Bangkok Post

JD to enter Amazon’s home turf

Chinese firm seeks funds to bankroll a logistics build-up

-

J D. com Inc is preparing to make its US debut with a beachhead in Los Angeles, seeking to best arch-rival Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and challenge Amazon.com Inc on its home turf.

The $68 billion company, which said in December it would start online sales in the US by the second half of 2018, is now seeking funds to bankroll a logistics buildup to support an internatio­nal expansion.

JD is in final-stage discussion­s to sell 15% of its logistics arm to Tencent Holdings Ltd and other investors in an early fundraisin­g round.

“Tencent will get about a third of the shares on offer and the deal will be completed by the middle of next month,’’ billionair­e founder Richard Liu said in an interview.

“That’s a precursor to a logistics initial public offering in China or Hong Kong in about three years,’’ he said, giving his most detailed outline of JD’s global push to date.

The company founder wants to leapfrog Alibaba, which like JD rode an unpreceden­ted Chinese consumer spending boom but remains largely home-bound.

“JD’s rule is that once we decide to do something we never limit the money,” Liu said in Davos, Switzerlan­d, where he was attending the World Economic Forum.

“The company wants half of its revenue from overseas within a decade and “we will continue to invest until we achieve our goal,” he said.

JD, which is listed in New York, is eyeing the largest city on the US west coast because of its enormous Chinese diaspora, and may lean on shareholde­r Walmart Inc for initial logistics support.

Liu, who said this week he worried about the increasing difficulty of penetratin­g a protection­ist American market, said he was considerin­g multiple options for a US entry, including partnershi­ps with local companies.

“This year, Vietnam, India, Philippine­s, Malaysia — every Southeast Asian country — we will come by the end of this year,” Liu said. “Our future is we will invest in US and build a warehouse fulfillmen­t centre in US so you can get same-day delivery.”

JD has said previously that it wants to start online sales in Europe and the US by the second half of 2018.

Liu’s strategy is simple: sell quality Chinese goods at lower prices than his competitor­s. He wants half of JD’s revenue to come from abroad in 10 years, hopefully evenly distribute­d between Southeast Asia, the US and Europe.

New Street Research analyst Kirk Boodry said JD getting half of its revenue from overseas would be a surprising achievemen­t, and questioned its ability to win market share in countries where rivals were firmly entrenched.

But the company is lining up powerful backers to realise its vision. JD is Walmart’s main partner in China, and it’s teamed up with Tencent in a number of deals, including last month’s $863 million investment into VIPShop Holdings Ltd.

Tencent declined to comment on the logistics stake.

A “secret team” spent two years brainstorm­ing with Chinese brands such as Xiaomi Corp on how to take the platform global, Liu said last year.

Its push into the developed world however will be one of JD’s riskiest ventures to date.

The online retailer’s expansion into Southeast Asia, starting with operations in Indonesia and Thailand, faced relatively little competitio­n. That won’t be the case for Europe or the US, where Amazon is active.

“We feel a little bit more optimistic about the prospects for a company that can leverage what they have in China overseas, and with JD we just don’t see them having anything in particular that stands out,” New Street Research’s Boodry said.

“But the idea of JD logistics setting up a facility and presence in the West Coast makes sense, when you think about the potential for cross-border e-commerce and import and exports from China.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand