Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Amazon may soon enter Brazil's e-commerce market


Amazon may soon enter Brazil's e-commerce market







Brazil's Saraiva, is trying to sell its online business, a move that could pave the way for Amazon's debut in Latin America's fastest growing e-commerce market.

SAO PAULO: Brazil's biggest bookstore chain, Saraiva, is trying to sell its online business, a move that could pave the way for Amazon's debut in Latin America's fastest growing e-commerce market, industry sources said.
Saraiva is widely seen as one of the main hurdles facing Amazon, the online retailer, as it prepares to set up shop in Brazil, a challenging market of 200 million people known for its tax and logistic complexities.
The Sao Paulo-based bookseller wants to sell its e-commerce platform and focus on its chain of over 100 stores and publishing businesses, where margins are higher, three industry executives told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
"Saraiva is trying to sell its online operations. They have offered it to some retailers," said one of the sources.
"Why would this be interesting for Amazon? Amazon's main challenge will initially be overcoming the obstacle of the publishing companies. By buying Saraiva it shortens that distance dramatically," the same source said.
Amazon spokesman Craig Berman declined to comment, as did a spokeswoman for Saraiva.
A second source said Saraiva has been preparing to spin off its online retail business for some time to focus on its publishing operations and bookstores, where it also sells CDs and DVDs.
"Their assets in terms of relationships with publishers and distributors could be important for Amazon," the source said.
Amazon is laying the ground to land in Brazil, a $12 billion e-commerce market where still low internet penetration and a swelling middle class should provide sustainable business growth for years to come.
Reuters reported in June that the Seattle-based company was planning to open a digital bookstore in Brazil and start selling its Kindle e-reader by the end of 2012. An online approach would allow Amazon to avoid logistics hazards that could jeopardise a full-scale retail operation.
Saraiva has Brazil's biggest ebook catalog with 12,000 titles in Portuguese, yielding around $250,000 a month in revenue. Though ebooks account for just a fraction of Saraiva's internet business -- it also offers DVDs, electronics and other consumer goods online -- the company says digital book sales are starting to grow at a faster pace.
One person familiar with Amazon's strategy for Brazil told Reuters that Saraiva approached the US retailer in the past, but dismissed media reports of ongoing talks as market speculation. The source said Amazon is sticking to its original plan of focusing on organic growth in foreign markets.

Doors open
Even if Amazon doesn't end up buying Saraiva's online business, the dismembering of Brazil's biggest bookstore could help by weakening its top local competitor.
Earlier this year Saraiva was reportedly pressuring Brazilian publishers not to sign-up with Amazon in an attempt to protect its market leadership, which helped it pull in 731 million reais ($362 million) in net revenue in the first half of 2012.
Saraiva relies heavily on its network of 102 stores across Brazil. Products sold online account for just one-third of the company's retail business and shrank 6.4 percent in the second quarter of 2012 compared to the same period a year earlier.
"Saraiva's online business is not generating the necessary profits," said a third executive familiar with the company's management. "They recently decided to scale down their e-commerce sales in order to maintain profits. And that means the business is not interesting."
Saraiva is looking to unload its online business because of small margins and aggressive price competition from bigger e-commerce players such as B2W, which controls Brazil's top platforms, Submarino and Americanas.com.
Earlier this month, Saraiva signaled it was open to entertaining offers following media reports that it was in talks with Amazon.
The company "is always attentive and willing to evaluate business opportunities of any other nature that arise and that may be of interest to its shareholders," Saraiva said in a securities filing.
Some analysts question the potential value of a Saraiva deal for Amazon, arguing that the US company's strong branding would allow it to grow organically and rapidly seize a big chunk of the Brazilian market.
"The process of integrating Saraiva's operations could pose risks for Amazon. It would be better for them to start from scratch," said Caue de Campos Pinheiro, a retail analyst with SLW Corretora in Sao Paulo.
Others, however, say an acquisition would help Amazon safely navigate the Brazilian market, where a mix of steep taxes and poor infrastructure make it a difficult place to do business.
"They would have a head start," said Jordan Rohan, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus in New York. "And they would have access to a management team with local knowledge."

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

What to do when Amazon’s spot prices spike


Rapid price spikes are affecting buyers on the Amazon Web Services Spot Instances market, where users are now bidding extremely high prices for scarce compute capacity. These price spikes are new, and they call into question assumptions that many users have made about how the auctioning of computing resources works.
The first report of this came in late September, when marketing software service SEOMoz reported huge price spikes on the spot market. A sudden spike in the price of “m2.2xlarge” servers (normally $.44/hour) drove the price briefly up to $999/hour, causing a site-wise outage. While this was bad news for SEOMoz, it was probably worse news for the unlucky customers who ended up paying $999 for one hour of compute time!

