China E-Commerce Giant JD Set for $1.4 Billion Discount Spree
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- 9618.HK
(Bloomberg) -- JD.com Inc. will offer discounts across its online shopping platforms from Monday in a 10 billion yuan ($1.4 billion) campaign to capture new users ahead of an anticipated Chinese economic recovery this year.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Singapore PM Lee’s Estranged Brother Weighs Presidential Run
Americans Need to Be Richer Than Ever to Buy Their First Home
Amazon Pauses Construction on Second Headquarters in Virginia as It Cuts Jobs
iPhone Maker Plans $700 Million India Plant in Shift From China
Amazon Is Closing Its Cashierless Stores in NYC, San Francisco and Seattle
The campaign has spurred concerns that larger rival Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. or upstart PDD Holdings Inc. may retaliate with cuts of their own, igniting a margin-eroding price war. JD announced the launch of the subsidy plan in a statement on its official WeChat account Saturday.
China’s internet firms are revving up efforts to outdo each other since Beijing began to wind back its bruising crackdown on the tech sector, spurring an abrupt surge in competition that’s spooking investors. Meituan is said to be expanding into Hong Kong and has embarked on a campaign to hire 10,000 people on the mainland — an effort to beat back heightened competition from new entrants such as ByteDance Ltd. in the $145 billion Chinese food-delivery arena.
JD shares tumbled after news of the impending rivalry surfaced in domestic media last week. Alibaba executives have since dismissed speculation it would directly engage its longtime rival, warning that a return to the price wars of years past was in nobody’s best interest.
In 2020, Beijing launched a crackdown campaign to rein in what it called the “reckless expansion of capital,” affecting sectors from e-commerce to online education and the sharing economy. The government has begun rolling back restrictions since late 2022, intent on reviving a Covid-struck economy.
A $33 Billion Hit Shows China’s Newest Stock Worry: Tech Watch
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
FBI Documents Show Leonardo DiCaprio, Kim Kardashian Grilled for 1MDB Secrets
Yellowstone Backers Wanted to Cash Out—Then the Streaming Bubble Burst
Female Execs Are Exhausted, Frustrated and Heading for the Exits
How Countries Leading on Early Years of Child Care Get It Right
Microsoft Expands Game Pass as Regulators Fret Over Activision Deal
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.