New Delhi (Sputnik) – Walmart's offer to buy stakes in Flipkart, India's largest e-commerce company, potentially its biggest overseas deal, has encountered a giant hurdle with an influential right-wing Indian fringe outfit warning the government against considering the American firm's proposition to acquire the country's biggest e-retailer.
Swadeshi Jagaran Manch (SJM), a sister organization of the ruling Bharatiya Janta Party, has argued that the proposed acquisition of Flipkart by the American firm goes against the country's foreign investment rules. SJM is the strongest voice outside the Narendra Modi-led government which is known to consistently impact key economic decisions of the state.
READ MORE: E-commerce Firms Eye Big Gains as India Mulls Adapting Commercial Use of Drones
"The deal is in violation of Indian laws, as the foreign direct investment in e-commerce is not allowed. Besides flouting the country's rule, this deal will kill competition in the sector and flush small retailers," Ashwani Mahajan, the national co-convener of SJM, told Sputnik.
Walmart has long been eyeing expansion in the world's fastest growing e-commerce market, but has not been able to get through as India does not allow full foreign ownership in multi-brand B2C retail. Earlier, Walmart's joint venture with India's Bharti Group was shuttered after an internal anti-corruption probe.
READ MORE: Regulator Can't Have Gates Foundation Employee as Board Member — Indian Group
This time, Walmart has worked out a strategy to circumvent India's foreign investment rules by making an arrangement with Google's parent company Alphabet Inc wherein the duo will enter into a deal with Japan's SoftBank Group Corp., which will sell its entire stake in Flipkart through a private equity fund at a valuation of roughly $20 billion.
Flipkart was founded by two Indian engineers in 2007 and garnered 39 percent of the e-commerce market in India with around 100 million registered users. It records more than eight million monthly shipments all across the country. Amazon has captured approximately 30 percent of the market in India.