Will you pay $999 per hour for a server?

Why would anyone bid such a high price? It’s hard to say for sure, but the unlucky winner of the auction probably did not expect to pay $999 per hour for a server. On the Amazon marketplace, your bid represents the maximum amount that you are willing to pay: you usually end up paying much less than your bid. Many buyers seem to have assumed that the price would never rise above the fixed-price “on-demand” rate charged by Amazon.
Unfortunately, it seems like a large number of people were using that flawed strategy. And when something changed in the spot market (perhaps a reduction in the number of machines available to rent, due to increased demand) the unrealistically high bids that customers made went into effect. Amazon has since posted a video describing the different strategies buyers on the spot market use. Litmus, one of the companies mentioned in the video, describes their strategy as “bidding high for convenience.” The $999 bidder who cornered the spot market on large servers was probably using an extreme version of this strategy.
My company (SlideShare) was also effected by the recent price spikes on the spot market. Several times in October and November, all of our EC2 servers disappeared at once because of a price spike (this had never happened before). Fortunately, the software code that manages SlideShare’s cloud servers responded automatically by renting new machines at the “on-demand” rate, so we didn’t experience any actual downtime, only degraded service. But after this happened to us several times, we have changed the mix of machines that we use so that only half of them are from the spot market, and the rest are on-demand.

Spikes are a recent problem

Looking through the pricing history for various classes of machines, it’s clear that these spikes are new, and that they are happening across almost all instance types, at least for servers that are on the East Coast of the United Sates. For example, “small” servers on AWS both spiked as high as $100 an hour twice in November, when the on-demand price for those servers is $.085/hr. “m1.large” machines also spiked as high as $40 an hour. Almost every class of servers has hit spikes of more than 10 times their retail price in last few months. What is going on?
It’s hard to say why the spot market is suddenly showing more price spikes. A drop in supply (from Amazon requisitioning machines for its own purposes or for renting in the on-demand market) or a spike in demand (from the Christmas e-commerce rush) could be to blame. It’s important to remember that the AWS spot market is not a typical market, with many buyers and sellers doing business over a neutral exchange. One seller is servicing many buyers, and is also operating the exchange.
Amazon benefits from customer anxiety about getting access to spot servers: they sell on-demand instances for a higher price, and pre-paid reserved instances for better cash flow. So it’s unrealistic to expect Amazon to do anything to “fix” these price spikes. From Amazon’s perspective, they are a feature, not a bug.

How to deal with EC2 spot price spikes

For customers of the AWS spot market, there are some best practices to be learned from these recent price spikes:
  • Never EVER bid more than you are willing to pay for a server on the spot market. This is the most important lesson. Don’t even bother doing “convenience bidding” of double or triple the on-demand price: when the price starts to spike it will easily go way beyond any rational price. Do you want to be the gal who explains to the CEO why the company is paying $100 an hour for servers?
  • Don’t run all your infrastructure on spot market machines. In fact, don’t run more infrastructure than you are prepared to lose on spot machines. We use a thumb rule of 50 percent at SlideShare, since our system can easily survive 50 percent of our machines disappearing at one time (which is what will happen during a price spike).
  • Write the code that manages your cloud infrastructure so that it responds intelligently to spot market price spikes. If you can’t get a spot machine at a reasonable price, your code should automatically request an on-demand server.
  • Consider having some “reserved instances,” so that you are guaranteed the right to a minimum base level of machines. I’ve argued in the past that reserved instances don’t make sense for startups, but it’s clear that when supply dries up at Amazon it happens all at once, without warning. Your portfolio of servers on Amazon is almost like a financial porfolio. You want some diversification between risky high-reward elements (spot market) and more conservative elements (reserved instances).
These are early days for real-time pricing of cloud computing, and the spot market on Amazon is finally acting like a real market, with extreme price fluctuations. The “free ride” of getting reliable spot priced machines for less than the on-demand price is over. So if you want to play with cheap cloud servers, make sure you have the infrastructure in place to handle a price spike that could make all your servers vanish in the blink of an eye!

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Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Amazon launches affordable Amazon Kindle Fire tablet


Amazon has unveiled its first tablet Kindle Fire. This 7 inch Kindle Fire is powered by unknown Android OS and powered by an unknown dual core processor.
Amazon-Kindle-Fire
Kindle Fire packed Wi-Fi connectivity, internal memory of 8GB, unlimited cloud storage for Amazon content, 3.5 mm audio jack, stereo speakers, and Silk browser. Kindle Fire battery life is 8 hours for reading and 7.5 hours of video playback. It weighs 413 grams.
Kindle Fire will be available in November for the price of $199.