Khaleej Times

Chinese consumers spend $21B in a day

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shanghai — China’s smartphone­wielding masses unleashed billions of dollars in e-commerce spending on Saturday as they rushed to snap up bargains on “Singles Day” — billed as the world’s biggest one-day online shopping festival.

Also known as “Double 11” for the November 11 date, the event launched in 2009 by e-commerce giant Alibaba kicked off at midnight and ended up shattering the previous year’s sales mark, as it does every year.

Eighteen hours later, at 6pm (1000GMT) on Saturday, Alibaba said the gross value of sales processed by its online payment system Alipay was nearing $21 billion — roughly equivalent to the annual economic output of Honduras or Afghanista­n.

That blew well past the $17.8 billion logged over the full 24 hours last year, which itself marked a 32 per cent year-on-year increase.

Alibaba rivals such as JD.com also reported brisk business.

The yearly display of rising Chinese consumer spending power has become crucial for manufactur­ers and retailers across the country, accounting for a significan­t share of annual orders for many businesses.

Five minutes after midnight, Alipay was processing 256,000 payment transactio­ns per second, doubling last year’s high-water mark, Alibaba said. More than 90 per cent of Alipay orders were placed via mobile, the majority on Alibaba’s main e-commerce platform Taobao.com.

More than half of China’s 1.3 billion people use smartphone­s, which have become central to daily life, used for messaging, shopping, news and entertainm­ent, ordering taxis and meals, and serving as digital wallets for a range of point-of-sale purchases. The day’s transactio­n volumes are pumped up by many Chinese delaying purchases of mundane items like rice and toilet paper to take advantage of cut-rate prices.

Alibaba launched “Singles Day” as the Chinese online answer to the late-November US “Black Friday” shopping rush, capitalisi­ng on the Chinese love of a good bargain and the growing national addiction to one-click smartphone payments.

E-commerce’s huge growth in China has put New York-listed Alibaba neck-and-neck with Amazon as the world’s most valuable e-commerce company, while also making Nasdaq-listed JD.com a Fortune 500 company.

Alibaba and JD stock have both doubled this year as revenues surged. Alibaba is investing heavily in creating an entire user ecosystem encompassi­ng cloud computing, artificial intelligen­ce, automated stores using face-recognitio­n, and is pushing into overseas markets under much-travelled boss Jack Ma, one of China’s richest men.

But environmen­talists accuse Alibaba and other e-tailers of fuelling a culture of excessive consumptio­n and mountains of waste.

Greenpeace said “Singles Day” deliveries last year created 130,000 tonnes of packaging waste — less than 10 per cent of which is recycled. It said e-commerce is actually more carbon-intensive than brick-and-mortar shopping, calling “Singles Day” a “disaster for the environmen­t”.

But the growth of Chinese e-commerce has proved a boon to hundreds of once-backward interior towns and villages, now dubbed “Taobao villages” after re-orienting their local economies toward manufactur­ing for online buyers.

Analysts say Alibaba will take “Singles Day” global as Chinese ecommerce growth rates are expected to slow in years ahead. It already has a substantia­l stake in Lazada, an online retailer in Southeast Asia — a hot e-commerce battlegrou­nd — and recently launched an electronic trading hub in Malaysia, its first outside China. — AFP

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 ?? Reuters ?? Jack Ma and Nicole Kidman attend a show during Singles’ Day global shopping festival. —
Reuters Jack Ma and Nicole Kidman attend a show during Singles’ Day global shopping festival. —

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