Kuwait Times

Chinese spend billions shopping online on ‘Singles Day’

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BEIJING: Chinese consumers are spending billions of dollars shopping online for anything from diapers to diamonds on “Singles Day,” a day of promotions that has grown into the world’s biggest e-commerce event. China’s biggest e-commerce giant, Alibaba Group, said sales by the thousands of retailers on its platforms had exceeded 130 billion yuan ($20 billion) by early evening Saturday in a count that started at midnight Friday. Last year, sales on Alibaba’s platforms totaled over 120.7 billion yuan, a record for the company.

By comparison, American shoppers last year spent more than $5 billion shopping online on Thanksgivi­ng Day and Black Friday, according to Adobe, which tracks such data. Shoppers also spent $3.39 billion on Cyber Monday last year, the largest single online shopping day in the US, Adobe said.

In China, Alibaba’s main rival, online retailer JD.com, said sales had topped $16.7 billion - though the tallies are not comparable because JD tracks transactio­ns starting from Nov. 1 through to the actual day.

Starting at midnight Friday, diamonds, Chilean frozen salmon, tires, diapers, beer, shoes, handbags, and appliances were shipped out from JD.com’s distributi­on centers on trucks bound for deliveries across China. China is already the world’s largest e-commerce market and the share of online shopping that makes up all consumer spending grows every year. Boston Consulting Group forecasts online spending will rise by 20 percent a year, hitting $1.6 trillion by 2020, compared with 6 percent growth for off-line retail.

Singles Day was begun by Chinese college students in the 1990s as a version of Valentine’s Day for people without romantic partners. Zhang Jingjing, a 30-year-old clerk for an engineerin­g company, prepared for Singles Day by building a shopping list on Alibaba’s retail platform Tmall and watching for when prices dip. She then clicks and snags a long-sought item at a discount.

“I have often emptied my ‘shopping cart’ on Singles Day,” Zheng said. “I have been watching those goods for a long time and know very well their original prices.”

The spending gives a boost to the ruling Communist Party’s efforts to nurture consumer-based economic growth and reduce reliance on trade and investment. China has 731 million internet users, up 6 percent from 2016, according to government statistics. —AP

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