Alibaba’s China-focused marketplace Taobao has joined the wave of Chinese e-commerce platforms launching cross-border operations with a plan to ship clothing globally for free. The platform will look to follow in the footsteps of the likes of Temu with an initial move to cover Asian territories including Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, and South Korea.
Why it matters: The move illustrates Taobao’s efforts to tap into a broader global market while also engaging in competition with Pinduoduo at home.
Details: Taobao aims to reach Australian shoppers as early as the end of this year before expanding further afield. The program will look to attract Taobao merchants selling not only men’s, women’s, and children’s apparel, but also sports and outdoor clothing, as well as shoes and bags.
Context: Taobao sells items from numerous local clothing brands that its domestic rivals have no access to. Previously, people living outside China needed third-party transit resources to get items they bought from Taobao.
]]>Chinese bubble tea chain Chagee has reportedly hired Li Tao, vice president of Starbucks China, paving the way for the rising brand’s further expansion, according to local media outlet 36Kr. However, the report was quickly denied by the company.
Founded in 2017, the bubble tea maker has found widespread success in China’s crowded ready-to-drink beverage industry through its addition of fresh milk to raw-leaf tea.
Why it matters: The reported move comes as Chagee mulls a US listing to widen its access to financing.
Details: The 36Kr report added that Chagee is also looking at hiring professionals from rivals such as Tims China (Tim Hortons’ China offshoot), while attempting to lure marketing staff from social media platform Xiaohongshu and tech giant Huawei.
Context: The past 18 months has been a period of wild expansion for Chagee, which opened more than 3,500 new stores in 2023. It took the chain more than five years to open its first 1,000 stores and it has over 4500 in total as of May.
]]>Alibaba has signed NBA star Tony Parker as an ambassador for Alibaba.com, its cross-border business-to-business retail platform, just days before the Paris Olympics, as the company tries to lure European customers and eyes further international expansion.
Why it matters: The signing of Parker comes shortly after David Beckham became ambassador for AliExpress, and its connections with professional sports figures indicate Alibaba’s intention to expand its businesses to reach a larger user base.
Details: Alibaba.com, founded in 1999 as the Chinese tech giant’s first business, was designed to serve as a bridge between foreign wholesalers and Chinese manufacturers.
Context: Global sports events are a significant traffic pool for Chinese brands looking to expand their business overseas, with prominent logos on the field and strong visitor flow rate as well as live viewer count making for fast results, as demonstrated by the spike in downloads of Temu after its Super Bowl debut in 2023.
]]>Kuaishou, one of the main rivals to TikTok’s China sibling Douyin, showcased several fresh features for its text-to-video model Kling AI at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai last week, including the ability to generate videos up to 10 seconds.
At WAIC, visitors queued to experience the Sora-like tool that is currently available by invitation only. Users sent simple prompts to generate videos, such as “a panda eating salmon” and “the Mona Lisa putting her glasses on with her hands”, with the resulting clips demonstrating Kling AI’s ability to render the inputs almost perfectly.
AI-generated videos have subsequently flooded the Chinese internet, with Kling AI being used to create clips featuring characters from historical films undertaking modern day tasks and spawning multiple memes.
A video featuring Rong momo, a character from “My Fair Princess” who has become a well-known internet meme in China, feeding Princess Ziwei a chicken drumstick has gone viral on social platforms these days. The AI-generated video is based on the drama’s most famous scene in which Rong momo tortures Ziwei by repeatedly stabbing her with a needle.
Why it matters: Kuaishou will be hoping that its suite of self-developed large model series, including language model KwaiYii, image-focused Kolors, and video-centered Kling, will give it an edge as it continues to challenge to ByteDance’s Douyin and TikTok.
Details: More than 500,000 users have applied to help beta test Kling, senior vice president of Kuaishou Gai Kun revealed last weekend at a WAIC forum, with the number of videos generated reaching 7 million as of now. The Sora rival’s hype is such that English language posts teaching users outside of China how to apply for a Kling AI trial can be found on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Context: Kuaishou, China’s second-largest short video company, launched its AI strategy in 2023, according to CEO Cheng Yixiao, who said that generative AI has a “very rich combination of business scenarios and huge value potential” for the content platform.
