Besides organic growth, acquisitions are another strategy for these companies in India, especially since they are facing more scrutiny back home and in western Europe.
India
is emerging as the testing and acquisition playground for global
consumer technology companies, especially the so-called FAANGs,
according to a veteran internet analyst.
RBC
Capital Markets’ Mark Mahaney, who calls himself Wall Street’s
“oldest internet analyst” after covering the sector for more than
two decades, said India is now more popular than markets like China
because it has the same growth dynamics but with fewer regulations.
As
one of the largest economies and most populous countries in the
world, India has turned into a testing ground for companies such as
Facebook
Inc., which has used it to beta-test a payments feature for
WhatsApp. Netflix Inc. rolled out a mobile plan in India at 199
rupees ($2.80), much cheaper than what it charges for a basic plan
elsewhere, and has created original content to capture more market
share.
“India
does have regulations but it doesn’t seem to be as protectionist as
China,” said Mahaney. India has been considering a new law that
would require personal data to be stored locally, which could impair
the operations of the Internet giants but Mahaney remains confident
they can still penetrate the market.
Besides
organic growth, acquisitions are another strategy for these companies
in India, especially since they are facing more scrutiny back home
and in western Europe. “There’s an opportunity to build growth”
in Asia, particularly in India, Mahaney said.
Amazon.com
Inc. has already tried its hand at deals in the South Asian nation by
attempting to acquire Indian e-commerce pioneer Flipkart Online
Services Pvt., before it was snapped up by Walmart Inc. last year.
Facebook,
Netflix,
Amazon and Alphabet Inc. can all win big in India, said Mahaney, who
has a buy rating on the stocks. “India is less than 5% of the
Amazon’s total revenues but it has the potential” to get to that
level within five years, Mahaney said.
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