Walmart and Jet.com are due to announce a $3 billion deal by Monday
Walmart and Jet.com have agreed to a deal worth "around $3 billion" and will make it official Monday, Recode's Jason Del Ray reported Sunday afternoon, citing anonymous sources.
The deal, which was first reported by the Wall Street Journal last week, would be the largest US e-commerce company acquisition in history. Recode points out Zulily's $2.4 billion sale to QVC was the previous record.
Jet.com's cofounder and CEO Marc Lore is expected to lead Walmart's US online business and directly report to Walmart CEO Doug McMillon following the acquisition. Lore, who owns about a quarter of Jet.com, could make as much as $750 million from the deal, on top of "incentive bonuses," according to Recode.
The acquisition is expected to help boost Walmart's online business, which has struggled to gain much traction against the market leading Amazon. Walmart's generated around $14 billion in e-commerce sales, a fraction of Amazon's $99 billion in annual revenue.
The acquisition by Walmart, the largest retailer in the US, also marks the final chapter to Jet.com, the two-year old e-commerce site that raised over $500 million. Jet.com has often positioned itself as an Amazon competitor and is reported to have set a goal of becoming a company worth $40 billion within 5 years. The company was last valued at around $ 1 billion.
Jet.com competed against Amazon and other e-commerce sites by focusing on a low price strategy. All products are typically 10% to 15% lower than those of its competitors, although that cost tens of millions of dollars per month in marketing. Recently, it pivoted away from a $50-per year subscription model in hopes of reaching more customers, which put even more pressure on its cost structure.
It's unclear how exactly the deal will help grow Walmart's e-commerce business. But combining Walmart's massive customer base and distribution network with Jet.com's strong e-commerce logistics and delivery expertise will at least help reignite the company's online business and potentially put a dent on Amazon's unstoppable retail machine.
You can read the full Recode report here>>