Editor’s note: ‘Landing AI’ is a series of special reports focusing on the field of Artificial Intelligence curated by TechNode. By investigating the development of AI landing in China and the behind-the-scenes stories of the industry, we’re going to dive deeper into everything that’s possible under the new wave of AI.
]]>US-based private equity investment firm Matrix Partners has rebranded its China arm as MPC in English, the initials of Matrix Partners China, keeping the Chinese name unchanged starting from July 1. Matrix Partners is the latest dollar fund to make its China operations independent amid geopolitical concerns, following Sequoia, BlueRun, and GGV Ventures.
At the same time, the firm said it would also rebrand its Indian business to DZ47.
Why it matters: Matrix Partners’ renaming reflects greater independence for its China operations, according to the company, but stops short of a complete split from its international operations, the path that many of its US counterparts have opted for.
Details: “Each team’s leadership has operated with separate decision-making and separate back offices from inception,” the US-headquartered venture firm said in a notice, emphasizing that the renaming is driven by a desire to clarify “regional market dynamics” and a continued focus on “competing locally.”
Context: In the past year, several US venture capital firms have split off their China arms as independent operations have felt increasingly like a better choice due to heightened geopolitical tensions and the increased likelihood of US-China technological decoupling.
]]>Chinese artificial intelligence firm iFlytek on Thursday unveiled the latest version of its AI model, Spark 4.0, which the company benchmarked against OpenAI’s GPT-4 Turbo, saying it shows better performance than the US company’s most-advanced model in five aspects, despite lagging in terms of coding and multimodal abilities.
Why it matters: Trained exclusively on a home-grown computing platform that is co-built with telecom giant Huawei, Spark 4.0 can be seen as sending a signal that China’s AI industry has entered a new phase of self-sufficiency despite the US’s restrictions on the country’s access to the most advanced chips, according to iFlytek.
Details: The Hefei-based company finally fulfilled its commitment to upgrade its Spark model to the level of GPT-4 in the first half of 2024, eight months after the promise was made. At Thursday’s event, however, Chairman Liu Qingfeng acknowledged that the gap would “widen again”, possibly to more than a year, once GPT-5 is released, because of its larger parameter size, longer training time, and the increase in the amount of data used.
Context: While iFlytek said its Spark 4.0 model ranked number one in eight international mainstream test sets, rival Alibaba on the same day was also certified by the world-renowned open-source platform Hugging Face as topping the world’s open-source big model list for its Qwen-2, with Meta’s AI model ranked behind it in second.
]]>China’s AI companies are rushing to win over OpenAI users in the country as the ChatGPT creator takes measures to block API traffic from countries and regions that it does not officially support. Affected regions include mainland China, Hong Kong, Russia, and Iran.
Why it matters: OpenAI’s latest announcement on API restrictions has been widely interpreted as targeting China, where local enterprises and developers have been using OpenAI’s API to build products or services. On the other hand, the move is being regarded as an excellent opportunity for Chinese AI companies to woo these users.
Details: Developers in China have posted screenshots of a notice from OpenAI to various online communities that states, “Our data shows that your organization has API traffic from a region that OpenAI does not currently support.” The notice adds that OpenAI will block such access starting on July 9.
Context: China has over one hundred AI models with parameters beyond 1 billion, according to data disclosed by the National Bureau of Statistics in March. Commercialization has become a key priority for the companies behind these models in recent months with a price war over tokens breaking out as the firms vie for potential clients.
]]>E-commerce sales dropped 7.0% from a year ago during China’s second-biggest annual shopping event, the 618 festival, third-party data provider Syntun said in a report on Wednesday. The dip in the mid-year festival’s numbers came despite major player Alibaba achieving a historical record on 88VIP loyalty membership sign-ups and JD announcing that it had set a new record for both transaction volume and orders.
A total of RMB 742.8 billion ($102.3 billion) in merchandise volume was generated by the country’s online retailers as part of the event, according to Syntun, the first drop recorded since figures began in 2008, as Chinese consumers tighten their wallets amid economic uncertainty.
Why it matters: E-commerce platforms invariably choose to release consumption data that is favorable to them in an attempt to portray untouchable positions in a crowded industry.
Details: Led by emerging platforms Douyin (China’s TikTok sibling) and Kuaishou, livestreaming-based sales enjoyed continuous growth and popularity during the month-long 618 festival period, with accumulated sales rising 12.1% to RMB 206.8 billion compared to the same period last year.
Context: The 618 festival began more than a decade ago to celebrate the founding of JD, before being adopted by other platforms. Its sales peaked at nearly RMB 800 billion in 2023.
]]>Major Chinese online retailers including Taobao and JD and emerging platforms like Xiaohongshu have said they saw positive metrics during China’s month-long 618 shopping festival, where low prices have taken center stage as merchants navigate the challenge of reduced consumer spending.
In an email, Alibaba sent to TechNode, the Taobao owner said it has seen “encouraging user engagement and growth” from merchants of all sizes.
Why it matters: The 618 shopping festival is the second largest online shopping event in China, with consumption levels during the event seen as a barometer of the country’s overall spending trends.
Details: Pinduoduo’s standout performance has turned it into a model for competitors, although the discount shopping app has become more aggressive recently as it looks to maintain its appeal. Before its main promotions began in late May, Pinduoduo quietly launched a system designed to automatically adjust prices within the range set by merchants, so that a product’s price drops if a competitor platform offers a lower price.
Context: The main e-commerce players kicked off their 618 promotions in mid-May, but none have posted overall sales totals for the period.
]]>A Chinese AI content creator has challenged cybersecurity firm 360 Security Technology over its use of an image of a woman wearing an ancient costume, which he claims he created via an AI model to showcase a “partially redrawn feature” on the company’s search engine.
The argument between creator DynamicWang and 360 Security escalated as the two parties failed to settle, with the company’s vice president Liang Zhihui saying it is willing to resort to legal action.
Why it matters: As the emerging technology of artificial intelligence is increasingly being used to create content, authorship attribution lacks a clearly defined legal framework.
Details: Even before DynamicWang publicly asked 360 Security to apologize over the alleged copyright infringement on June 8, the firm was in the midst of a public opinion storm, this time over its perceived disrespect toward women. When founder Zhou Hongyi introduced the repainting function at the company’s AI product launch on June 6, he used “sexy” as a prompt to ask the AI-powered search engine to redraw a woman’s breasts of the female in the controversial picture, which DynamicWang since claimed was based on his AI-generated work.
Context: In January, the Beijing Internet Court granted copyright protection for an artificial intelligence-generated image, ruling that the image involved had an element of “originality” due to the plaintiff inputting multiple prompts and adjusting the parameters before generating a picture of a young woman through the text-to-image AI model Stable Diffusion. The ruling was seen as the first such AI-generated image copyright infringement case in China.
]]>On Thursday, global investment leaders gathered at BEYOND EXPO’s Global Investment Summit in Macao, offering a comprehensive exploration of pivotal themes, shaping the future of investment amid the current complex and evolving financial landscape.
Artificial Intelligence is undoubtedly the star of this summit. Investors shared how the buzz around the promising technology is revolutionizing investment paradigms, and how geopolitical tensions are impacting the expansion of AI companies and global data governance.
David Beckham, Sands Global Ambassador, also joined the Summit to share his business insights. “I’ve always thought that the best businesses that we have are the authentic ones,” he said, adding that he would never get into something that he didn’t believe in.
Attract users with market-fit AI products
Creating a product that fits the market is the ultimate goal that any entrepreneur or company must achieve, and this also applies to companies focused on building a sustainable AI business.
When talking about the shift in investment strategies in the AI era, Harry Man from Matrix Partners China, and Lu Zhang, founder and managing partner of Fusion Fund both mentioned that while they acknowledge mergers and acquisitions as a viable exit strategy, they still aim to invest in companies with unicorn potential to achieve greater returns through IPOs.
“I guess all of us are early stage venture capitalists, right? We all like to shoot for the moon. We want to invest in the biggest idea that eventually goes on to an IPO. And that’s how we make money,” said Harry.
However, many AI application companies are currently being overvalued amid the hype, which was the consensus among guests at the Summit.
De-risking or global collaboration?
There’s no doubt that geopolitical tensions are exacerbating the technology decoupling between China and the US markets. However, most startups remain focused on the local market, limiting the impact of these geopolitical issues.
The US is in the process of restricting China’s access to American companies’ AI cloud services from overseas and advanced chips. But according to Esther Wong, the founder and CIO of 3Capital, while China may lag behind the US in cutting-edge AI models and algorithms, it can leverage its market size for operational excellence.
Panelists agreed that AI startups aiming for the global market may need to choose between the Chinese and US markets in the future.
