China Daily

JD opens door to Australia, NZ

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

The country’s second-largest e-commerce site JD has officially opened its Australia and New Zealand headquarte­rs in Melbourne, Australia as it accelerate­s expansion in overseas markets amid fierce competitio­n from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Amazon.com Inc.

JD will offer Australian and New Zealand brands and retailers access to Chinese consumers through JD’s exclusive partnershi­p with Tencent Holdings Ltd, the owner of popular Chinese social networking platform WeChat.

The regional headquarte­rs, which is based in the heart of Melbourne’s business district, will provide low-cost and high-efficiency commodity circulatio­n solutions for small and medium-sized enterprise­s in Australia.

“Our customers have rising demand for high-quality products from Australia and New Zealand, and this move is a major step toward meeting that demand,” said Liu Qiangdong, JD’s chairman and CEO.

Winston Cheng, head of JD’s internatio­nal operations, said: “Australian and New Zealand brands are in strong demand on JD, especially in the categories of food, agricultur­e, dairy and cosmetics. The move will help local products access that demand.

“We look forward to strengthen­ing and promoting the trading relationsh­ip between these two countries and China,” Cheng added.

Statistics showed that sales of cosmetics and personal care products made in Australia surged 1,000 percent in 2017 on JD compared with the same period last year. Australian brands such as Devondale, Swisse and Penfolds are among the most popular with JD consumers.

Almost exactly one year ago, JD’s biggest rival Alibaba launched its Melbourne office. Lyu Haoze, an analyst at China E-Commerce Research Center, said the move will further expand JD’s influence and brand awareness in the global market, and intensify competitio­n among major e-commerce players.

Apart from the two countries, JD has stepped up its efforts to expand its presence in Europe, the United States and Southeast Asia.

The company will launch its first European e-commerce platform and delivery services in France, with plans to roll out to the United Kingdom and Germany, according to Liu. In the UK, JD will also open an artificial intelligen­ce research center in Cambridge and offices in London.

JD is also preparing to operate in the United States by the end of the year, starting in Los Angeles. It wants half of its revenue from overseas within a decade and “we will continue to invest until we achieve our goal,” Liu said in an interview.

In Southeast Asia, JD launched its Indonesia business in 2015 and formed its joint venture with Thai conglomera­te Central Group to enter Thailand in 2017. In January, it made a strategic investment in Tiki.vn, Vietnam’s leading business-toconsumer e-commerce platform.

Australian and New Zealand brands are in strong demand on JD ...” Winston Cheng, head of JD’s internatio­nal operations

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