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Reliance, Amazon lock horns over 'Future' deal

INDIAN conglomerate Reliance has dismissed Amazon's push to delay its acquisition of domestic retail giant Future Group, despite an arbitration panel suspending the deal following objections by the US online titan.

The row is the latest development in a prolonged battle for dominance in India between Reliance, owned by Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani, and Amazon, whose founder Jeff Bezos is the world's wealthiest person.


Amazon, which owned a stake in one of Future Group's firms that reportedly included an option to buy into the flagship company, claims that the $3.4-billion Reliance deal, announced in August, amounted to a breach of contract.

After an arbitration panel ordered the deal to be put on hold following Amazon's request, Reliance said late Sunday(25) that it would nevertheless "enforce its rights and complete the transaction in terms of the scheme and agreement with Future group without any delay".

Reliance's retail subsidiary RRVL said in a statement that it had followed "proper legal advice" before agreeing to buy Future Group, adding that the deal was "fully enforceable under Indian Law".

Reliance, Amazon and Walmart-backed Flipkart have been locked in a frenzied contest for a share of India's lucrative online market.

The acquisition of Future Group, which owns some of India's best-known supermarket brands such as Big Bazaar, would strengthen Reliance's presence in the hugely competitive e-commerce sector.

The arbitration panel has 90 days to give a final verdict on the Reliance-Future deal.

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5 key reasons why UK is losing its billionaires while global rich-list grows 300 per cent
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5 key reasons from Knight Franks' wealth report on why the UK is losing its billionaires

  • Global ultra-wealthy population jumps over 300 per cent since 2021
  • UK billionaire count drops to 156, biggest fall in 37 years
  • Policy shifts, mobility and weaker investment appeal drive the change

A fresh global wealth snapshot shows just how sharply fortunes are rising. The number of individuals worth at least $30m (£22m) has surged from 162,191 in 2021 to 713,626 now, an increase of more than 300 per cent, according to analysis by Knight Frank. The billionaire population, currently at 3,110, is projected to grow by 25 per cent to 3,915 by 2031.

This rapid expansion is being fuelled largely by technology-led wealth creation. As Liam Bailey of Knight Frank reportedly said in a news report, the ability to scale businesses faster, particularly in sectors like artificial intelligence, is accelerating how quickly large fortunes are built.

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