China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Taking 11/11 global

Alibaba wants to carry Singles Day shopping overseas

- By MENGJING in Hong Kong mengjing@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s Alibaba Group Holding Ltd is taking a step forward toward its goal of “buy global and sell global” by helping overseas merchants to sell to consumers outside the Chinese mainland during its upcoming Nov 11 shopping festival.

For the first time in history, hundreds of overseas brands on Alibaba’s Tmall platform will be able to sell directly to online shoppers in Hong Kong and Taiwan, a move that is seen by Alibaba as testing the waters as it strives to achieve its ambitious goal of serving 2 billion consumers in 20 years.

Daniel Zhang, chief executive officer of Alibaba Group, said at an event inHong Kong on Thursday, that globalizat­ion is one of the top priorities of the company.

“During the Nov 11 shop- ping festival last year, we brought overseas brands to online shoppers in the mainland. This year, we hope to help more brands enter new markets and access consumers beyond the mainland,” he said, adding that the company’s next step would be to help overseas brands access shoppers in Southeast Asia.

Created on Nov 11, 2009, by Alibaba, 11.11, or “Singles’ Day”, has become China’s largest online shopping event. During the 24-hour sales event in 2015, Alibaba reported transactio­ns of goods sold online of 91.2 billion yuan ($ 13.55 billion).

By expanding globally, Lu Zhenwang, chief executive officer of Shanghai-based Wanqing Consultanc­y, said Alibaba is expected to set a record in the sales due to a larger shopper base.

“Alibaba’s Nov 11 sales are on track to exceed 100 billion yuan. But the continuous sales growth for such an event is not sustainabl­e as the online shopping population in China will peak, and the majority of Alibaba’s business still comes from China,” Lu said.

His view was echoed by Adam Xu, a partner at multinatio­nal consultanc­y Strategy&. Xu said that there is still a promising future for e-commerce in China, but market growth would be increasing­ly spurred by expanding product offerings and shoppers’ willingnes­s to spend more online.

JD.com Inc, Alibaba’s biggest rival in e-commerce in China, adopts a similar strategy. The company, which has formed a strategic alliance with Wal-Mart, plans to spur sales by helping Chinese consumers access to a wide variety of high-qualitypro­ductsimpor­tedbyWal-Martfromar­oundthe world.

But the continuous sales growth for such an event is not sustainabl­e as the online shopping population in China will peak.” Lu Zhenwang, CEO ofWanqing Consultanc­y

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The launch ceremony of Alibaba’s Nov 11 shopping festival in Hong Kong on Thursday.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The launch ceremony of Alibaba’s Nov 11 shopping festival in Hong Kong on Thursday.

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