Naver Corp., South Korea's top online portal, is in talks with the country's retail giant Shinsegae Group about a joint bid for eBay Korea -- a deal that would accelerate a shake-up in the domestic retail landscape.
The two companies are discussing forming a consortium to buy eBay Korea, the country's No. 3 e-comemerce platform estimated at 5 trillion won ($4.4 billion), according to investment banking sources on May 19. Shinsegae may seek a majority stake in eBay Korea and Naver another 20%, while co-managing the online retailer.
US e-commerce giant eBay Inc. has offered to sell 100% of its South Korean operations and Shinsegae is one of the four shortlisted candidates, alongside fellow leading retail group Lotte, as well as SK Telecom Co. and MBK Partners. SK Telecom and MBK are also considering partnering up for the deal, according to other banking sources.
Their share swap agreement comes after Shinsegae Group Vice Chairman and de-facto leader Chung Yong-jin met with Naver’s co-founder and Global Investment Officer Lee Hae-jin in January to discuss business cooperation.
Shinsegae Vice Chairman Chung Yong-jin at an SSG Landers game after the retailer took over the pro baseball team from SK Group for 100 billion won in Feb. 2021
Naver commands 18.6% of the domestic e-commerce market, followed by Coupang's 13.7% and eBay Korea's 12%. eBay Korea runs the country's two popular shopping platforms -- Gmarket and Auction -- as well as a curated shopping platform, G9.
If the proposed Naver-Shinsegae consortium wins the competition for eBay Korea, they will emerge as the dominant player in the country's online retail market worth 47 trillion won in annual transaction value.
A combination of Naver's e-commerce business worth 29 trillion won with eBay Korea's 17 trillion won and Shinsgae's 1.4 trillion won via its e-commerce spin-off SSG.COM will far outweigh Coupang Corp's 24 trillion won.
As well as sharing the acquisition costs for eBay Korea, teaming up with Naver will allow Shinsegae to put more resources into its logistic infrastructure, while taking full advantage of Naver's broad portal customer base.
For Naver, it will be able to enhance its product lineup by using Shinsegae's retail brands -- Shinsegae Department Store, E-Mart, SSG.COM and No Brand -- while making up for its weakness in logistics facilities. The online giant may use Shinsegae's offline stores nationwide as logistics centers.
Acquisition of a 21% stake to become top shareholder
24 billion won*
2017
Woowa Brothers, operator of Baemin
Minority stake purchase
35 billion won*
2017
Korean fulfillment center operators
Stake purchases
N/A
2020
Note: * Reported
ANTITRUST ISSUES
The biggest stumbling block to a possible joint bid for eBay Korea would be monopoly concerns, given Naver's leading position in the e-commerce sector.
Naver could face tight scrutiny from antitrust regulators as a candidate, delaying the deal's closing. In that respect, the antitrust issue may give its rival bidders the upper hand in negotiations.
"A recent ruling by the Korea Fair Trade Commission concluded that Naver and open market platforms are not in equal relationships but in vertical relationships. That could become a challenge to a possible deal," said an antitrust lawyer at a law firm.
In the worst-case scenario, the antitrust regulator could order Naver to give up price-comparison services, or not allow eBay Korea's outlets -- Gmarket, Auction and G9 -- to sell products on the Naver website, he added.
An open market platform such as Gmarket is a marketplace that connects a wide range of sellers with consumers.