China Daily Global Weekly

Cross-border opportunit­ies

Best Inc looks to leverage ASEAN e-commerce for global growth

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

With the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) emerging as China’s largest trading partner, Chinese integrated supply chain and logistics solutions provider Best Inc will build more service networks in the bloc’s member economies.

Earlier this year, the Hangzhouhe­adquartere­d company in Zhejiang province started operating cross-border services between China and five Southeast Asian markets.

Best had completed building service networks in Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Cambodia and Singapore in July to introduce China’s mature logistics operationa­l modes. These are creating jobs, tax revenues and the right conditions for local businesses to develop e-commerce, mobile payment systems and other emerging industries.

By leveraging its asset-light model and experience in Thailand and Vietnam, Best plans to operate 12 sorting centers and around 400 service stations across Malaysia, Cambodia and Singapore over the next three years.

These will include two customized flagship sorting centers in Kuala Lumpur and Phnom Penh that will be equipped with cutting-edge technology like high-speed automatic sorting lines and dimension-weight-scanning systems.

According to joint research by Google, Temasek and Bain & Company, with 360 million mobile-savvy internet users, Southeast Asia’s e-commerce sector is on track to reach $150 billion in sales by 2025 from $38 billion in 2019.

Best Inc Founder and Chairman Jonny Chou said the company aims to provide its ASEAN clients with efficient services through vigorous investment and applicatio­n of automation equipment and informatio­n technology. This will help local small and medium-sized enterprise­s to benefit from smart logistics services and to facilitate the growth of digital economies in these areas.

In addition to building more partnershi­ps with airlines, freight train operators and local partners in both China and ASEAN markets, Best’s next steps will be ramping up crossborde­r business, fortifying logistics as a strong link in internatio­nal trade under the current global business setting.

To meet rising demands of the e-commerce sector and evolving customer needs, Best is offering nextday delivery options in major areas of Thailand and same-day deliveries in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi in Vietnam. The company’s total parcel volume from Southeast Asia reached 16.1 million in the second quarter of this year.

The company is also eyeing other opportunit­ies in the region, including supply chain management, freight delivery and truckload capacity brokerage, with plans to operate in Indonesia and the Philippine­s.

Chou stressed that multilater­al trade is still an irresistib­le trend. The increasing­ly close economic and trade relations between ASEAN and China remain vigorous due to multilater­alism and free trade deals like the upcoming Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p.

China’s trade with ASEAN stood at 2.51 trillion yuan ($367 billion) in the first seven months, growing 6.6 percent year-on-year, and accounting for 14.6 percent of its total foreign trade volume, according to data released by the General Administra­tion of Customs.

The expansion in Sino- ASEAN trade has been partly buoyed by the implementa­tion of an upgraded China-ASEAN Free Trade Area protocol since October 2019, which has further facilitate­d goods trade and brought dividends to e-commerce businesses on both sides.

“We will promote the constructi­on of logistics channels from China to Southeast Asia, making available sea, land and air transport between the two sides, and provide cross-border e-commerce customers with full-link door-to-door integrated cross-border logistics services,” said Chou.

The company hopes to work with more partners to provide logistics support to Chinese companies so they could “go global” through the deployment of global logistics and supply chain networks. It will also seek to help upstream businesses cultivate reliable logistics service ability.

Earlier this month, Best participat­ed in the 2020 China Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services in Beijing as part of its efforts to further expand its global footprint.

Chou said with COVID-related social distancing measures forcing many people into isolation across the world, demand for faster and better deliveries is rising. Since the contagion has been largely under control since April, the company saw its firsthalf internatio­nal business volume surge, with total sales reaching 13.88 billion yuan in the first half of this year.

As people in other countries are also under quarantine and still subject to social distancing measures, e-commerce is booming. Demand for faster and better logistical services is high. Many multinatio­nals believe the industry is no longer simply laborinten­sive, but a combinatio­n of people, technology and innovation, Chou said.

“Going forward, we plan to maintain a balanced growth strategy and strive for profitabil­ity by continuing to leverage our technology-enabled integrated supply chain and logistics service model. We will lay emphasis on e-commerce, invest in technology applicatio­n and automation, and capture revenue and cost synergies across multiple business units,” said Chou.

Efficient supply chains are essential to the digital economy and foreign trade. Besides making bigger investment­s in technology, many logistics companies are expanding their network of warehouses to improve cross-border delivery services, said Cai Jin, vice-president of the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing.

China’s courier sector delivered 60 billion parcels in 2019. The country has over 20,000 companies for express deliveries, employing more than three million people, according to the State Post Bureau.

Supported by more than 8,000 employees, the New York Stock Exchange-listed Best’s business currently covers express and freight delivery, supply chain management, business-to-store-to-consumer supply chain, truckload capacity brokerage, internatio­nal logistics and financial services.

It had business units in around 20 countries and regions such as the United States, Germany and Japan by the end of 2019.

Wei Jianguo, vice-chairman of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said it is time for

China to highlight the roles of processing trade and cross-border e-commerce businesses to ease the pressure on general trade, which refers to imports or exports of goods.

It is equally important to further tap the consumptio­n potential in the domestic market to help Chinese exporters seek new growth points. Processing trade refers to the business activity of importing all — or part of — the raw and auxiliary materials from abroad, and re-exporting the post-processing and assembling of finished products.

Wei said both exporters and the government need to intensify informatio­n exchange with the country’s long- term trading partners and maintain China’s vital position in the global industrial chain. Chinese logistic service providers must pay close attention to the pandemic situation in their overseas markets, and prevent risks caused by protection­ism.

To maintain solid economic fundamenta­ls, the government has also emphasized the importance of focusing on the six priorities of safeguardi­ng employment: people’s livelihood­s, the developmen­t of market entities, food and energy security, the stable operation of industrial and supply chains and the smooth functionin­g of society.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A woman receives goods from a Best Inc employee in Kuala Lumpur in July.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A woman receives goods from a Best Inc employee in Kuala Lumpur in July.

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