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China's Second Largest Online Retailer JD.com Files for US Stock Listing

Categories: East Asia, North America, China, U.S.A., Citizen Media, Economics & Business, Technology

JD.com Inc., a major Chinese e-commerce company, has filed to raise up to 1.5 billion [1] US dollars in an initial public offering (IPO) in the US, making it the largest IPO of a Chinese Internet company in the states thus far.

JD is a major competitor to Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., China's biggest e-commerce company, which is also considering going public in what is expected to be a much larger IPO valued around 100 billion. JD's business model is more similar to that of Amazon.com in that it is a direct seller of goods held in sprawling warehouses, while Alibaba runs online marketplaces.

The company's most distinctive feature is its highly efficient delivery team that reaches third-tier cities and is currently expanding to rural villages. Below is the latest advertisement of the company that highlights its delivery service:

JD.com, founded by its chairman Richard Liu Qiangdong only ten years ago, had 35.8 million customer accounts by the end of the third quarter of last year. After two years of losses, the company said it registered a profit of 60 million yuan (about 9.9 million US dollars) in the first three quarters of last year, mainly due to interest income.

The company said it would use the funds raised to “acquire land use rights, build new warehouses and establish more delivery stations,” according to the filing. It currently operates 82 warehouses and 1,453 delivery stations across China.

Although the company's profit comes from its interest and the reach of its e-commerce platform is far behind Alibaba and Tencents, JD.com has its supporters. IT news commentators Xie Pu and Xu Ji highlighted [2] the great potentials of the company's logistics, in particular its nationwide warehouse and goods delivery network:

为京东点赞,因为刘强东比起其他电商公司,更早看到虚拟与现实的交融,京东十年来做对了一件事——自建物流。物流建设成就了京东,它进可攻,退可守。

We support JD.com because Richard Liu sees the intertwine between the virtual and the real. In the past ten years, it built its logistics system. JD.com is a logistic infrastructure. It helps the company to sustain and expand its business.

我们为京东点赞,也因为京东赚钱不容易。电商不是游戏,毛利低得可怜,要自建物流,还要供养数万快递配送员,能够赚到不容易赚到的钱,这样的公司,才好长期看好。

We support JD.com because it does not make easy money. E-commerce is no game and it has very little profit margin. To make money by building its logistic infrastructure and hiring tens of thousands delivery workers, this is not an easy task and the long-term effect will show.

China’s e-commerce boom

By 2015, China will have surpassed the US as the leading e-commerce market, according to [3] consulting firm Bain & Company. On November 11, China marked its “Super Singles” day for jewelry and other sales to entice couples to shop for their loved ones. Sales hit five billion US dollars. By comparison, last year’s Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales combined reached around three billion dollars.

In such as huge market, local corporates such as JD.com perform much better than international giant corporates such as Amazon. Chinese New York Times columnist Li Chengdong compared [4] JD.com and Amazon's performances in China on his Weibo:

凡是亚马逊进入的市场,基本是第一名。进入中国10年了,且提供的体验是要优于亚马逊全球的标准。拼钱,亚马逊更多;拼技术,亚马逊更强;拼仓储,亚马逊自建更早更先进;拼品牌,亚马逊更要强于京东。如果非要分析亚马逊中国为什么打不过京东?京东有不一样的就是刘强东,而亚马逊中国是一帮职业经理人!

In the rest of the world, Amazon occupies the number one position in all its markets. The company has been in China for about ten years and its services in China are on average better than the rest of the world. Amazon has more money, better technology, more advanced warehouses than JD.com. If I have to explain why Amazon cannot beat down JD.com, it is because of Richard Liu. Amazon is run by a team of professional managers [rather than an entrepreneur like Liu].

However, Jing Nanke, who is customer of both Amazon and JD.com, disagreed [5] with Li's judgement:

胡说八道,这两家网店我都是经常去买东西,到我还是喜欢京东。在服务,响应时间,送货时间,平台友好程度上,京东都远优于亚马逊。看好京东,亚马逊在中国牛不了。

Nonsense, I am customer of both online platforms and I like JD better. Its customer service, delivery service and platform friendliness is better than Amazon. I don't think Amazon can gain an upper hand in China.

Lingpeng1973 said [6] the “professional managers” of Amazon are poor at localization of e-commerce:

这些职业经理人们根本不了解在中国电商怎么玩,只对西雅图负责,不求有功只求无过,碰上刘强东、李国庆这帮不按规矩出牌的地头蛇,只能苟延残息。以前还看好其强大的技术背景和仓储实力,但随着京东等的崛起,亚马逊在中国的机会已经失去。

The professional managers don't understand how to run e-commerce in China and they are responsible to Seattle. They don't want to make mistakes rather than taking risks to compete for success. Thus, when competing with Richard Liu and Li Guoxin [CEO of Dangdang.com, China's biggest online bookstore], who play the game differently, it barely makes business. Because of Amazon's super technology and warehouses, it had great potential before. Now that JD.com, among others, have established themselves in China, Amazon has lost its edge.

Li Guoqing, CEO of another online retailer, Dangdang.com, believed [7] that going public in the US could help JD.com to improve the company's capital flow and transparency:

目前公认美国资本市场过热,是融资好时机。老刘说“13年盈利,但14年不上市”,那我再劝一句:14年Q1务必在美国上市,补充资本金不足和增加被美国会计准则审计的透明度。

Now the US capital market is becoming overheated, which offers good timing for fundraising. Liu once said “JD will gain profits in 2013 but will not go public in 2014″, but I would advise him to go public in the first quarter of 2014 so as to improve capital flow and increase audit transparency.