By Anna Ringstrom and Veronica Ek
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Budget fashion chain Hennes & Mauritz
The Indian government has been pushing through controversial economic reforms which relax rules on store opening by foreign retailers, arguing these measures would help revive the economy, and H&M said it was preparing to apply to start wholly-owned subsidiaries in the country.
Like Swedish furniture maker IKEA, which is waiting for final approval of its own application, H&M hopes to cater to a growing urban middle-class with a strong demand for western-lifestyle products.
H&M Chief Executive Karl-Johan Persson said after presenting H&M's India plans to Trade Minister Anand Sharma in New Delhi on Tuesday that the Indian market had huge potential.
"We will start with a few stores ... and we will see if everything (goes) as we hope, then we will expand heavily from there," he said in a statement released by the Indian government.
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H&M, the world's second-largest apparel retailer after Zara-owner Inditex
"India represent a significant opportunity for clothing chains and it makes sense for a global player like H&M to seek to expand there. There is no reason the fast-fashion, value- oriented model should not work in India," Neil Saunders at retail consultancy Conlumino said.
India last year opened up to full foreign ownership of single-brand retail firms. Foreign retailers wanting to invest in India beyond the previous cap of 51 percent will need to source 30 percent of their goods locally and Persson said H&M would increase its sourcing in the country.
Inditex, which entered India in 2010 through a joint venture with Tata Group-owned Trent Ltd
India's bid to open up to foreign retailers such as supermarkets has stirred criticism from some local traders, who say it will wipe out small, family-run neighbourhood stores and trigger mass unemployment.
Yet Sanford Bernstein analyst Jamie Merriman said it made sense for H&M to aim for India as it was an attractive, albeit complicated, market for retailers.
"Although, if you think about how long it takes H&M to build up scale in most markets, it's probably going to be a while before that would happen in India," she said.
(Aditional reporting by Matthias Williams in New Delhi and Sarah Morris in Madrid; Editing by Alistair Scrutton and David Holmes)