
25% 28%
69%
48%
9%
FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21
Grocery revenue (INR b) YoY growth (%)
250
400
500
End May Mid July End July Mid Dec
Daily Order (000s)
Launch
of the
beta
1.5
5
7
10+
Mid July End July End Aug Mid Sep Current
App downloads (m)
Launch
of the
app
8.7 8.3
4
Flipkart Amazon JioMart
Download in Aug'20 (m)
13,500
30,000
End July End Oct E
Association with Kirana stores
4 June 2021 31
Retail
Exhibit 60: JioMart’s rating on Google Play store at par with
peers
Source: Play store
Exhibit 61: JioMart’s customer experience is lagging
Customer complaints
Product deliveries getting delayed
Cancelled deliveries
Missing products
No refund or delayed refund
Poor customer care and support team
Source: Media articles
Exhibit 62: JioMart garners the lowest rating on Mouthshut.com
Company Recommendation Stars Customer
service Delivery timeliness Reliability Product
quality
Apps and
websites
JioMart 12% 1.31 1 1 1 2 2
Big Basket 35% 2.15 2 3 2 2 3
Grofers 27% 1.92 2 2 2 2 2
Amazon 76% 3.57 4 4 4 4 4
Source: Mouthshut.com
Best placed to leverage the hyperlocal model
With the deepest physical footprint, RRVL is best placed to leverage the hyperlocal
delivery model. It can utilize its vast physical store network to fulfill online orders. Its
store network could increase significantly with the completion of the Future group
acquisition. Apart from using its own stores, RRVL is partnering with local Kirana
stores to increase its reach. It has partnered with Kirana stores in 23 cities as on
Dec’20. JioMart is also converting its B2B stores to fulfillment centers to service its
online orders. It is using Reliance Market stores to sell products to local kirana stores
and leverage these stores for home delivery (utilizing a hyperlocal model) by
accepting orders on its online platform: JioMart. In this way, it would own the entire
supply chain, while keeping customers’ trust intact as they are buying products from
their local stores.
Challenges in scaling up
The Indian F&G Retail market is dominated by mom-and-pop stores. To gain
significant scale in the F&G Online market, RRVL needs to partner with kirana stores.
This could be difficult as it could face resistance from these stores, given the lack of
trust and a system of home delivery already in place through their own delivery
personnel. These shops offer credit options to customers, which could be difficult to
replicate for organized players. The online market is getting crowded with the entry
of new players, with different operating models. Recently, Swiggy entered into the
hyperlocal e-Grocery space in Gurugram and Bengaluru. RIL would not be able to
overwhelm competition in the e-Grocery space by just offering steep discounts, as it
did in the telecom market, due to the strong financial muscle of competitors. Players
like Flipkart, Dunzo, and Amazon have a strong parental backing.
4.3
3.6
4.4 4.4 4.3
2.5
4.4 4.4
JioMart DMart Ready Big Basket Grofers
Rating on Playstore Rating on Apple
4 June 2021 32
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Exhibit 63: Profile of JioMart
Founded Apr'20
Founders Mr. Mukesh Ambani
Headquarters Mumbai, India
Total funding USD20b (Jio Platforms)
Major investors Facebook, Google, Silver Lake, Mubadala,
Vista, TPG, General Atlantic, and ADIA
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 64: Strategic choices of JioMart
Particulars Strategic choices
Target HH
Convenience first
Value first
Advertisement Over 280 brands
Over 2,000 SKUs
Delivery model
Scheduled
Express
Micro
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 65: JioMart’s strategic focus
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 66: JioMart’s B2C order flow
Source: RedSeer report
Tier II
+
reach
Hybrid
model
Private
label
focus
Fresh
offerings
Free
delivery Discounts
4 June 2021 33
Retail
Grofers
Started in CY13, Grofers was among the first specialist Grocery retailers to target
value buyers with a healthy private label portfolio of nearly 30%. It has a strong
loyalty program for customer retention. It has a unique local partnership-led
delivery model that enhances supply chain turnaround and reduce logistics cost. It
has three delivery models – Scheduled, Express, and Regular (Micro).
Unique inventory/logistics management through local entrepreneurship
model
Grofers has a significantly leveraged the unorganized supply chain via a partnership
model with local entrepreneurs (like travel agents and mobile recharge shop
owners) to improve supply chain flexibility and cost. The packaged order goes to
micro warehousing stores (drop points) managed by local entrepreneurs who are in
close proximity to customers and deliver to their doorstep. About 95% of orders are
fulfilled by the local network close to customers.
Cluster-based approach
Grofers follows a cluster-based expansion strategy to go deeper into Tier II, III, and
IV cities having a population of less than 1m. From a warehouse in Delhi, it is serving
customers in Sonipat, Panipat, Meerut, Chandigarh, Aligarh, Bhiwandi, and
Moradabad.
Loyalty program
It has a loyalty program called Grofers Smart Bachat Club, which offers discounts,
exclusive offers, and priority support. This allows it to: a) improve AOV through
upselling, thus leveraging its fixed and supply chain cost, b) improve customer
stickiness and reduce retention costs, c) forecast sales and therefore aid in
procurement costs. About 70% of GMV is driven by the loyal users on the platform.
