Title: David Noble
1 David Noble Supervisory Board Director Boston
29th October , 2003
2Introduction
2
- 1 The Food Retail Market in Russia
- 2 A Brief History of Pyaterochka
- 3 Questions and Answers
3Overview
- An Overview of the Russian Food Retail Market in
2003
4AT Kearney
AT Kearney Global Retail Development Index
4
Go Now
Go
Source AT Kearney GRDI 2003-( EDS)
5Institute of Grocery Distributions (UK) Market
Index
Country Rank Score Status
China 1 70 Priority 1 markets
Italy 1 70 Priority 1 markets
Russia 1 70 Priority 1 markets
Japan 4 68 Priority 2 markets
Hungary 5 66 Priority 2 markets
India 5 66 Priority 2 markets
United States 5 66 Priority 2 markets
Poland 8 65 Priority 2 markets
Canada 9 62 Priority 2 markets
France 9 62 Priority 2 markets
United Kingdom 9 62 Priority 2 markets
Germany 12 61 Priority 2 markets
Turkey 13 61 Priority 2 markets
6Top 5 European Grocery Markets (2001)
6
Country Grocery Market ( bn)
Germany 204
France 176
United Kingdom 162
Italy 134
Russia 99
Source Institute of Grocery Distribution (IGD)
7Western food retailers in Eastern Europe
7
Source IGD, MM Planet Retail
8Food retail spending in Moscow by outlet type
8
Supermarkets and hypermarkets 12
Traditional small shops and kiosks 58
Outdoor markets 30
Source Moscow City Hall
9Major food retailers in Russia
9
Chain / Company Number of stores Number of stores Number of stores Gross turnover, m Gross turnover, m Gross turnover, m
Chain / Company 2000 2001 2002 2000 2001 2002
Pyaterochka 38 80 135 75 212 501
Perekrestok 28 38 46 156 252 333
Ramstore 9 9 15 125 250 308
Sedmoy Continent 15 22 31 124 201 301
Kopeika 16 23 27 60 116 182
Dixi 23 28 40 20 70 n/a
Bin n/a 26 32 70 100 120
Paterson 4 10 16 12 40 82
Source Company data, UFG
10Share of top 3 food retailers
10
Source ACNielsen, Company estimate for Russia
11Why international retailers have not come (Yet!)
- shortage of suitable retail properties
- the difficulty of getting access to land and
necessary permits - lack of long-term leases
- underdeveloped supply infrastructure
- huge distances between major urban centers
- shortage of qualified retail staff
- BUT IKEA , METRO, AUCHAN, AVA/EDEKA have taken
the plunge
12Market Summary
12
- Russia is among the worlds top 10 grocery
markets with over 100 bn turnover in 2002 - Share of open markets and small shops is still
high - Domestic food retail chains enjoy strong growth,
but share of top 3 retailers is only 1.1 - Foreign competition is insubstantial
13 14Pyaterochka Introduction
14
- Pyaterochka is the leading grocery chain in
Russia by sales and number of stores 162 own
stores and 20 franchised - Pyaterochka was formed after 1998 financial
crisis from two food wholesale operations - First store opened in February 1999
- Positioned as a soft discounter with 3500
products - Average store size 585 sq m
- Mostly located in residential districts
- EBRD has been a shareholder since 2001
15New store openings in 1999-2003E Rapid Growth
15
16Pyaterochka stores in St. Petersburg and
Moscow
16
17Pyaterochka Proposition
17
- OUR CUSTOMER STORE CHARACTERISTICS
- Low to middle income group Convenient
location - Average basket 4.5 Competitive prices
- Frequent shoppers Guaranteed quality of
products - Majority do not have cars Well-chosen range
of products - Live within 1,5 km Always in stock
18One of Pyaterochka stores in St. Petersburg
18
19Inside the store
19
20Pyaterochka Phase One Strategy
20
- Build Pyaterochka brand as fast as possible
- Lease all stores rather than buy or build
- Increase range from 600 to 3500 SKUs
- Build reputation for low cost quality branded
goods - Concentrate on supply chain issues
- Introduce best practices throughout organisation
21Pyaterochka Phase Two Strategy
21
- Continue aggressive roll out strategy
- Buy well located stores
- Build stores when the opportunity arises
- Introduce a number of own label products
- Leverage buying power to keep prices low
- Build consolidated warehouses
- Introduce best of breed IT solutions across the
supply chain - Develop larger format
22Pyaterochka Critical Success Factors
22
- Keep it simple
- Limited Promotional Activity
- No Internet Home Delivery
- No Credit and Loyalty Cards
- Every day low prices
- Same price in every store in each region
- Well trained employees
- Pyaterochka training school 3 week course
- Source products locally
- 2000 50 of all products imported
- 2003 95 of all products bought locally
- Always in stock
- Very high sales per sq m on a range of 3500
products
23Pyaterochka as a Proxy for Russia - Positives
23
- Rapid growth in all forms of organised retail
- Stock market up by over 50 av for each of last
three years - Increasing interest from Multi Nationals in
setting up local operations - All big 4 accountants present and very busy (and
expensive) - EBRD and IFC very active
- Top Law Firms and Investment Banks returning
since 1998 financial crisis
24Pyaterochka as a Proxy for Russia - Negatives
24
- St Petersburg and Moscow reasonably easy places
to do business- regions less so - A bit of a bubble again with high real estate
prices. Leases still short 5-6 yrs common - Infrastructure Road Rail need investment
- Little sale/ lease back activity
- No 3rd Party Logistics Operators- Do it all
yourself! - Red tape does mean you need a local partner
25Pyaterochka Key Challenges
25
- Finding appropriate locations
- 2 teams of people in St Pete Moscow
- Keeping highly trained employees
- Continual learning at training school
- Above average compensation
- Keeping costs low
- Re-investing supplier discounts into lower prices
for customers - Fight competition
- Outdoor markets, other discounters, Western
operators
26Financials and operating data
26
- Key performance measures in 2002
- Inventory turnover 11 days
- Average purchase bill 4.5
- Average daily number of purchases 296,228
- Sales/sq. metre of selling area 8.986
- Long term debt/equity 0.05 (as of end 2002)
27Benchmarking Analysis European Comparables
27
Source SSSB, Company data (audited IAS)
28Pyaterochka Plans
28
- Continue rapid organic growth of existing format
in Moscow St. Petersburg - Increase purchasing power with suppliers
enhance gross margins and volume - Increase share of owned and purpose built stores
to 50/50 - Expand into the regions (through franchising)
- Develop larger format
- Be well positioned to fight eventual competition
from other Russian and foreign retailers - Become a strong candidate for an IPO
29Conclusion
29
- Growth in consumer spending in Russia will
further boost development of all retail chains - Food retail industry is very fragmented, but
entering stage of fast consolidation - Suppliers need to set up shop in Russia to do
business - Excellent opportunities for western Suppliers
prepared to invest in Russia - Logistics and IT services companies in short
supply but translation issues must be tackled - Own label manufacturers will have massive demand
over next 5 years
30Contact details
30
- Any questions? E mail
- David Noble
- Supervisory Board Director
- Pyaterochka
- e-mail dnoble_at_e5.ru