Amazon's Grocery Push Playing Catch Up With Chinese E-Commerce Giants

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 22 June 2017 10:14 IST

As Amazon.com looks to swallow US grocery chain Whole Foods, China's tech giants are already digesting hefty bricks-and-mortar deals, taking the lead in the battle to transform supermarket shopping with big data and better supply chains.

China's Alibaba Group Holding and JD.com have invested heavily in offline retail - bricks-and-mortar stores - in recent years to complement their online offerings.

Advertisement

With their ready-made payment and social media platforms to lure shoppers, Alibaba and JD.com have helped China become the world's largest online grocery market, far ahead of the United States.

This early lead, cemented by densely populated urban areas and cheap labour, could be key as retailers and tech firms race to boost margins on low-cost consumer goods by reinventing supply chains with big data analytics.

Advertisement

"China is already the largest online grocery market in terms of value in the world so it's really advanced in terms of scale," said Nick Miles, London-based head of Asia Pacific for food and grocery industry research body IGD.

Amazon Prime Wardrobe in Testing, a 'Try Before You Buy' Fashion Service

Sales made online are set to more than double to around 6.6 percent of China's broader grocery market by 2020, compared to around 1.4 percent for U.S. sales by then.

Advertisement

Both US and Chinese e-commerce firms are grappling with the challenge of increasing their margins on fast moving consumer goods (FMCG), which include low-margin, high-demand goods with a short shelf-life - a staple of grocery stores.

Alibaba, which has a burgeoning cloud business that competes directly with Amazon, plans to use its trove of consumer data to provide a suite of connected services back to brands whose goods they sell.

Advertisement

Services will include inventory management, smart manufacturing and logistics, aiming to slash waste and margins across the entire supply chain, according to the company's so-called "New Retail" strategy.

Likewise, JD.com uses data from a partnership with China's hugely popular messaging app WeChat, which has over 930 million users, to build data profiles for a range of brands including baby products, cosmetics and soft drinks.

Catch up
Alibaba has invested over $9.3 billion (roughly Rs. 60,000 crores) in offline retail stores since 2015, including supermarket chain Sanjiang, department store Intime Retail Group and Suning Commerce Group, one of China's biggest offline retailers.

In May it took an 18 percent stake in Lianhua Supermarket Holdings, part of retailer Bailian Group.

JD.com bought Wal-Mart Stores's Chinese online platform Yihaodian for about $1.5 billion in shares in 2016.

US firms are now looking to play catch up - key as bricks-and-mortar stores are hit by a slowdown and online players battle with tight profit margins and high delivery costs.

Amazon launched a $13.7 billion (roughly Rs. 88,300 crore) bid for grocery chain Whole Foods Market last week, marking its intention to take on Wal-Mart.

Amazon's Whole Foods Deal Seen as Disruptor of Grocery Business

Wal-Mart, which got a stake in JD.com in the Yihaodian deal, upped its share in the Chinese firm to 12.1 percent in February, having bought online retailer Jet.com in a $3 billion deal last year.

It's a race with a big global impact on the wider market: worries about Amazon's new clout with the Whole Foods deal wiped more than $35 billion off the combined market value of dozens of US supermarkets, food producers and shopping malls.

The incentive for Chinese tech firms to slash costs and take a bigger bite of the offline market is clear.

Despite being the world's largest e-commerce market, over 80 percent of transactions are still conducted offline in China.

The country's e-commerce market grew over 50 percent last year while hypermarket and supermarket sales flatlined, according to consultancy Bain & Company. Online retail growth hasn't been immune either, with analysts pointing to high delivery costs and tight margins.

"It's going to very hard for those pure e-commerce players to grow (margins), and for those offline players, it's going to be very hard to survive and make money," said Bruno Lannes, Shanghai-based partner at Bain.

"The answer is to combine in an integrated supply chain."

Competition
China's firms and their global rivals are increasingly looking to tap into overseas market such as South East Asia and India, the most likely battlegrounds for any stand-off.

However, online-offline tie-ups, even in China, are still at a relatively early stage. Challenges remain with integrating physical store assets to online systems, cutting delivery costs and dealing with fierce competition.

At the Hema seafood market on the east side of Beijing, these challenges - and China's ambition - are on display. Shoppers peruse fresh fish and clams, but pay with smartphones, scanning QR codes using Alibaba-linked payment platform Alipay as staff in red t-shirts help set up accounts and connect to wifi.

"I don't think Amazon is competitive in this field... its pages, functions and payments are old fashioned," said one female shopper in her 20's with the last name Liu.

"Hema is like Ikea but better... it feels like home."

© Thomson Reuters 2017

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. You Can Now Turn Your PS5 Into a Linux Gaming PC
  2. These Four Xiaomi Phones Are Now Eligible to Get Android 17 Beta Updates
  3. ULA Atlas V Launches 29 Amazon Kuiper Satellites in Return Mission
  4. OpenAI Confirms GPT-5.5 Cyber Model's Rollout Is Around the Corner
  5. Moto Buds 2 Plus Launched in India With ANC, Up to 40 Hours of Total Playback Tim
  6. Moto G47 Debuts Globally With a 108-Megapixel Camera at This Price
  7. Moto G37 Power, Moto G37 Launched With Dimensity 6300 Chip: See Price
  8. Motorola Razr 2026 Series With Up to 4-Inch Cover Display Launched
  1. Netflix Mobile App Gets New ‘Clips’ Feed to Show Users Vertical Videos Amid a Major Design Overhaul
  2. ULA Atlas V Launches 29 Amazon Kuiper Satellites in Return Mission
  3. Moto Buds 2 Plus Launched in India With Hi-Res Audio, Up to 40 Hours of Total Playback Time: Price, Features
  4. iQOO Z11 Global Variant Spotted on Geekbench Database With Snapdragon Chipset, Unlike Chinese Model
  5. Samsung Reportedly Plans to Launch Galaxy Book Models With Android-Based One UI 9 Soon
  6. PS5 Linux Loader Gets Public Release, Allowing Users to Run Steam and PC Games on Console
  7. Nine Crypto Scam Centres Targeting US Users Shut Down in Joint Operation Involving UAE, US and China
  8. Google Photos Unveils New AI-Powered Wardrobe Feature to Help You Decide What to Wear
  9. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Teases GPT-5.5 Cyber AI Model Rollout, Could Take On Anthropic’s Claude Mythos
  10. Vivo X Fold 6 Leaks Hint at 200-Megapixel Camera, MediaTek Dimensity 9500 Chip and 7,000mAh Battery
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.