The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
BEIJING, China — JD.com Inc. posted a quarterly profit for the first time as a public company after revenue beat expectations, as the online retailer integrated Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s Chinese web business and rode strengthening consumer spending.
China’s second-largest e-commerce company reported sales of ¥76.2 billion ($11 billion) for the three months ended March, compared with the ¥73.6 billion expected by analysts on average. The company, which bought Wal-Mart’s “Yihaodian” local shopping platform in 2016, had a net profit of ¥239 million versus estimates for an ¥851 million loss.
JD has benefited from the rise of online shopping in a country with patchy physical retail infrastructure, and is now investing in technology to ensure longer-term growth. It’s spinning off its online payments and finance division and building warehouses and drone delivery networks to become one of Asia’s dominant e-commerce players. Its battle with larger domestic rival Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. may now be starting to spread to Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries.
It’s said to be in talks to invest hundreds of millions of dollars into Indonesian e-commerce platform Tokopedia, which could form the basis of a bigger push into the region. But it’s already facing competition from Alibaba’s Lazada, which has a headstart in key countries such as Singapore.
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“We expect total gross merchandise volume to rise 46 percent year on year including Yihaodian thanks to the recovery of general consumption trends since the start of this year,” China International Capital Corp. analysts led by Natalie Wu wrote in a note to clients before the earnings. “We also expect second-quarter guidance to be strong, on the recent recovery of the retail business.”
JD expects revenue to grow 35 to 39 percent to between ¥88 billion and ¥90.5 billion this quarter, compared with the ¥89 billion that analysts had estimated. Active annual customers rose to 236.5 million, compared with 169.1 million a year earlier.
By David Ramli; editors: Robert Fenner, Edwin Chan and Reed Stevenson.
Fast-growing start-ups like Hettas, Saysh and Moolah Kicks created sneakers designed specifically for active women. The sportswear giants are watching closely.
The companies agreed to cap credit-card swipe fees in one of the most significant antitrust settlements ever, following a legal fight that spanned almost two decades.
In an era of austerity on Wall Street, apparel businesses are more likely to be valued on their profits rather than sales, which usually means lower payouts for founders and investors. That is, if they can find a buyer in the first place.
The fast fashion giant occupies a shrinking middle ground between Shein and Zara. New CEO Daniel Ervér can lay out the path forward when the company reports quarterly results this week.