Friday May 25, 2018
    Home > News > Economy
    Text:| Print|

    Wal-Mart enters China e-commerce business

    2012-10-31 13:12 CNTV     Web Editor: yaolan comment
    A man walks out of a Wal Mart outlet in Shenzhen. China said Tuesday it has approved a plan by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to gain control of a local online supermarket.

    A man walks out of a Wal Mart outlet in Shenzhen. China said Tuesday it has approved a plan by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to gain control of a local online supermarket.

    As China's e-commerce sector is booming, foreign retailers are positioning themselves to grab a piece of the cake. The world's biggest retailer, Walmart, is boosting its stake in the popular Chinese supermarket website Yihaodian, hoping to win more Chinese shoppers.

    Walmart closed the deal with Chinese online supermarket Yihaodian last week, and now owns 51 percent of the company. The move underlines Walmart's determination to be a bigger player in China's fast expanding e-commerce sector, as well as in the retail market.

    Neil Ashe, president & CEO of Wal-Mart Global e-Commerce, said, "Sam's Club currently operates online, and we'll continue to operate there but our emphasis for e-commerce will be at Yihaodian. Our goal isn't necessarily to be the biggest online retailer but to be the best."

    Analysts say the partnership provides a shortcut for Walmart's e-commerce ambitions in China in terms of localization, which is a key to success.

    Lu Zhenwang, CEO of SH Wanqing Consultancy, said, "It's unlikely that Walmart could start its online store in China from scratch. Yihaodian has and e-commerce-ready distribution system, warehouse infrastructure, a large pool of registered users, as well as a lot of experience in purchasing local Chinese food products."

    George Ren, partner & VP for Greater China, Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, said, "There're lots of local food brands, and local food assortment, and this is not the traditionally strong area for international retailers - how to do the assortment smartly and give the Chinese consumer what they really want."

    Walmart recently announced its opening 100 new stores in China in the next three years, a rate slower than the 50-60 stores a year that it had been opening recently. But Walmart is not the only one slowing its expansion in China. Experts say foreign supermarkets are re-evaluating their return on investment rates, as they struggle to win over the Chinese consumer from their local competitors. Currently foreign supermarkets - Walmart, Tesco and Carrefour alike - all lag behind local chains in terms of market share.

    Comments (0)

    Copyright ©1999-2011 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 含山县| 化州市| 盐池县| 于都县| 河津市| 册亨县| 临洮县| 北票市| 盐边县| 德庆县| 洛隆县| 亚东县| 鄂尔多斯市| 汉中市| 富川| 根河市| 临清市| 荔浦县| 丹江口市| 同江市| 观塘区| 阳朔县| 吉林市| 平谷区| 洛扎县| 建宁县| 同仁县| 余江县| 甘泉县| 太原市| 清流县| 博罗县| 东乡| 潞城市| 青冈县| 湖南省| 乐昌市| 千阳县| 营山县| 佛山市| 沈丘县|