| Wal-Mart Exec: Focus is on China(AP)Updated: 2006-10-25 10:36
 
 
 
 Wal-Mart's top international executive said Tuesday that the world's largest 
retailer wants to tackle China the way its founder, Sam Walton, did in the 
United States -- by offering a slew of items at a resonable 
price.
 |  Customers with shopping 
 bags walk out of a Wal-Mart Supercenter in Beijing October 17, 2006. 
 Foreign retailers are rushing to tap China's fast-growing economy, large 
 population and expanding middle 
class. [Reuters]
 |  
 "You have to be excited by China. That's 
where Wal-Mart can win," Mike Duke, chief executive of Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s 
international division, said at a meeting with Wall Street analysts.
 Duke was responding to questions about reports that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. 
wants to expand in China by offering about US$1 billion for a chain of 100 
combination merchandise and grocery stores, or hypermarkets.
 News reports citing unnamed sources have said Wal-Mart is bidding for the 
hypermarkets from Taiwanese company Trust-Mart.
 Duke declined to comment on the reports.
 "Clearly you know our position on acquisitions. We cannot make any comment 
today on any acquisition including an acquisition on something named 
Trust-Mart," he told analysts on the second day of the company's investor 
meeting in Teaneck, N.J., across the Hudson River from Manhattan.
 A Trust-Mart deal would vault Wal-Mart past its rival, Carrefour SA of 
France, in the number of hypermarkets in China.
 Foreign retailers are rushing to tap China's fast-growing economy, large 
population and expanding middle class.
 Duke said Wal-Mart was on track to open 25 stores in China by the end of this 
fiscal year on January 31, adding to 52 it had at the start of the year.
 Duke said Wal-Mart sees an opportunity to prosper in China by offering a 
better standard of living to shoppers in the form of more goods at a better 
price.
 "There is a great opportunity for Wal-Mart to do in 
China what Sam Walton did in the United States and is still doing today with the 
Wal-Mart stores in the US, and that's really bringing a product at a better 
value to the customer," Duke said. |