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Carrefour to open two stores in Egypt by 2002
By Khaled Diab
CAIRO, April 11, 2001 (Reuters) - French retailer
Carrefour and its local partner will open two stores in Egypt in 2002,
undeterred by British supermarket chain Sainsbury's decision to pull out of the
country, the partner said.
An official at Majid al-Futtaim (MAF) Egypt, a subsidary of the Dubai-based MAF
group of companies, told Reuters that MAF had begun building two shopping malls
in March, one in Cairo and the other in the Mediterranean port city of
Alexandria, where the hypermarkets will be located.
“We've started constructing the two malls which will contain the hypermarkets that we will lease to the joint venture company,” MAF-Egypt General Manager for Business Development Mohamed Galal said.
Carrefour in Paris confirmed that its partner al-Futtaim “is looking for sites
in Egypt”, but would not be more specific.
Galal said MAF had made investments of close to
800 million Egyptian pounds ($206 million) since it entered the Egyptian market
in 1998. The company has purchased land for a total of four malls it plans to
build. All four are due to contain Carrefour hypermarkets, he said.
Asked about Sainsbury's decision to pull the plug on its Egypt operation, Galal
said: “We feel Egypt has good potential, otherwise we would not invest these
large amounts of money in Egypt.”
Sainsbury announced early this week that it was selling its 80.1 percent stake
in its Egyptian operations to its minority partner, al-Nasharty group.
TARGET CUSTOMERS
“In the current economic situation, there is a
need for discount stores, and the hypermarket concept is a discount store where
all items are available for the target (customers) who are middle class,” Galal
said.
Sainsbury tried, with its network of over 100
stores, to tap into a wider-based market, usually served by local stores. Some
analysts considered this a departure from the traditional foreign supermarket
target of serving mostly upmarket customers.
At a time of strained Israeli-Arab relations, Sainsbury was dogged by rumours
that it had Israeli links. Sainsbury Chief Executive Peter Davis called the
speculation unfounded.
Galal said each hypermarket would cost MAF
Egypt some 50 million Egyptian pounds to build. ($1=3.88 Egyptian pounds).
ã Reuters
Limited 2001.
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