E-Land in talk to sell stores to Tesco S.Korea unit
SEOUL (Reuters) - Unlisted South Korean retailer E-Land said on Wednesday it was in talks to sell 35 discount stores to British retail giant Tesco Plc's (TSCO.L: Quote, Profile, Research) South Korean unit, sending shares of rivals sharply lower.
"Samsung Tesco is a prime candidate and a deal is imminent," an E-Land spokesman told Reuters, referring to the Tesco unit. He declined to give further details on the deal's price and timing.
An earlier local report said E-Land was selling the stores to Tesco for 2.3 trillion won ($2.2 billion). The two sides are expected to sign a deal on Wednesday, Yonhap News said, citing company and industry sources.
A spokesman for Samsung Tesco said nothing had yet been decided and the company had no comment.
E-Land, previously known as a fashion retailer, bought 32 outlets from France's Carrefour (CARR.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) in 2006 for $1.85 billion. Bigger South Korean rivals Lotte Shopping Co. (023530.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) and Samsung Tesco, 94 percent owned by Tesco, were left empty-handed in the deal.
News of the deal Wednesday sent shares in top discount store operator Shinsegae Ltd (004170.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) down 4.43 percent to 583,000 won at 0045 GMT after tumbling nearly 6 percent on fears of increased competition. Lotte Shopping shares fell 2.54 percent to 325,500 won, against the wider market's 0.11 percent gain.
After the 2006 purchase, E-Land conducted a thorough remodeling of the former Carrefour stores, giving them a new brand name and seeking to distance itself from the warehouse-like image that was shunned by South Korean consumers.
But E-Land has suffered from labor unrest over contract workers, which has disrupted operations at some of its stores.
Last week the economy ministry said Tesco would invest $100 million in a logistics centre in central Korea which is expected to open in December 2010. Continued...

