Despite tensions, global collaboration is still ongoing in areas like open-source AI models and data governance. “Regulation of data and data flow is beyond the control of any single entity. Tt requires global collaboration to implement proper data control and regulation,” Wong noted.
What to evaluate when investing in emerging markets?
Investing in emerging markets was also a hot topic on Thursday’s panels. Betting on these markets requires multifaceted considerations, as factors such as political stability, regulations, and investor protections are crucial risks to evaluate.
“So there are actually factors that are more at a political and regulatory level. And then there are also more local cultural practices,” said Akio Tanaka, a Partner at the global venture capital firm Headline.
Roderick Purwana, who serves as a Managing Partner at East Ventures, mentioned during the Summit that Indonesia is set to have a new president in October. “I think the government has been relatively supportive, I guess, of the tech ecosystem in Indonesia, making it easier to anticipate their plans and actions.”
Meanwhile, investment organizations are increasingly focusing on ESG issues. However, emerging markets often lack strict environmental regulations. William Mimassi Pedroso, a Partner at Latin America’s Monashees, emphasized that gender diversity and data protection, including personal data protection, are important and substantial elements, because if these are not addressed, investors will raise questions later in the growth phase.
Overall, based on investors’ experiences and views, a nuanced approach balancing risks and opportunities is needed for investing successfully in emerging markets.
]]>Chinese artificial intelligence company Zhipu AI on Wednesday announced its second price cut in a month, slashing the price tag of its “most popular model” by more than half. The company said it would now offer its GLM-4 model at a charge of RMB 0.10 ($0.014) per 1,000 tokens, but CEO Zhang Peng insisted the move was not part of “a simple price war.”
Why it matters: Offering ever lower prices to capture market share characterizes China’s AI sector at the moment, where over 200 large language models have been released since October 2023.
Details: Tokens are sequences of data that large language models use to process text. GLM-4-0520, the most advanced model built by Zhipu AI, has a context window of 128,000 tokens with RMB 1 for every 10,000 input tokens. The price of this advanced model was cut in May.
Generally, 1,000 tokens are equivalent to around 750 English words or 500 Chinese characters.
Context: Zhipu AI has received at least nine rounds of financial injections from Chinese state-backed funds, major tech companies, and well-known venture capital firms since it was founded in 2019. Those supporters include Alibaba, Tencent, Sequoia, and Hillhouse.
TikTok eyes a shopping sales goal between $12 billion and $13 billion for the second half this year in the US, according to a 36Kr report on Tuesday. The high target was set after the short video platform fell far below expectations in the first five months.
The report quoted key data from Tabcut, a Chinese firm that tracks TikTok Shop’s performance, indicating that TikTok generated less than $2 billion in the US shopping business from January to May 2024.
Why it matters: The potential ban TikTok faces in America seems to have already hurt its growing e-commerce business in its largest user base country.
Details: TikTok, the international version of Douyin, was reportedly hoping to expand its US e-commerce business tenfold to as much as $17.5 billion this year, according to a January report from Bloomberg. TikTok has so far only accomplished 11.4% of its GMV goal in the past 5 months, the 36Kr report said.
Context: TikTok Shop officially entered the US market in September 2023, although little official data has been given to the outside world regarding its merchants and sales. The platform has grown to 170 million users in the American market, according to figures released in January, up from 150 million last year.
]]>Tencent on Thursday launched an AI assistant app called Yuanbao, signaling the Chinese tech giant’s belated entry into the highly competitive artificial intelligence assistant field with an independent entry based on the company’s Hunyuan foundation model.
Yuanbao integrates artificial intelligence-based search, summaries, and writing competencies, and can be used to analyze documents, and basically engage with people based on prompts.
Why it matters: The opening of the independent app shows that Tencent has finally chosen to face competition head-on, several months after AI offerings from its rivals. Baidu’s ERNIE Bot has already amassed 200 million users, while ByteDance’s Doubao currently boasts over 26 million monthly active users.
Details: Tencent’s Yuanbao distinguishes itself from Baidu, Alibaba, and ByteDance’s products by offering direct access to content from the WeChat ecosystem, the company’s super app with nearly 1.4 billion monthly active users, which the firm says will give it superiority in terms of content timeliness and richness.
