China Daily (Hong Kong)

Bailian builds e-commerce platform

Firm expects Shanghai unit to provide diverse solutions to other enterprise­s

- By WU YIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

An online e-commerce platform for commodity trading that aspires to become an internet-based informatio­n and transactio­n hub with a trillion-yuan ($151 billion) in target was establishe­d in Shanghai on Tuesday, making it one of the first to offer customized real time informatio­n services for the trade.

The platform, Shanghai Bailian Commodity E-commerce Co Ltd, is the commodity e-commerce arm of Shanghai’s State-owned conglomera­te Bailian Group.

“The Bailian Commodity E-commerce Co aims to become a service provider that offers a wide range of services that cover informatio­n, pricing, transactio­n, settlement, logistics and supply chain financing,” said Xu Ziying, president of Bailian Group.

Zhou Jiayu, managing director of Shanghai Bailian Commodity E-Commerce Co, said that the platform aims to synergize resources of other Bailian arms including retail and financing to provide commodity sellers and buyers one- stop solutions that help in decision making.

“Very often commodity trade platforms are regarded business-to-business hubs. In practice, it is decision makers, or individual­s facing real situations instead of an abstract company that needs the informatio­n the most. So we are creating this platform to cater to people’s needs and helping them get access to transparen­t data when making informed decisions”, said Zhou.

The platform features fast and accurate transactio­ns that enable order placements in 30 seconds. It takes one second to respond to existing orders. Convention­al transactio­ns and settlement­s that would take three days can be completed in just half an hour at the platform, according to company officials.

The platform focuses on only spot goods and is not operating in futures, and the major products transacted are oils and petroleum products, said Zhou.

Li Wenzhe, deputy managing director of Shanghai Zhongshan Chemicals Market, a chemical commoditie­s trading hub, said that the online e-commerce commodity platform would help the convention­al brick-and-mortar market to become more efficient.

“Trading would be much easier thanks to one-spot solutions. For example, shipment and settlement­s are trackable online, making everything transparen­t and immediate. Supply chain financing would also help smaller players to operate with more ease,” he said.

According to a research report by OCN.com, an industry research services provider, the country has more than 1,200 commoditie­s e-commerce platforms on the mainland, and annual transactio­ns are expected to exceed 30 trillion yuan in 2017.

“Growing number of platforms shows that commoditie­s market’s demands are not yet fully met, and competitio­n has just started. In the future, platforms will be more consolidat­ed,” the report said.

Shanghai is planning to have several hundred billionyua­n and trillion-yuan level trading platforms, a goal it expects to reach by the end of 2020, according to its latest five-year plan.

Bailian Commodity E-Commerce is aspiring to be one of the mega-platforms, said Zhou.

 ?? WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A customer chooses seafood at a supermarke­t of Bailian Group in Shanghai. The company is setting up a commodity trading platform targeting sales of a trillion yuan.
WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A customer chooses seafood at a supermarke­t of Bailian Group in Shanghai. The company is setting up a commodity trading platform targeting sales of a trillion yuan.

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