Bangkok Post

As EBay returns to China, it may be onto something

- ADAM MINTER Adam Minter is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is the author of ‘Junkyard Planet: Travels in the Billion-Dollar Trash Trade’.

About a decade ago, EBay Inc made a legendary retreat from the Chinese auction business in the face of growing local competitio­n. It was a defeat so humiliatin­g that it became a business school case study. Since then, however, the Chinese e-commerce market has changed drasticall­y — and so has EBay. As the company makes its return to the mainland, it may be at the forefront of an important trend in online trade.

EBay recently announced it’s partnering with Ningbo, a major port and manufactur­ing hub, to help boost the city’s e-commerce with the rest of the world. It’s a farsighted move. In 2016, Chinese shoppers made a whopping $86 billion in online purchases from vendors in other countries. Globally, such trade was just as healthy, adding up to $300 billion in 2015 and growing at nearly 25% a year — faster than domestic e-commerce. At a time when globalisat­ion otherwise seems to be in retreat, companies taking advantage of this kind of trade are looking like the future of retail.

As EBay has figured out, the phenomenon revolves around China. Ningbo’s e-commerce pilot zone is one of more than a dozen recently establishe­d by the Chinese government. Companies operating in these areas can get several benefits, including expedited imports and tax breaks. More crucially, they can set up bonded warehouses to store imported goods for quick dispatch to customers — thereby reducing shipping times by as much as 80%.

That’s much appreciate­d by Chinese shoppers, who have long sought out foreign alternativ­es to unsafe local products. In the late 2000s, after repeated scandals over contaminat­ed infant formula, Chinese parents bought up foreign brands in such quantities that they created shortages overseas. (If you’ve ever encountere­d tins of baby formula at a duty-free shop, it’s thanks to those scandals.) Now e-commerce is making such products far more accessible: As of 2015, China’s legal imported formula market was worth $2.5 billion annually.

A growing demand for luxury is also contributi­ng to the trend. One recent survey from McKinsey & Co found that 50% of Chinese consumers “now seek the best and most expensive product” when they shop. Last year, those shoppers purchased $5 billion worth of goods online from South Korea alone, with luxury items such as cosmetics, clothing and accessorie­s topping the list. Although there’s local competitio­n in all those categories, foreign brands are still widely perceived to be superior — and cross-border e-commerce has become the easiest way to buy them.

Outside China, meanwhile, it’s bargains that are driving this trade. San Franciscob­ased Wish.com has built a multibilli­ondollar business on the insight that US consumers will buy low-quality products directly from China — and then wait forever for them to ship — so long as the stuff is cheap. Wish’s hugely popular app offers an endless stream of such goods. In the market for a pair of suede men’s oxford shoes? If you don’t mind waiting until the spring equinox, they’re scrolling by for just $6.95.

EBay shoppers aren’t strangers to this kind of deal. They’ve long used the platform to snap up cheap foreign goods, from squirt guns to chrome-plated muffler silencers. With the Ningbo partnershi­p, EBay is hoping to improve this process by training local workers to help manufactur­ers meet the demands of overseas customers. It’s a big bet that cross-border online commerce will keep growing in the years ahead — even as internatio­nal trade stagnates and protection­ism rises.

That trend won’t benefit everyone, of course. It will surely take a toll on traditiona­l retailers. And bricks-and-mortar shops that target bargain-minded customers will probably be especially vulnerable. Wish, for one, has been upfront about its plans to compete with Wal-Mart Stores Inc. For consumers, though, that kind of competitio­n is a good thing. It means internatio­nal borders are no longer an impediment to shopping — or to getting a good deal.

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