It's a deal: Wal-Mart is ramping up its presence in China but is struggling to maintain its upscale
consumer base
CHINA
Hitting a great wall
Even before the fox-tainted donkey-meat scandal,
‘Wal-Mart was struggling to find its place in China
y viova xaunt-The news last week that Wal-Mart had to recall packages
of donkey meat from its stores in China because they contained bits of
fox ricocheted around the world as only a story about fox-tainted don-
key meat can. But, for all the attention given to the proclvities of Chi-
nese grocery shoppers, the incident shone a light on a particular prob-
lem for the company: For a retailer that’s come to be synonymous with
cheap Chinese goods, Wal-Mart is having a hard time finding its iden-
tity in the Middle Kingdom itself.
tee When Wal-Martentered Chinain the mid-1990s, twasamong the first
v American retailers to do so. From its early days, it appealed to wealthyBack
‘oop
shopperslooking forimported goods of higher quality than wasavailable
at local Chinese shops. The customers drove BMWs and were willing to
pay higher prices for grocery items that wouldn’t put theirhealth at risk.
It became a status symbol to shop at the world’s largest retailer
But, as the store’s footprint grew to the current 404 Wal-Mart outlets,
including 10 Sam’s Clubs—with another 110 more stores set o open over
thenext three years—Wal-Mart has struggled to maintain its upscale con-
sumerbase in recent years. For one thing, specialty retailers have popped
up to serve the wealthy. At the same time, Wal-Mart’ brand identity asa
discount retailer caused it to lose some ofits appeal for well-heeled shop-
pers. “The wealthier consumers didn't like being confronted with discount
signs,” says Shaun Rein, a Shanghai-based retail consultant at China Mar-
ket Research Groupand author of The End of Cheap China. His irm’s data
show Wal-Mart is losing market share, even as it ramps up its expansion.
“The atmosphere started to get dingy... They didn’t always have great
upkeep of the floors, and so wealthier consumers stopped going.”
But luring discount shoppers has posed its own challenges. Rents in
many prime retail areas are high, relative to the prices it can charge, and
the company has had a difficult time matching deals at mom-and-pop
shops. It all comes down to a disconnect in how the Chinese perceive
Wal-Mart: To budget shoppers, it’s an expensive Western brand; to the
wealthy, i's a low-rent retailer to be avoided.
‘The contaminated-donkey-meat scandal has done nothing to help
Wal-Mart with either type of shopper. (It’s not the chain's first food-
safety incident there.) Wal-Mart China’s CEO Greg Foran has apolo-
gized, and said the company will “increase investment in supplier man-
agement,” Foran also said that, within a year, the retailer will add another
500 imported produets to its shelves to appease food safety concerns
among Chinese shoppers.
Inthe end, retail consultant Rein suspects the impact of the incident
will be small, Compared to local businesses hit by far more severe food
violations, Wal-Mart China is still overwhelmingly safe. Donkey meat
is not a major consumer item, and Sam’s Clubs continue to attract the
upper classes looking for imported foods.
But Wal-Marts still trying to find its niche. While opening new stores,
itis closing dozens of underperforming stores and renovating 165 oth-
ers. With these improvements, analysts say, Wal-Mart hopes to avoid
the same fate it experienced when it had to pull out of Germany and
South Korea because it couldn't meet specific local demands. As long
as it avoids more tainted-food scandals. #