The Sun (Malaysia)

Google to invest US$500m in China’s JD.com

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BEIJING: Google will invest more than half a billion dollars in China’s second-largest ecommerce company JD.com as part of a move to expand retail services around the world, the companies said yesterday.

The announceme­nt comes as the US giant is pushing Google Shopping, a platform allowing customers to compare prices between different sellers, which poses a challenge to Amazon.

The firms will marry JD’s supply chain and logistics experience with Google technology to create “next generation” personalis­ed retail in regions including Southeast Asia, the US and Europe, the joint statement said.

“This partnershi­p with Google opens up a broad range of possibilit­ies to offer a superior retail experience to consumers throughout the world,” JD.com’s chief strategy officer Jianwen Liao said.

Google will put US$550 million (RM2.2 billion) in cash into JD.com and in return, the California-based company will receive 27.1 million newly issued JD.com Class A ordinary shares.

The shares are equivalent to a nearly 1% stake in the company, according to a JD. com spokesman.

Google chief business officer Philipp Schindler said the move will give customers “the power to shop wherever and however they want.”

However, the partnershi­p is unlikely to affect Google’s status in mainland China, where Gmail, Google Search and Google Maps are all blocked in China.

“The announceme­nt isn’t focused on China,” JD.com spokesman Josh Gartner confirmed to AFP.

Chinese internet users face fines or even jail for unfavourab­le social media posts. Authoritie­s have further tightened internet controls in recent months, shutting down celebrity gossip blogs and probing platforms for “obscenity”.

In China, JD.com competes aggressive­ly with e-commerce leader Alibaba, which runs the popular Taobao and Tmall shopping platforms. – AFP

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