Improving unit economics
During the COVID-19 outbreak, unit economics improved significantly, garnering
higher margin through direct brand tie-ups, increased private label sales, and
reduced marketing/cashback spends, owing to organic e-Grocery demand last year
and customer stickiness. Prior to COVID-19, Grofers operated on a contribution
margin of -12% due to higher cash back (6%) and marketing cost (8%). However, in
the COVID-19 phase, its margin returned to 4%, as higher demand led to reduction
in cashback to a mere 1% of its overall portfolio. Similarly, marketing expenses fell
to 1%, cumulatively saving 12%. Higher mix of private labels improved gross margin
by 3% to 15%, while increased demand/AOV led to leverage of supply chain costs.
4 June 2021 34
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Exhibit 67: Profile of Grofers
Founded CY13
Founders Albinder Dhindsa and Saurabh Kumar
CEO Albinder Dhindsa
Headquarters Gurugram, India
Total funding Over USD472m
Major investors
Tiger Global, Sequoia Capital,
SoftBank Vision Fund, Apoletto Asia,
KTB, and ADCG
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 68: Strategic choices of Grofers
Particulars Strategic choices
Target HH
Convenience first
Value first
Advertisement Over 280 brands
Over 2,000 SKUs
Delivery model
Scheduled
Express
Micro
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 69: Strategic focus of Grofers
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 70: Grofers’ delivery process
Source: RedSeer report
Exhibit 71: Grofers’ unit economics change during COVID-19
Particulars Pre COVID
(Dec'19)
COVID period
(Jun'20)
How the change impacted
profitability
Commission/margin 12% 15%
Higher sales of private labels
led to greater margin during
COVID-19
Cashback (-) 6% (-) 1% Drop in discount during
COVID-19
Supply chain cost (-) 9% (-) 8%
Higher AOV during COVID-19,
resulted in a lower cost of
delivery
Payment gateway cost (-) 1% (-) 1% No major change
Marketing expense (-) 8% (-) 1% Significant reduction during
COVID-19
Contribution margin (-) 12% 4%
Source: RedSeer report
Loyalty
program
Private
label
Customer
centric
shopping
experience
Focused
assortment
Clusterbased
growth
strategy
Local
Entrepreneur
led supply
chain
Collective
sourcing
(Brands +
Private
labels)
Warehousi
ng
Drop points
managed by
local
entreprene
urs
Doorstep
delivery by
local
entreprene
urs
4 June 2021 35
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Financials and valuation – Reliance Retail
Standalone Income Statement (INR b)
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Total Income from Operations 161 183 264 515 1019 1304 1181 1755 2225
Change (%) 26.9 13.8 44.2 94.6 98.1 27.9 -9.4 48.7 26.7
Total Expenditure 153 174 253 491 960 1212 1089 1630 2059
% of Sales 95.1 95.0 95.6 95.4 94.2 93.0 92.2 92.9 92.5
EBITDA 8 9 12 24 59 91 92 125 166
Margin (%) 4.9 5.0 4.4 4.6 5.8 7.0 7.8 7.1 7.5
Depreciation 3 3 4 4 6 11 8 9 10
EBIT 5 6 8 19 53 80 84 116 156
Int. and Finance Charges 2 1 1 1 6 9 4 4 4
Other Income 1 0 0 0 1 3 2 2 2
PBT bef. EO Exp. 4 5 8 19 48 74 82 115 154
EO Items 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PBT after EO Exp. 4 5 7 19 48 74 82 115 154
Total Tax 1 2 3 6 17 19 21 29 39
Tax Rate (%) 31.1 38.2 43.6 33.7 34.9 25.4 25.2 25.2 25.2
Reported PAT 3 3 4 12 31 55 61 86 115
Adjusted PAT 3 3 4 12 31 55 61 86 115
Change (%) -9.4 9.9 40.4 192.8 NA NA NA NA NA
Margin (%) 1.7 1.6 1.6 2.4 3.1 4.2 5.2 4.9 5.2
Standalone Balance Sheet
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Equity Share Capital 50 50 50 50 50 50 97 97 97
Eq. Share Warrants and App. Money 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Preference Capital 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total Reserves 2 11 18 41 76 131 618 704 819
