The US retailer is spending up to $80 million a month to acquire customers and grow its market share, nearly a four-fold increase compared to last year ,according to a Business Line report.
In the three months that ended September, Amazon's international losses swelled to $541 million, with the biggest sap on earnings being the company's investments in India. Analysts said losses in the quarter spiked due to preparations for festive sales that took place in October.
"By far the biggest individual thing is the investment in India that we continue to make and very excited about it, the initial reaction in India from both the customers and also sellers," said Brian T Olsavsky, Chief Financial Officer at Amazon, during a call with analysts last month.
However, Amazon's huge investments didn't win it favour over customers during the festive season, with rival Flipkart selling more goods of higher average value. While both companies claim leadership, the local company continues to have bigger userbase which hit 100 million earlier this year and has a higher proportion of sales of fashion, that earns it better margins than electronic goods.
However, local rivals Flipkart and Snapdeal in the last one year cut costs, shelved resources and focused on improving efficiency and eyeing profits. At the same time, they have been matching discounts and incentives of Amazon to retain their existing customers and grow their businesses.
For the fiscal 204-15, Indian e-commerce firms reported losses of over Rs 5,200 crore, with Flipkart leading the at Rs 2000 crore loss as it expanded rapidly, hiring expensive resources from Silicon Valley and investments that it had to pull back eventually. Financial details for 2015-16 is not available yet.