In addition, he has 400 trucks on the road and aims to
make that 40,000. Private-equity investor Warburg Pincus
has backed Stellar to the tune of $125 million.
“Everything related to consumers — lifestyle, durables,
food, beverages, pharmacy and FMCG (fast-moving consumer
goods) — that’s where we intend to bring change,” Singh
says, noting India hasn’t too many good warehouses. “Ten
years ago, we had only godowns. I want to build the
supply chain in this country,” he says.
A game-changer
Ironically, when Singh helped launch Future Logistics a
decade ago, he did so believing GST was just around the
corner. Now it’s finally arrived, it’s undoubtedly a
game-changer for the logistics sector which kicks in 13
per cent to GDP despite being underdeveloped and highly
fragmented. (Bear in mind China, during its rapid growth
phase, saw its logistics sector account for 18-20 per
cent of GDP). Pre-GST, “companies were used to locating
and operating warehouses keeping in view the Central
Sales Tax structure, irrespective of their end-customer
base.
Now emphasis will be on operational efficiencies”, says
Shyam Arumugam, who’s office services associate director
at commercial real-estate company Colliers International
India. It’s been the e-commerce industry which has been
the fuel for the sector’s rocket-propelled growth as it
replaced shoppers tramping around stores with doorstep
parcel service.
Take a squint at Ecom Express, started in 2012 by four
employees of courier company DHL. During the last
financial year, Ecom Express delivered 50 million
parcels, up from 19 million two years earlier. Ecom
Express’s proud boast is it can reach every pincode in
12 states and its next goal is to do the same in another
12 states. It reckons 25 per cent of the logistics
industry comes from e-commerce. “We’re practically like
the post office,” says K Satyanarayana, a company
co-founder.
“We deliver to furthermost rural areas and create lots
of rural employment,” he adds. Ecom Express has 16,000
people on its rolls. The company has also taken a
sideways step and opened five warehouses near major
metros. Another early-mover company was TVS Logistics
Services, founded in 2004 and now a
billion-dollar-company.
It played the game slightly differently, looking first
globally and then locally at India. Today, it has around
300 warehouses and about 10 million sq ft all over
India, making it one of the country’s most powerful
operators. But that’s only 30 per cent of its total
business.
“In terms of spread and space, we’re one of the
biggest,” says R Shankar who’s TVS Logistics’ India CEO.
The company also has major backers like the Caisse de
Depot et Placement de Quebec, Canada’s second-largest
pension fund, and the Tata Opportunities Fund.
Bright picture
The logistics firms were already in the fast lane but
the big time looms with GST, the biggest upheaval, which
consultancy KPMG says will provide a chance to
“rationalise and re-engineer transportation and
logistics networks”.
Logistics firms will be able to follow hub-and-spoke
models for freight movement as they set up large
warehouses. “We expect 80 warehouses to become 20 much
bigger ones,” says one executive. Stellar’s Singh says
his warehouses will be sited near 17 big metros and four
production centres like Ludhiana.
Certainly, the new warehouses will be state-of-the-art
and many will be super-sized and specialised. Stellar
aims to have four warehouse types, including some
handling only cold-chain items and others e-commerce
products.
He expects his warehouses to match highly automated ones
abroad. TVS Logistics’ Shankar has a slightly different
take on automation given India’s inexpensive, plentiful
labour: “We’ll have fit-for-market automation, keeping
in mind manpower availability we have here.” Entering
the logistics business at a different level are firms
like IndoSpace and Bangalore-based real-estate giant the
Embassy Group.
They’re building logistics parks with warehouses that
will be rented by firms like Stellar Value. IndoSpace
hit headlines recently when it won $1.2-billion backing
from the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board.
IndoSpace is part of Everstone Group, founded by two
Goldman Sachs bankers. It already has 28 logistics parks
with 30 million sq ft of space.
Everstone Real Estate’s managing partner Rajesh Jaggi
says the company “plans to expand the portfolio to
around 50 million sq ft in the next five-to-seven
years”. Similarly, Embassy Industrial Parks has
sprawling logistics parks in Sriperumbudur, Chakan near
Pune and also Gurgaon. Anshul Singhal, CEO, Embassy
Industrial Parks, says the company already has 4 million
sq ft of space and plans to hike that to around 20-25
million sq ft in the next five years.
The Embassy Group is also getting funding from Warburg.
Incidentally, Warburg’s logistic investments include
Embassy, Stellar, Ecom Express and Rivigo, a trucking
firm. Warburg has invested $75 million in Rivigo. As
efficiencies take effect, logistics costs will fall, as
is the case with the US where logistics now represents
just 8.5 per cent of GDP. When that happens, it will be
a clear sign India’s logistics industry has come of age.
Source:::
Business Line,
dated 25/07/2017