Net Worth 52 61 68 91 126 181 715 801 916
Total Loans 17 11 0 34 128 47 44 44 44
Deferred Tax Liabilities -6 -10 -9 -6 0 0 0 0 0
Capital Employed 63 62 60 119 254 228 760 846 961
Gross Block 33 35 40 53 98 114 90 106 120
Less: Accum. Deprn. 13 14 17 21 26 33 41 50 60
Net Fixed Assets 21 20 23 32 72 82 49 56 60
Capital WIP 4 5 7 41 25 88 88 88 88
Total Investments 5 5 8 5 36 6 5 5 5
Curr. Assets, Loans and Adv. 51 64 70 156 211 180 825 970 1156
Inventory 39 52 51 105 113 93 167 221 280
Account Receivables 2 2 7 22 43 25 69 91 116
Cash and Bank Balance 2 0 3 2 3 3 516 562 638
Loans and Advances 8 9 9 28 52 58 73 96 122
Curr. Liability and Prov. 17 33 48 116 90 128 208 275 348
Account Payables 13 28 39 82 41 57 135 178 226
Other Current Liabilities 4 5 9 33 48 71 73 96 122
Provisions 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
Net Current Assets 34 32 22 41 121 52 617 696 808
Appl. of Funds 63 62 60 119 254 228 760 846 961
4 June 2021 36
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Financials and valuation – Reliance Retail
Ratios
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Basic (INR)
EPS 0.6 0.6 0.9 2.5 6.3 11.1 12.3 17.2 23.1
Cash EPS 1.2 1.3 1.6 3.4 7.5 13.3 13.9 19.0 25.1
BV/Share 10.4 12.3 13.7 18.2 25.2 36.3 143.4 160.5 183.6
DPS 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Payout (%) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Return Ratios (%)
RoE 5.3 5.3 6.6 15.7 29.0 36.1 13.7 11.3 13.4
RoCE 5.4 5.3 6.7 13.5 18.7 25.7 13.0 11.0 13.0
RoIC 6.7 7.0 9.6 22.8 26.6 37.5 44.7 51.1 55.5
Working Capital Ratios
Fixed Asset Turnover (x) 4.8 5.3 6.6 9.7 10.4 11.4 13.1 16.5 18.6
Asset Turnover (x) 2.6 3.0 4.4 4.3 4.0 5.7 1.6 2.1 2.3
Inventory (Days) 88 105 70 74 40 26 52 46 46
Debtor (Days) 5 4 10 16 16 7 21 19 19
Creditor (Days) 29 55 54 58 15 16 42 37 37
Leverage Ratio (x)
Current Ratio 3.0 2.0 1.5 1.4 2.3 1.4 4.0 3.5 3.3
Interest Coverage Ratio 3.3 5.0 10.3 19.1 8.7 9.3 23.6 32.7 43.7
Net Debt/Equity 0.2 0.1 -0.2 0.3 0.7 0.2 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7
Cash Flow Statement
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
OP/(Loss) before Tax 4 5 8 19 48 74 82 115 154
Depreciation 3 3 4 4 6 11 8 9 10
Interest and Finance Charges 1 1 1 1 -1 -2 4 4 4
Direct Taxes Paid -1 -1 -1 -5 -10 -11 -21 -29 -39
(Inc.)/Dec. in WC -4 2 11 -15 -33 84 -53 -33 -36
CF from Operations 4 10 22 4 11 156 20 66 93
Others 0 0 1 1 6 9 -2 -2 -2
CF from Operating incl. EO 4 11 22 5 17 165 18 64 91
(Inc.)/Dec. in FA -4 -4 -8 -48 -47 -67 25 -16 -13
Free Cash Flow 0 6 14 -43 -30 98 43 47 78
(Pur.)/Sale of Investments 1 0 -3 3 -7 18 0 0 0
Others 1 0 0 -4 0 2 2 2 2
CF from Investments -1 -5 -11 -49 -54 -48 27 -14 -11
Issue of Shares 0 0 0 10 4 0 473 0 0
Inc./(Dec.) in Debt 23 -6 -8 34 94 -81 -2 0 0
Interest Paid -2 -1 -1 -1 -6 -9 -4 -4 -4
Dividend Paid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Others -25 0 0 0 -23 -27 0 0 0
CF from Fin. Activity -3 -7 -9 43 68 -117 467 -4 -4
Inc./Dec. in Cash -1 -1 2 -1 32 0 512 46 76
Opening Balance 2 2 0 3 2 33 33 546 592
Closing Balance 2 0 3 2 3 3 516 562 638
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Financials and valuation – Avenue Supermarts
Consolidated Income Statement (INR m)
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Total Income from Operations 64,394 85,838 118,977 150,332 200,045 248,702 241,431 302,801 457,499
Change (%) 37.4 33.3 38.6 26.4 33.1 24.3 -2.9 25.4 51.1
Raw Materials 54,879 73,035 100,810 126,356 170,008 211,029 205,547 257,528 387,880
Gross Profit 9,515 12,802 18,167 23,976 30,037 37,673 35,884 45,273 69,619
