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Tap here for cheap stuff

T-shirts, toilet tissue and rotten mangoes: Chinese app Pinduoduo rides success all the way to Nasdaq.

- By Raymond Zhong in Beijing

Apple, Gucci, Tesla. Many Chinese shoppers love their top-shelf brands.

But another big slice of the population goes gaga for a 40-cent pair of earrings, a US$1.50 wireless smartphone charger and 50 rolls of toilet tissue for $4.75.

These are the shoppers on Pinduoduo, a Chinese app that drew close to 350 million customers in the past year. Its parent company listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market in New York on July 26, just three years into its existence.

The lightning-fast ascent of Pinduoduo suggests that China is not done producing high-flying internet upstarts, despite the vast reach of incumbents such as Alibaba. It also illustrate­s the clout of an underserve­d category of Chinese consumers.

They live outside the prosperous megacities, in the smaller cities, towns and hamlets that more than one billion Chinese call home. They tend to be older, less internet savvy. And they absolutely cannot resist a bargain, even if the stuff they’re buying isn’t exactly top of the line.

In the southern city of Foshan, Li Tianqiang and his wife sell rice noodles and other breakfast food out of a three-wheeled truck to factory workers. Over the past two years, Li, 45, has bought nearly $1,000 worth of merchandis­e on Pinduoduo — the equivalent of around two months’ income for him. Among his purchases: an inflatable paddle boat, a fishing bag and a cherry-red motorised car for his young daughter to drive around.

Li knows he is a little addicted. Any purchases he regrets? A few, he admits.

Some were made out of curiosity. In other cases, the items were of such lousy quality that he threw them out after they arrived. The toys he has bought for his daughter — including dolls, a violin and a keyboard — have been particular­ly bad, he said.

It is all so inexpensiv­e, though, that he said he didn’t mind the occasional misfire.

“It’s nothing, really,” he said of his spending on the app.

For many years, China was a byword for shoddy goods produced on a mass scale. But that is changing. Wages are rising, forcing manufactur­ers to compete on quality. Communist Party leaders want to nurture brands known globally for their innovation­s. Mobile device makers such as Xiaomi and Huawei are investing heavily in design and finding fans worldwide.

To shop on Pinduoduo, however, is to be reminded that many Chinese consumers still check prices first, and that low-end suppliers remain a big part of the country’s economy. The Pinduoduo app’s main page is a bottomless cascade of groceries, fast fashion, household sundries and electronic bric-a-brac — all carrying wildly improbable price tags.

A pair of stretchy, “Playboy”-brand men’s pants: less than $3. Five kilogramme­s of rice: $4. A four-pack of boxer briefs printed with an image of a wolf’s head: $2. A purple kettle with “LOL” written along the bottom: $3. A pink, around-the-neck smartphone stand that lets you lie down and watch videos at the same time: $1. A vibrating electric belt that supposedly helps shed fat: $6.

Shipping is always free. Pinduoduo wants shoppers to involve their online friends in the process. Group orders receive discounts. New users who persuade others to sign up are rewarded with one of a selection of free purchases. Tiny pop-ups within the app provide relentless, real-time updates on what others are buying, creating a sense of urgency: everyone is getting great deals and you are not.

Between the deliriousl­y strange product selection, the next-to-nothing prices, the barrage of coupons and deals, and the ease with which purchases are made, the experience feels less like shopping and more like playing a shopping video game. In regulatory filings, the company calls the app “a combinatio­n of Costco and Disneyland”.

Pinduoduo started operations in 2015. It has grown swiftly enough to attract powerful backers including the US venture firm Sequoia Capital and the Chinese internet giant Tencent. The Shanghai-based company raised $1.6 billion in its Nasdaq share offering, giving it a valuation of $24 billion.

Because it offers so much cheap stuff, however, Pinduoduo is still way behind its rivals in the total value of goods sold. The company, which is unprofitab­le, said that its average shopper spent less than $90 on the platform last year. That translates into revenue per shopper of a dollar and change.

“This is the lowest quality of traffic you can get,” said Steven Zhu, an analyst in Shanghai with the research firm Pacific Epoch. And if older people are driving Pinduoduo’s popularity, Zhu added, then its prospects for long-term growth are grim by default.

The platform has also been accused of being awash with knockoff products. Last week, the company was sued for trademark infringeme­nt in the United States. The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation has also called for an investigat­ion following Chinese media reports of counterfei­t goods and intellectu­al property infringeme­nts on the site.

In its filings with stock regulators, the company said it immediatel­y removed counterfei­ts from the app. And this year, the company’s founder, a former Google engineer named Colin Huang, described his philosophy on price versus quality to the Chinese business magazine Caijing.

His own mother complained to him when two of the nine mangoes she had bought for $1.50 on the app turned up rotten, Huang told Caijing. Still, he said, she continued to use Pinduoduo. “If you can buy seven good mangoes for $1.50, you’re not losing out,” he said.

For the most part, Kang Xia agrees. The 52-year-old retiree in Chengdu has used Pinduoduo to buy shoes, clothes, gadgets — “quite a lot”, she said, although the quality isn’t always great.

A few months ago she got stung by two bad purchases. First, there was a $5 wardrobe with colourful fabric panels and a “real wood” frame. One touch was all she needed to realise the thing was no good. Then she bought a chiffon skirt with a floral pattern — less than $6, including a yellow T-shirt to wear with it — that arrived with a jagged tear down the side.

Kang said she is now less likely to buy things on Pinduoduo solely because they are cheap. But she still looks at the app every day.

For the establishe­d big shots of Chinese e-commerce, it is unwelcome news that many shoppers will buy very nearly anything if the price is right.

To retain customers and avoid regulators’ ire, Alibaba, which served more than 500 million buyers last year, has fought sales of fakes on its Taobao marketplac­e. JD.com, which has around 300 million buyers, has courted upmarket brands and cultivated a reputation for reliabilit­y.

Terry Yao lives in Dandong, a small city in China’s northeast. After looking at some sneakers on Pinduoduo — pairs that should retail for more than $100 were going for a tiny fraction of that, he said — he made up his mind about the authentici­ty of the platform’s products.

“China has developed so much,” said Yao, 28. “But if residents of these third- and fourth-tier cities can only use things like Pinduoduo, it feels to some degree like a big failure. We’ve gone backward.”

But Pinduoduo does not have to be stuck in the bargain bin forever, said Tian X Hou, founder of TH Data Capital, a research firm in Beijing. Now that it has used low prices to attract so many users, it can do as Alibaba did and go premium.

“Once you have this trust, you can grow out of the current business and create a new business,” Hou said.

© 2018 New York Times News Service

Tiny pop-ups within the app provide relentless, real-time updates on what others are buying, creating a sense of urgency: everyone is getting great deals and you are not

 ??  ?? The group discounter Pinduoduo has become a huge hit with budget-minded Chinese consumers.
The group discounter Pinduoduo has become a huge hit with budget-minded Chinese consumers.
 ??  ?? Li Tianqiang shows some of the items he bought on Pinduoduo, the online bazaar that caters to Chinese consumers’ love of a good bargain.
Li Tianqiang shows some of the items he bought on Pinduoduo, the online bazaar that caters to Chinese consumers’ love of a good bargain.

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