Amit
Agarwal, the India head of Amazon, said in an interview on Friday
that groceries and goods such as creams, soaps and cleaning products,
were already the largest product category on Amazon in
terms of number of units sold in India.
"I
would not speculate on when we would launch AmazonFresh but,
absolutely, if you ask me the next five years of vision - from your
avocados to your potatoes, and your meat to your ice cream - we'll
deliver everything to you in two hours," he said.
AmazonFresh,
which launched more than a decade ago in the US market, is the
company's flagship fresh grocery delivery service. In
India, Amazon currently
offers some groceries via a service named Pantry. It has also tied up
with local vendors in four cities for Amazon Now,
which promises two-hour deliveries.
"Probably
in the next five years groceries and consumables would be more than
half of our business," he told Reuters.
Agarwal
said Amazon had
already started experimenting with a few fresh groceries in India,
already home to its largest active customer base outside of the
United States.
India's
e-commerce market is tipped to grow to $200 billion in a decade,
according to Morgan Stanley, as cheap mobile data makes online
shopping increasingly accessible.
And
Amazon, which already has over 100 million registered users in India,
is looking to cash-in on the opportunity.
"We
want to get the next hundred million customers shopping with us,"
said Agarwal, adding that Amazon plans
to woo new clients with product exchange and staggered payment
offerings.
With
almost 500 million Indians using the Internet in 2018, India, Asia's
No. 3 economy, is a huge e-commerce battleground.
Retail
giant Walmart is inching closer to buying a controlling stake into
home-grown e-commerce player Flipkart, which is already backed by big
name investors like SoftBank,and Microsoft.
"I
feel extremely excited that e-commerce is attracting so much
funding," Agarwal said. "Otherwise, we'd have been wrong in
going about it in such as big way."
Amazon's
founder Jeff Bezos told shareholders in a letter last week
that Amazon India
is the fastest growing marketplace in the country. He
said Amazon added
more members to its Prime loyalty programme in India in its first
year, than any previous geography in Amazon's history.
Still
profitability in India is years away for Amazon, admits Agarwal, as
logistics, payments and other infrastructure needed to address the
long-term opportunity are still being built.
He
said the $5 billion Bezos had committed to investing in India was
just a signal of intent, and the company was ready to invest
significantly more to achieve its goals.
"Our
ambition is so big it would be futile for us to think about anything
other than to ensure we keep investing to bring the next 100 million
customers online," Agarwal said.
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