Margin (%) 14.8 14.9 15.3 15.9 15.0 15.1 14.9 15.0 15.2
Employees Cost 1,341 1,490 1,925 2,826 3,554 4,561 5,366 6,359 8,692
Other Expenses 3,592 4,676 6,429 7,622 10,150 11,829 13,088 15,746 22,875
Total Expenditure 59,811 79,201 109,165 136,804 183,712 227,419 224,000 279,633 419,447
% of Sales 92.9 92.3 91.8 91.0 91.8 91.4 92.8 92.3 91.7
EBITDA 4,583 6,636 9,812 13,528 16,333 21,283 17,431 23,168 38,052
Margin (%) 7.1 7.7 8.2 9.0 8.2 8.6 7.2 7.7 8.3
Depreciation 815 984 1,278 1,590 2,125 3,744 4,142 4,832 6,195
EBIT 3,768 5,652 8,534 11,938 14,208 17,539 13,289 18,337 31,857
Int. and Finance Charges 724 913 1,220 595 472 691 417 375 375
Other Income 183 179 286 693 484 600 1,962 1,992 1,701
PBT bef. EO Exp. 3,226 4,918 7,600 12,036 14,219 17,448 14,835 19,954 33,183
EO Items 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PBT after EO Exp. 3,226 4,918 7,600 12,036 14,219 17,448 14,835 19,954 33,183
Total Tax 1,109 1,715 2,683 4,158 5,195 4,438 3,840 5,165 8,959
Tax Rate (%) 34.4 34.9 35.3 34.5 36.5 25.4 25.9 25.9 27.0
Minority Interest 0 1 129 -185 1 1 0 0 0
Reported PAT 2,117 3,202 4,788 8,063 9,024 13,009 10,994 14,788 24,223
Adjusted PAT 2,117 3,202 4,788 8,063 9,024 13,009 10,994 14,788 24,223
Change (%) 31.2 51.3 49.5 68.4 11.9 44.2 -15.5 34.5 63.8
Margin (%) 3.3 3.7 4.0 5.4 4.5 5.2 4.6 4.9 5.3
Consolidated Balance Sheet (INR m)
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Equity Share Capital 5,615 5,615 6,241 6,241 6,241 6,478 6,478 6,478 6,478
Total Reserves 6,377 9,589 32,177 40,450 49,634 104,320 115,359 130,148 154,371
Net Worth 11,992 15,204 38,418 46,691 55,875 110,797 121,837 136,625 160,848
Total Loans 9,043 11,923 14,973 4,393 4,298 37 0 37 37
Lease Liabilities 2,955 3,927 3,927 3,927
Deferred Tax Liabilities 305 399 505 452 633 474 512 512 512
Capital Employed 21,340 27,527 53,898 51,541 60,811 114,268 126,281 141,107 165,330
Gross Block 18,321 21,918 27,764 37,223 49,352 65,748 77,401 98,292 126,981
Less: Accum. Deprn. 3,041 983 2,260 4,006 6,131 7,050 8,096 12,927 19,122
Net Fixed Assets 15,281 20,935 25,504 33,217 43,221 58,698 69,305 85,364 107,859
Right to use assets 7,173 9,602 9,602 9,602
Capital WIP 981 817 1,529 1,471 3,768 3,644 10,196 10,196 10,196
Total Investments 152 293 531 682 165 31,374 11,122 8,898 7,118
Curr. Assets, Loans and Adv. 7,134 8,970 30,629 20,330 22,118 26,264 45,144 46,047 54,727
Inventory 5,396 6,717 9,479 11,634 16,087 19,474 22,483 24,695 37,194
Account Receivables 71 84 210 335 644 196 436 555 838
Cash and Bank Balance 380 351 18,843 5,602 2,191 1,079 14,456 13,028 8,925
Loans and Advances 1,287 1,818 2,097 2,758 3,197 5,516 7,770 7,770 7,770
Curr. Liability and Prov. 2,208 3,488 4,295 4,942 9,246 6,497 10,280 10,191 15,362
Account Payables 1,185 1,944 2,607 3,173 4,633 4,335 5,781 7,314 11,016
Other Current Liabilities 843 1,487 1,605 1,642 4,474 1,996 4,236 2,574 3,889
Provisions 179 56 84 127 139 167 262 303 457
Net Current Assets 4,926 5,482 26,334 15,387 12,872 19,767 34,865 35,857 39,365
Deferred Tax assets 0 0 0 1 2 3 10 9 9
Appl. of Funds 21,340 27,527 53,897 51,541 60,811 114,268 126,281 141,107 165,330
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Financials and valuation – Avenue Supermarts
Ratios
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
Basic (INR)
EPS (diluted from FY17) 3.8 5.7 7.7 12.9 14.5 20.1 17.0 22.8 37.4
Cash EPS (diluted from FY17) 5.2 7.5 9.7 15.5 17.9 26.8 24.3 31.4 48.7
BV/Share (diluted from FY17) 21.4 27.1 61.6 74.8 89.5 177.5 195.2 218.9 257.7
DPS 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Payout (%) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Valuation (x)
P/E 402.8 239.2 213.7 153.9 182.1 135.4 82.6
