The Phnom Penh Post

E-commerce eyes China’s real estate

- Fan Feifei

MAJOR Chinese e-commerce players are betting big on the real estate market and will sell properties during this year’s Singles Day shopping spree, in a bid to increase sales revenue, diversify their product portfolio, as well as inject new vitality to the country’s housing sector.

Online retailer JD will release more than 6,000 discounted housing resources in cooperatio­n with over 200 property developers in 70 cities across the nation for the upcoming shopping bonanza, while Alibaba Group Holding Ltd will launch over 10,000 properties on November 11.

China E-Commerce Research Center director Cao Lei said property developers are facing great pressure to cut inventorie­s as the government has maintained tight regulation­s to curb speculatio­n in the property market.

“The e-commerce platforms have become an important channel for real estate developers to boost sales. Meanwhile, Alibaba and JD need such eye-catching commoditie­s with high per-customer transactio­ns to increase the gross merchandis­e volume,” Cao said, while noting this move will have a limited influence on the real estate market.

Cao added Chinese consumers could not only buy daily necessitie­s, but also tourism products, houses and automobile­s via online marketplac­es.

Zhang Dawei, chief analyst at property agency Centaline, said these moves will have no impact on the property market.

JD officially marched into the country’s property market in 2017. It rolled out a site on its online platform targeting property buyers in associatio­n with leading developers.

The company said it would take steps to integrate online and offline real estate businesses by creating a one-stop service platform that would integrate its capacities in marketing, services and the supply chain.

In 2014, tech behemoth

Alibaba joined hands with real estate developer Vanke to offer discounts to property buyers.

Moreover, it signed an agreement with the Hangzhou city government to use the company’s technology to create an online system for house rentals in August 2017.

Guo Shiying, an analyst from Zhuge Zhaofang, a leading real estate big data and artificial intelligen­ce start-up in China, said the discounted properties provided by Alibaba and JD represent an innovative sales model in the property market.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, new home prices in China’s four firsttier cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen) rose by 0.3 per cent in August month-on-month, reporting the same increase as the previous month.

In August, new home prices and the second-hand housing prices in 31 second-tier cities rose by 0.5 per cent and 0.2 per cent month-on-month respective­ly, both being 0.2 percentage point lower than the previous month.

 ?? XINHUA NEWS AGENCY ?? Online retailer JD’s head office in Shaanxi province’s Hanyin county in China.
XINHUA NEWS AGENCY Online retailer JD’s head office in Shaanxi province’s Hanyin county in China.

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