Amazon 2021: Dominating the ALL-DELIVERY ECONOMY, Advertising and Streaming, the FBA roll up

Amazon 2021: Dominating The ALL-DELIVERY ECONOMY, Advertising And Streaming, The FBA Roll Up


Release date: January 27th, 2021 (92 pages)
PDF/Powerpoint format. Price: GBP774.00

Abstract

Due to the various lockdowns 2020 was arguably the first real online Christmas, which has meant a great final quarter for Amazon, closing out a real stand out year for the company.

We believe that Amazon marketplace’s GMV has grown by at least 50% from
US$200bn in 2019 to around US$300bn in 2020.

That said, some other retailers have also reported record figures and in many ways the logistical advantage (FBA, Prime Air, Fulfillment centre network) Amazon has built up over the competition over years
has (almost unbelievably) been somewhat reduced, as competing retailers have invested heavily into their own digitalisation (Walmart, Kroger etc) and logistics efforts and/or services such as Instacart have proliferated
and are easily available on a plug and play basis. One should mention the runaway success of Shopify in enabling independents and major retailers alike to go online in this context too.

While Amazon’s logistics network was simply overwhelmed in Q1/2 2020 with the spike in extra demand, a situation which has stabilised now, there is another reason, why we think the competitive moat of FBA has been somewhat
eroded. This is due to the rise of click & collect, which has become such a major trend in the USA. For Walmart click & collect (or drive up) has taken 50% of all online orders - and possibly all of US online grocery has developed like this, as it is the cheapest option for both retailers and shoppers, due to the last mile deliveries cost falling away. During the pandemic click & collect also enabled shoppers to avoid going into crowded
shops.

Amazon lacks the same physical presence as its bricks and mortar competitors (Walmart, Target for example), but has started to address this with the acquisition of the Whole Foods business, the locker roll out, its click & collect partnerships (with Kohls’ for example) and of course its Go and Fresh stores.

Another prediction we are making is that Amazon advertising is set for massively successful 2020 and 2021. Estimates are pegged at an annual US$20bn run rate for the business unit. And looking ahead, there might
be another nascent market in audio ads (coupled with Alexa) that could grow massively in years to come.

Advertising on the Amazon platform will be driven by the sheer endless number of SKUs on the website and the problem to gain visibility for brands and sellers as a necessary prerequisite for sales conversion. In this sense
Amazon follows down the path of the Alibaba model, where the Chinese platform makes most of its money from advertising rather than
the listing fees. End user experience on Amazon has suffered for some time now, with the search function being overwhelmed by the sheer mass of Asins and advertising making the problem even worse.

Amazon is also looking to use influencers more in future and has copied live video shopping streams, which have gained quite a bit of traction in China and in the fashion sector. It remains to be seen whether this will
be as successful in the West.

The other big story in the Covid era is the FBA roll up and a whole new industry has evolved around the marketplace, the most successful sellers and their top selling products. While the gold rush of selling on Amazon as a 3P business is now over, with most categories featuring well established top
selling products and companies, private equity has discovered the platform.

For 3P sellers being successful on the Amazon marketplace platform has become a lot more difficult, as it has matured somewhat and it is overrun by Chinese competitors. Due to this influx, it has become very hard to gain visibility for a new product launch. Moreover, if a 3P seller has built up, let's say, a kitchenware top selling product and is thinking of branching
out into a different category (for example mobile covers), chances are there is a lot of competition there already. Many private label sellers on the marketplace hit a plateau in sales, somewhere around the couple of $ million mark. Then a lot of start ups look for a way out, because it is hard to
raise cash for a new venture, if a company has only one top seller. These trends of 3P sellers looking for an exit and of PE looking for new opportunities have come together in the form of the FBA roll up company and have created a new boom.

Instead of trying to build new consumergoods brands from scratch, the new FBA roll up ventures plan to buy up dozens of small merchants that have already proven successful on Amazon. Most of them did not even exist at the start of the year. All hope to emulate the model of two-year-old Thrasio,
and Anker, the Chinese electronics accessory maker and “Amazon native” brand that listed at an $8bn valuation. The FBA roll-ups benefit from more financial muscle than single sellers, better marketing, and greater bargaining power with factories and potentially even with Amazon.

The main risk for these new start ups is the dependency on Amazon and its fee structures, algorithm changes and policies - we also don't know why Amazon isn't doing the roll up themselves. The most likely explanation is probably that the company fears political oversight and interference from
both the US and the EU around its private label business and alleged data misuse. It should also be kept in mind that Amazon benefits greatly from the success of its 3P marketplace platform in form of the service fees it charges and because it uses the infrastructure built for the marketplace for its own first party business.

Looking ahead, from being an essential emergency service throughout the first phase of the pandemic, Amazon has become an almost boring household utility going into 2021. But at the same time political oversight and interference has become a major threat to its business model. How serious the company takes this is also reflected in the PR campaigns highlighting charitable giving, wage increases, environmental initiatives and of course the success of small and medium size enterprises on the platform.

Table of contents

Executive summary p8