Cash P/E 317.9 199.8 173.0 115.1 127.4 98.3 63.4
P/BV 50.2 41.3 34.5 17.4 15.8 14.1 12.0
EV/Sales 16.2 12.8 9.7 8.1 8.2 6.6 4.4
EV/EBITDA 196.1 142.5 118.2 94.1 114.2 86.0 52.5
Dividend Yield (%) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
FCF per share -4.1 -3.6 -2.8 -2.9 -9.5 -6.6 -10.1 -8.2 -11.1
Return Ratios (%)
RoE 19.6 23.6 17.9 18.9 17.6 15.6 9.5 11.4 16.3
RoCE 14.0 15.8 14.2 15.8 16.8 15.5 9.4 11.3 16.0
RoIC 14.3 16.0 18.7 20.4 18.3 19.7 11.7 13.6 18.7
Working Capital Ratios
Fixed Asset Turnover (x) 3.5 3.9 4.3 4.0 4.1 3.8 3.1 3.1 3.6
Asset Turnover (x) 3.0 3.1 2.2 2.9 3.3 2.2 1.9 2.1 2.8
Inventory (Days) 36 34 34 34 35 34 40 35 35
Debtor (Days) 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1
Creditor (Days) 8 10 9 9 10 7 10 10 10
Leverage Ratio (x)
Current Ratio 3.2 2.6 7.1 4.1 2.4 4.0 4.4 4.5 3.6
Interest Coverage Ratio 5.2 6.2 7.0 20.0 30.1 25.4 31.9 48.9 85.0
Net Debt/Equity 0.7 0.7 -0.1 0.0 0.0 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 -0.1
Consolidated Cash Flow Statement (INR m)
Y/E March FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E
OP/(Loss) before Tax 3,226 4,918 7,600 12,036 14,219 17,448 14,835 19,954 33,183
Depreciation 815 984 1,278 1,590 2,125 3,744 4,142 4,832 6,195
Interest and Finance Charges 724 913 1,220 595 472 691 417 375 375
Direct Taxes Paid -1,000 -1,642 -2,586 -4,027 -5,018 -4,924 -2,616 -5,165 -8,959
(Inc.)/Dec. in WC -1,520 -685 -2,697 -2,427 -3,507 -3,762 -1,271 -2,420 -7,611
CF from Operations 2,245 4,489 4,815 7,767 8,292 13,197 15,506 17,575 23,182
Others -25 -154 -237 -467 -224 -395 -1,754 -1,992 -1,701
CF from Operating incl. EO 2,220 4,335 4,578 7,300 8,068 12,801 13,751 15,583 21,481
(Inc.)/Dec. in FA -4,770 -6,350 -6,354 -9,087 -13,970 -17,060 -20,275 -20,891 -28,690
Free Cash Flow -2,549 -2,015 -1,775 -1,787 -5,902 -4,259 -6,524 -5,308 -7,208
(Pur.)/Sale of Investments 31 -151 -229 -247 0 0 7,830 2,224 1,780
Others 0 172 -18,259 13,970 4,386 -29,505 1,345 1,992 1,701
CF from Investments -4,739 -6,329 -24,842 4,635 -9,584 -46,566 -11,100 -16,674 -25,210
Issue of Shares 326 0 18,406 0 0 41,869 0 0 0
Inc./(Dec.) in Debt 2,634 2,898 3,050 -10,791 2,600 -6,615 -1,359 37 0
Interest Paid -621 -934 -1,203 -800 -510 -682 -436 -375 -375
Dividend Paid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Others 5 0 0 0 0 -998 0 0 0
CF from Fin. Activity 2,345 1,964 20,253 -11,591 2,090 33,574 -1,795 -338 -375
Inc./Dec. in Cash -174 -30 -11 345 574 -190 856 -1,429 -4,103
Opening Balance (without bank bal.) 546 370 340 329 674 1,249 1,059 1,915 486
Closing Balance 372 340 329 674 1,249 1,059 1,915 486 -3,617
Other bank balance 8 11 18,514 4,928 942 20 12,541 12,542 12,542
Closing Balance (including bank bal.) 380 351 18,843 5,602 2,191 1,079 14,456 13,028 8,925
4 June 2021 39
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4 June 2021 40
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N O T E S
4 June 2021 41
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Explanation of Investment Rating
Investment Rating Expected return (over 12-month)
BUY >=15%
SELL < - 10%
NEUTRAL < - 10 % to 15%
UNDER REVIEW Rating may undergo a change
NOT RATED We have forward looking estimates for the stock but we refrain from assigning recommendation
*In case the recommendation given by the Research Analyst is inconsistent with the investment rating legend for a continuous period of 30 days, the Research Analyst shall within
following 30 days take appropriate measures to make the recommendation consistent with the investment rating legend.
Disclosures
The following Disclosures are being made in compliance with the SEBI Research Analyst Regulations 2014 (herein after referred to as the Regulations).
Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. (MOFSL) is a SEBI Registered Research Analyst having registration no. INH000000412. MOFSL, the Research Entity (RE) as defined in the
Regulations, is engaged in the business of providing Stock broking services, Investment Advisory Services, Depository participant services & distribution of various financial
products. MOFSL is a subsidiary company of Passionate Investment Management Pvt. Ltd.. (PIMPL). MOFSL is a listed public company, the details in respect of which are
available on www.motilaloswal.com. MOFSL (erstwhile Motilal Oswal Securities Limited - MOSL) is registered with the Securities & Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and is a
registered Trading Member with National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. (NSE) and Bombay Stock Exchange Limited (BSE), Multi Commodity Exchange of India Limited (MCX) and
National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange Limited (NCDEX) for its stock broking activities & is Depository participant with Central Depository Services Limited (CDSL) National
Securities Depository Limited (NSDL),NERL, COMRIS and CCRL and is member of Association of Mutual Funds of India (AMFI) for distribution of financial products and Insurance
Regulatory & Development Authority of India (IRDA) as Corporate Agent for insurance products. Details of associate entities of Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited are
available on the website at http://onlinereports.motilaloswal.com/Dormant/documents/List%20of%20Associate%20companies.pdf
MOFSL and its associate company(ies), their directors and Research Analyst and their relatives may; (a) from time to time, have a long or short position in, act as principal in, and
buy or sell the securities or derivatives thereof of companies mentioned herein. (b) be engaged in any other transaction involving such securities and earn brokerage or other
compensation or act as a market maker in the financial instruments of the company(ies) discussed herein or act as an advisor or lender/borrower to such company(ies) or may have
any other potential conflict of interests with respect to any recommendation and other related information and opinions.; however the same shall have no bearing whatsoever on the
specific recommendations made by the analyst(s), as the recommendations made by the analyst(s) are completely independent of the views of the associates of MOFSL even
though there might exist an inherent conflict of interest in some of the stocks mentioned in the research report
MOFSL and / or its affiliates do and seek to do business including investment banking with companies covered in its research reports. As a result, the recipients of this report
should be aware that MOFSL may have a potential conflict of interest that may affect the objectivity of this report. Compensation of Research Analysts is not based on any specific
merchant banking, investment banking or brokerage service transactions. Details of pending Enquiry Proceedings of Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited are available on the
website at https://galaxy.motilaloswal.com/ResearchAnalyst/PublishViewLitigation.aspx
A graph of daily closing prices of securities is available at www.nseindia.com, www.bseindia.com. Research Analyst views on Subject Company may vary based on Fundamental
research and Technical Research. Proprietary trading desk of MOFSL or its associates maintains arm’s length distance with Research Team as all the activities are segregated
from MOFSL research activity and therefore it can have an independent view with regards to Subject Company for which Research Team have expressed their views.
Regional Disclosures (outside India)
This report is not directed or intended for distribution to or use by any person or entity resident in a state, country or any jurisdiction, where such distribution, publication, availability
or use would be contrary to law, regulation or which would subject MOFSL & its group companies to registration or licensing requirements within such jurisdictions.
For Hong Kong:
This report is distributed in Hong Kong by Motilal Oswal capital Markets (Hong Kong) Private Limited, a licensed corporation (CE AYY-301) licensed and regulated by the Hong
Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) pursuant to the Securities and Futures Ordinance (Chapter 571 of the Laws of Hong Kong) “SFO”. As per SEBI (Research Analyst
Regulations) 2014 Motilal Oswal Securities (SEBI Reg No. INH000000412) has an agreement with Motilal Oswal capital Markets (Hong Kong) Private Limited for distribution of
research report in Hong Kong. This report is intended for distribution only to “Professional Investors” as defined in Part I of Schedule 1 to SFO. Any investment or investment activity
to which this document relates is only available to professional investor and will be engaged only with professional investors.” Nothing here is an offer or solicitation of these
securities, products and services in any jurisdiction where their offer or sale is not qualified or exempt from registration. The Indian Analyst(s) who compile this report is/are not
located in Hong Kong & are not conducting Research Analysis in Hong Kong.
For U.S.
Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited (MOFSL) is not a registered broker - dealer under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the"1934 act") and under
applicable state laws in the United States. In addition MOFSL is not a registered investment adviser under the U.S. Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the "Advisers
Act" and together with the 1934 Act, the "Acts), and under applicable state laws in the United States. Accordingly, in the absence of specific exemption under the Acts, any
brokerage and investment services provided by MOFSL , including the products and services described herein are not available to or intended for U.S. persons. This report is
intended for distribution only to "Major Institutional Investors" as defined by Rule 15a-6(b)(4) of the Exchange Act and interpretations thereof by SEC (henceforth referred to as
"major institutional investors"). This document must not be acted on or relied on by persons who are not major institutional investors. Any investment or investment activity to which
this document relates is only available to major institutional investors and will be engaged in only with major institutional investors. In reliance on the exemption from registration
provided by Rule 15a-6 of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act") and interpretations thereof by the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission ("SEC") in order to conduct business with Institutional Investors based in the U.S., MOFSL has entered into a chaperoning agreement with a U.S. registered brokerdealer, Motilal Oswal Securities International Private Limited. ("MOSIPL"). Any business interaction pursuant to this report will have to be executed within the provisions of this
chaperoning agreement.
The Research Analysts contributing to the report may not be registered /qualified as research analyst with FINRA. Such research analyst may not be associated persons of the U.S.
registered broker-dealer, MOSIPL, and therefore, may not be subject to NASD rule 2711 and NYSE Rule 472 restrictions on communication with a subject company, public
appearances and trading securities held by a research analyst account.
For Singapore
In Singapore, this report is being distributed by Motilal Oswal Capital Markets Singapore Pte Ltd (“MOCMSPL”) (Co.Reg. NO. 201129401Z) which is a holder of a capital markets
services license and an exempt financial adviser in Singapore.As per the approved agreement under Paragraph 9 of Third Schedule of Securities and Futures Act (CAP 289) and
Paragraph 11 of First Schedule of Financial Advisors Act (CAP 110) provided to MOCMSPL by Monetary Authority of Singapore. Persons in Singapore should contact MOCMSPL
in respect of any matter arising from, or in connection with this report/publication/communication. This report is distributed solely to persons who qualify as “Institutional Investors”,
of which some of whom may consist of "accredited" institutional investors as defined in section 4A(1) of the Securities and Futures Act, Chapter 289 of Singapore (“the
SFA”). Accordingly, if a Singapore person is not or ceases to be such an institutional investor, such Singapore Person must immediately discontinue any use of this Report and
inform MOCMSPL.
