The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
SYDNEY, Australia — Online retail giant Amazon.com Inc , whose entry into Australia last year rattled established bricks-and-mortar retailers, posted a modest loss in its earliest days in the country, corporate filings show.
Amazon's foray into Australia was met with fevered attention from investors and a steep selldown in traditional retail stocks.
The US company launched its website on December 5, though it ran preparatory operations through the year, racking up a modest loss of almost A$9 million (£5.09 million).
In the Christmas trading weeks from the launch to December 31, it turned over A$6.3 million in direct sales versus total Australian retail sales of A$26.3 billion that month.
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These figures, however, are unlikely to be indicative of the future performance of a company that reported losses and roller-coaster results for years, but is now the second-biggest company in the world and closely watched on Wall Street.
The Australian trading period was too short for meaningful analysis, said Evan Lucas, chief market strategist at fund manager InvestSmart.
"Amazon is not the kind of company that accepts failure — they have a longer term goal."
Amazon hit logistical snafus in Australia's vast interior and handed eBay Inc — market leader in Australia — some victory after a move last month to block Australians from shopping on its foreign websites drew customer backlash.
A spokesman for Amazon declined to comment on the filing and directed Reuters to previous commentary about record Australian sales during a promotion in July without quantifying them.
The filing was lodged in April but the results were not reported at the time. They were first reported on Friday by the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper.
Last week, Amazon forecast strong fall sales for its overall operations and posted a $2.5 billion quarterly profit that was double Wall Street targets on the back of its younger businesses — cloud computing and advertising.
By Tom Westbrook; Editors: Sayantani Ghosh and Manolo Serapio Jr.
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