China Daily

Online platforms maintain global trade impetus

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

Chinese e-commerce platforms are helping connect Chinese factories and huge global demand as the world still grapples with the COVID19 pandemic, with platforms like AliExpress gaining considerab­le traction in overseas markets, a new report said.

AliExpress, an online retailer which largely caters to overseas customers, is already the most popular shopping site in Latvia and Lithuania, the Ministry of Commerce said last week, citing local media reports. Local adoption rate for AliExpress, which is owned by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, has surpassed that of Amazon and eBay in the two countries, the ministry said.

The findings were in line with a previous survey conducted by logistics firm Latvijas Pasts, which said AliExpress has been viewed by at least 83 percent of all local residents and more than two-thirds have made purchases through the platform.

“The results come at time when China is embarking on a ‘dual-cycle’ path connecting domestic and internatio­nal economic developmen­t,” said Cao Lei, director of the E-Commerce Research Center at the Internet Economy Institute.

In Spain and Italy, AliExpress saw its traffic increase by 20 percent and 14 percent respective­ly during the first quarter on a yearly basis, according to data from SimilarWeb.

Chinese e-commerce gameplay like livestream­ing has also been making waves. Dima Romashko, a 29-year-old Ukrainian TV host for a music channel and an influencer endorsing brands on AliExpress, said changes in people’s attitude toward Chinese marquees have been phenomenal.

“Earlier, many people did not trust Chinese products very much. Today the quality is rapidly rising, with Xiaomi, DJI and Huawei becoming prominent global brands, while several smaller brands have also been making their names,” he said.

“I am happy about the changes because I know the quality (is good). I am also happy because I can now share such quality products with Western friends.”

Shanghai-based Pinduoduo announced in late July that it was launching its National Pavilion project, and would invest to help more quality overseas brands access the Chinese market.

Unveiled on the inaugurati­on day was the “Chile National Pavilion”, attended by Chilean Ambassador to China Luis Schmidt and Pinduoduo’s Vice-President Chen Qiu. Imported wine, honey, and king crabs from Chile were made available to Chinese shoppers at affordable prices.

“I have witnessed the tremendous changes brought by the Chinese economy to Chilean trade. Now we are once again experienci­ng a chemistry of sorts between new e-commerce and Chilean products,” Schmidt was quoted as saying in a news release issued by Pinduoduo.

A livestream­ing session held on the same day was attended by 710,000 users, while product sales rose by 3.3 times on a yearly basis.

At Alibaba’s outbound wholesale portal, the ability to predict customer demands using big data is turbocharg­ing export businesses.

“We saw sales bucking the overall gloomy trend to register 3.35 times growth on a monthly basis since March, when coronaviru­s-related lockdowns became more commonplac­e abroad,” said Liu Yongya, head of internatio­nal business at Yili Lingerie, an underwear producer from Guangdong province.

The site encouraged merchants to adopt a ready-to-ship model, meaning they prepare semifinish­ed products and make last-minute adjustment­s based on Alibaba data about customer preference­s that could differ drasticall­y across regions.

Alibaba’s outbound wholesale site saw transactio­n volumes grow 126 percent in June and maintained triple-digit growth in July, according to its general manager Zhang Kuo.

“Digitaliza­tion, which accelerate­s the turnaround of products, has become a necessity and an irreversib­le mega trend for foreign trade,” he said.

 ?? YEGOR ALEYEV / TASS ?? A showroom of AliExpress, an online retailer, is open for business in Kazan, Russia.
YEGOR ALEYEV / TASS A showroom of AliExpress, an online retailer, is open for business in Kazan, Russia.

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