Specific Disclosures
1 MOFSL, Research Analyst and/or his relatives does not have financial interest in the subject company, as they do not have equity holdings in the subject company.
2 MOFSL, Research Analyst and/or his relatives do not have actual/beneficial ownership of 1% or more securities in the subject company
3 MOFSL, Research Analyst and/or his relatives have not received compensation/other benefits from the subject company in the past 12 months
4 MOFSL, Research Analyst and/or his relatives do not have material conflict of interest in the subject company at the time of publication of research report
5 Research Analyst has not served as director/officer/employee in the subject company
6 MOFSL has not acted as a manager or co-manager of public offering of securities of the subject company in past 12 months
7 MOFSL has not received compensation for investment banking/ merchant banking/brokerage services from the subject company in the past 12 months
8 MOFSL has not received compensation for other than investment banking/merchant banking/brokerage services from the subject company in the past 12 months
9 MOFSL has not received any compensation or other benefits from third party in connection with the research report
10 MOFSL has not engaged in market making activity for the subject company


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The associates of MOFSL may have:

  • financial interest in the subject company
  • actual/beneficial ownership of 1% or more securities in the subject company
  • received compensation/other benefits from the subject company in the past 12 months
  • other potential conflict of interests with respect to any recommendation and other related information and opinions.; however the same shall have no bearing whatsoever on the specific recommendations made by the analyst(s), as the recommendations made by the analyst(s) are completely independent of the views of the associates of MOFSL even though there might exist an inherent conflict of interest in some of the stocks mentioned in the research report.
  • acted as a manager or co-manager of public offering of securities of the subject company in past 12 months
  • be engaged in any other transaction involving such securities and earn brokerage or other compensation or act as a market maker in the financial instruments of the company(ies) discussed herein or act as an advisor or lender/borrower to such company(ies)
  • received compensation from the subject company in the past 12 months for investment banking / merchant banking / brokerage services or from other than said services. The associates of MOFSL has not received any compensation or other benefits from third party in connection with the research report Above disclosures include beneficial holdings lying in demat account of MOFSL which are opened for proprietary investments only. While calculating beneficial holdings, It does not consider demat accounts which are opened in name of MOFSL for other purposes (i.e holding client securities, collaterals, error trades etc.). MOFSL also earns DP income from clients which are not considered in above disclosures. Analyst Certification The views expressed in this research report accurately reflect the personal views of the analyst(s) about the subject securities or issues, and no part of the compensation of the research analyst(s) was, is, or will be directly or indirectly related to the specific recommendations and views expressed by research analyst(s) in this report. Terms & Conditions: This report has been prepared by MOFSL and is meant for sole use by the recipient and not for circulation. The report and information contained herein is strictly confidential and may not be altered in any way, transmitted to, copied or distributed, in part or in whole, to any other person or to the media or reproduced in any form, without prior written consent of MOFSL. The report is based on the facts, figures and information that are considered true, correct, reliable and accurate. The intent of this report is not recommendatory in nature. The information is obtained from publicly available media or other sources believed to be reliable. Such information has not been independently verified and no guaranty, representation of warranty, express or implied, is made as to its accuracy, completeness or correctness. All such information and opinions are subject to change without notice. The report is prepared solely for informational purpose and does not constitute an offer document or solicitation of offer to buy or sell or subscribe for securities or other financial instruments for the clients. Though disseminated to all the customers simultaneously, not all customers may receive this report at the same time. MOFSL will not treat recipients as customers by virtue of their receiving this report. Disclaimer: The report and information contained herein is strictly confidential and meant solely for the selected recipient and may not be altered in any way, transmitted to, copied or distributed, in part or in whole, to any other person or to the media or reproduced in any form, without prior written consent. This report and information herein is solely for informational purpose and may not be used or considered as an offer document or solicitation of offer to buy or sell or subscribe for securities or other financial instruments. Nothing in this report constitutes investment, legal, accounting and tax advice or a representation that any investment or strategy is suitable or appropriate to your specific circumstances. The securities discussed and opinions expressed in this report may not be suitable for all investors, who must make their own investment decisions, based on their own investment objectives, financial positions and needs of specific recipient. This may not be taken in substitution for the exercise of independent judgment by any recipient. Each recipient of this document should make such investigations as it deems necessary to arrive at an independent evaluation of an investment in the securities of companies referred to in this document (including the merits and risks involved), and should consult its own advisors to determine the merits and risks of such an investment. The investment discussed or views expressed may not be suitable for all investors. Certain transactions -including those involving futures, options, another derivative products as well as non-investment grade securities - involve substantial risk and are not suitable for all investors. No representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, completeness or fairness of the information and opinions contained