The Sun (Malaysia)

Alibaba looks to expand SE Asian arm Lazada to Europe

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SINGAPORE: Alibaba Group plans to expand its Southeast Asian arm Lazada to Europe, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as the Chinese e-commerce company seeks further overseas growth amid slowing opportunit­ies at home.

The move comes months after Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao, opened a central hub for European sales in Belgium.

Alibaba is already present in Europe through its global e-commerce platform AliExpress, which mainly targets consumers looking for such goods from Chinese manufactur­ers as smartphone accessorie­s and clothing.

Lazada plans to target local European vendors, while AliExpress will continue to focus mainly on cross-border sales from China, one of the sources told Reuters. Lazada Thailand CEO James Dong will help spearhead the initiative, that person said.

Alibaba overseas commerce head Jiang Fan visited Singapore in April to discuss the expansion, the same source added.

Lazada and Alibaba did not immediatel­y respond to requests from Reuters for comment.

The sources did not specify which European countries Lazada intended to expand to. The details were being finalised, they said. They declined to be identified, as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

In China, Alibaba has faced strong competitio­n from such rivals as Pinduoduo Inc and ByteDance subsidiary Douyin, while new regulation­s have limited opportunit­ies for expansion.

Lazada was founded in 2012 by Germany’s Rocket Internet technology incubator to become Southeast Asia’s answer to Amazon.com Inc. Alibaba acquired a controllin­g stake in it for about US$1 billion (RM4.4 billion) in 2016 in what was the Chinese firm’s biggest foreign deal at the time.

Alibaba said in December it had set targets for the Southeast Asian marketplac­e of US$100 billion in gross merchandis­e volume and 300 million users.

Lazada generated US$21 billion in gross merchandis­e volume in the year to endSeptemb­er 2021 and had 159 million users, as competitio­n intensifie­d with larger rival Shopee, owned by Sea Ltd. – Reuters

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