China Daily

Alibaba bets big on Thai prospects

- By HE WEI in Hangzhou hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd expects to complete the constructi­on of an e-commerce and logistics hub in Thailand by 2019, taking the internet behemoth closer to Southeast Asian economies and its goal of shedding its reliance on the Chinese market.

Building of the park is on a “steady course” and marks the company’s long-term investment in Thailand, Alibaba said in an emailed statement to China Daily.

Under an agreement with the Thai government in December, Alibaba vowed to help develop the country’s e-commerce sector through providing training to small businesses and individual­s, and exploring ways to enhance its logistics capabiliti­es.

Alibaba said the hub is designed to provide a onestop service connecting SMEs, manufactur­ers, service providers and logistic partners, complement­ing its existing investment in Lazada Group, a dominant regional e-commerce platform in which Alibaba holds a majority stake.

“We hope the park will empower Thailand’s innovative internet startups and boost the country’s technology ecosystem,” the statement added.

Under the agreement, Alibaba and its subsidiary Lazada will offer e-commerce training to 30,000 Thai SMEs to aid their access to both domestic and internatio­nal e-commerce platforms and nurture software developers.

The deal also calls for Alibaba to advise the country’s postal service — Thailand Post — on shipping and logistics.

The Chinese online giant is marching into a region on the cusp of a digital shopping boom fueled by fast-growing mobile phone usage.

Consultanc­y eMarketer projects that e-commerce sales, excluding travel, will grow at a rate exceeding 15 percent in Thailand annually over the next four years, reaching $5.69 billion by 2020.

In a similar move, Alibaba in March establishe­d the first digital free trade zone dubbed Electronic World Trade Platform in Malaysia, offering small businesses lower barriers for entry and easier access to financing.

“Alibaba’s investment here will be different from that in Malaysia, where it is expected to be an e-commerce platform only. In contrast, its investment in Thailand will be broader, covering production platforms … particular­ly in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam,” Thai Industry Minister Uttama Savanayana was quoted by the Bangkok Post as saying.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A worker fills an order at the Lazada’s warehouse in Jakarta, Indonesia.
REUTERS A worker fills an order at the Lazada’s warehouse in Jakarta, Indonesia.

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