in this document. The Disclosures of Interest Statement incorporated in this document is provided solely to enhance the transparency and should not be treated as endorsement of the views expressed in the report. This information is subject to change without any prior notice. The Company reserves the right to make modifications and alternations to this statement as may be required from time to time without any prior approval. MOFSL, its associates, their directors and the employees may from time to time, effect or have effected an own account transaction in, or deal as principal or agent in or for the securities mentioned in this document. They may perform or seek to perform investment banking or other services for, or solicit investment banking or other business from, any company referred to in this report. Each of these entities functions as a separate, distinct and independent of each other. The recipient should take this into account before interpreting the document. This report has been prepared on the basis of information that is already available in publicly accessible media or developed through analysis of MOFSL. The views expressed are those of the analyst, and the Company may or may not subscribe to all the views expressed therein. This document is being supplied to you solely for your information and may not be reproduced, redistributed or passed on, directly or indirectly, to any other person or published, copied, in whole or in part, for any purpose. This report is not directed or intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity who is a citizen or resident of or located in any locality, state, country or other jurisdiction, where such distribution, publication, availability or use would be contrary to law, regulation or which would subject MOFSL to any registration or licensing requirement within such jurisdiction. The securities described herein may or may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain category of investors. Persons in whose possession this document may come are required to inform themselves of and to observe such restriction. Neither the Firm, not its directors, employees, agents or representatives shall be liable for any damages whether direct or indirect, incidental, special or consequential including lost revenue or lost profits that may arise from or in connection with the use of the information. The person accessing this information specifically agrees to exempt MOFSL or any of its affiliates or employees from, any and all responsibility/liability arising from such misuse and agrees not to hold MOFSL or any of its affiliates or employees responsible for any such misuse and further agrees to hold MOFSL or any of its affiliates or employees free and harmless from all losses, costs, damages, expenses that may be suffered by the person accessing this information due to any errors and delays. Registered Office Address: Motilal Oswal Tower, Rahimtullah Sayani Road, Opposite Parel ST Depot, Prabhadevi, Mumbai-400025; Tel No.: 022 71934200/ 022-71934263; Website www.motilaloswal.com.CIN no.: L67190MH2005PLC153397.Correspondence Office Address: Palm Spring Centre, 2nd Floor, Palm Court Complex, New Link Road, Malad(West), Mumbai- 400 064. Tel No: 022 7188 1000. Registration Nos.: Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited (MOFSL)*: INZ000158836(BSE/NSE/MCX/NCDEX); CDSL and NSDL: IN-DP-16-2015; Research Analyst: INH000000412. AMFI: ARN - 146822; Investment Adviser: INA000007100; Insurance Corporate Agent: CA0579;PMS:INP000006712. Motilal Oswal Asset Management Company Ltd. (MOAMC): PMS (Registration No.: INP000000670); PMS and Mutual Funds are offered through MOAMC which is group company of MOFSL. Motilal Oswal Wealth Management Ltd. (MOWML): PMS (Registration No.: INP000004409) is offered through MOWML, which is a group company of MOFSL. Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited is a distributor of Mutual Funds, PMS, Fixed Deposit, Bond, NCDs,Insurance Products and IPOs.Real Estate is offered through Motilal Oswal Real Estate Investment Advisors II Pvt. Ltd. which is a group company of MOFSL. Private Equity is offered through Motilal Oswal Private Equity Investment Advisors Pvt. Ltd which is a group company of MOFSL. Research & Advisory services is backed by proper research. Please read the Risk Disclosure Document prescribed by the Stock Exchanges carefully before investing. There is no assurance or guarantee of the returns. Investment in securities market is subject to market risk, read all the related documents carefully before investing. Details of Compliance Officer: Name: Neeraj Agarwal, Email ID: na@motilaloswal.com, Contact No.:022-71881085.
  • MOSL has been amalgamated with Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited (MOFSL) w.e.f August 21, 2018 pursuant to order dated July 30, 2018 issued by Hon'ble National Company Law Tribunal, Mumbai Bench.
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Amul Fresh Cream 250ml (Tetra Pak)

This product is a 250ml Tetra Pak of Amul Fresh Cream. This product is made from pasteurized milk, sugar, vegetable fat, skimmed milk powder, glucose-fructose syrup, and salt. It is a product that is a staple in the Indian diet and a refreshing accompaniment to a meal. It can be used as a substitute for cream or as a spread on toast. It is the perfect accompaniment to a spicy curry and rice dish.

Website at https://www.amul.com/products/amul-yellowghee-info.php

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Amul Pure Ghee 1 L (Pouch)
Ghee is a class of clarified butter that originated in ancient India. It is commonly used in Indian cooking. Amul Pure Ghee can be swapped for vegetable oil or coconut oil in baked goods or can be used for sautéing and deep-frying. Or simply melt it and spread it on roti, or pour it on vegetables/dal before serving. So go ahead and buy this product online today!

Manufactured By:
Gujarat Co-Operative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd., Anand 388001, Gujarat, India.|Kaira District Co-Operative Milk Producers Union Ltd., Anand 388001, Gujarat, India.

Customer Care Number & Email:
18002583333 customercare@amul.coop

SEE MORE
Features & Details
Can be consumed directly or can be swapped for oil/butter
Product Information
Brand Amul
Manufacturer GCMMF Limited
Country of Origin India
Food Type

Disclaimer:
Despite our attempts to provide you with the most accurate information possible, the actual packaging, ingredients and colour of the product may sometimes vary. Please read the label, directions and warnings carefully before use.

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