Context: Last week, Tencent announced that it had made the lite version of its Hunyuan model free to access, while the price of its more powerful version has been reduced by 50% to 87.5%, as the firm joined a fresh price war among major Chinese tech companies.
China’s online retailer JD said it will hold a one-day 2 yuan ($0.28) campaign for millions of goods with free shipping during this year’s 618 event, set to begin on Friday, as cheap remains a main theme across the country’s e-commerce marketplaces and consumers care priorities.
Why it matters: The market pressure that JD faces has now intensified as Pinduoduo, which operates on the principle of low prices and user-friendly after-sales service, continued to nibble away at what was once China’s second-largest e-commerce retailer by market capitalization.
Details: The company had a press conference about the 618 mid-year shopping festival on Tuesday, where JD promoted it will provide “saving to the extreme and cheaper shopping experiences” to customers.
Context: Sandy Xu, the current CEO of JD, revealed that its “10 billion yuan subsidy” channel has amassed over 100 million users since launched last March, while more than one million third-party sellers have operated online stores on the platform, which is in contrast to itself in previous years when JD’s self-operated stores the main within its ecosystem.
]]>Cross-border e-commerce has emerged as a catalyst for economic growth while offering consumers a smooth shopping experience. This consumption model has granted access to China-manufactured products for people globally.
BEYOND EXPO’s cross-border e-commerce summit panel discussion provided insightful perspectives from industry leaders on the growth trends and opportunities in the global e-commerce landscape for 2024 and beyond.
The cross-border ecosystem is far more complex than sellers in China shipping to buyers abroad after receiving an order. It encompasses various elements, including cross-border platforms, payment systems, investors, and data service providers.
Chinese sellers new to cross-border transactions are grappled with a crucial question: how and where to start?
Deena Ghazarian, chairwoman of the Consumer Technology Association’s executive board and founder and CEO of Austere, said partnering with established brands and service-based companies leverages e-commerce platforms including Amazon.
Xiaohongshu, a popular lifestyle-sharing platform that has expanded to the e-commerce business, is seeking to emerge as a service provider to leverage its content and targeted advertising capabilities to drive cross-border e-commerce growth, according to Ning Guang, the company’s business manager.
When asked about the perception of Chinese brands in the American market, Ghazarian said “regionalizing and rebranding” would help appeal to diverse consumer bases.
“We took assets, got a more diverse background, it came across as a diverse brand,” Ghazarian said,” said. “Once we did that, you had no idea it was a Chinese brand.”
Cheryl Tang, APAC sales director of Indiegogo, however, argued that consumers gravitate toward a brand with a “bright spot.”
“We have also seen Chinese brands following Chinese brands going overseas and transforming into U.S. local brands successfully,” she said.
The cross-border e-commerce industry may adopt AI technologies faster than other sectors due to factors like time zone differences, round-the-clock operations, and the desire to leverage AI for cross-cultural challenges, the panelists said.
]]>In today’s rapidly evolving technological landscape, artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and robotics are transforming our daily lives and work environments. These cutting-edge technologies are poised to unlock innovative digital experiences and redefine our interaction with the world.
At the BEYOND EXPO’s ConsumerTech Summit on Friday, industry leaders gathered to explore the potential and challenges of these burgeoning technologies through a series of insightful panels.
The integration of artificial intelligence into personal devices has been a hot topic in recent months, with companies vying to harness this powerful technology to enhance user experiences. The idea of personalized AI is rapidly moving from science fiction to reality.
Jingkang Liu, the CEO and founder of 360-degree camera maker Insta360, described his vision as a future where individuals have a digital personal assistant by their side, constantly learning from their interactions, understanding their preferences, and providing tailored solutions.
However, the path to this AI-driven utopia has its challenges. One of the primary concerns raised was the issue of privacy and data security. As Carl Pei, co-founder of Nothing Technology, noted “The core of security is truth.”
“The core of privacy is to make uses transparent to users, that is, what data we collect, they can choose whether to give us this data or not,” Pei continued. “We must fully communicate the benefits of sharing their data — what advantages they will gain and what enhanced services we can provide. Our goal is to ensure that the product allows them to truly experience the value of these services.”
The panelists in the morning session also explored the interplay between cooperation and competition within the industry. While acknowledging the inherent human tendency towards competition, they advocated for a balanced approach that encourages collaboration and mutual growth.
Specifically, industry players should strive for a healthy ecosystem where competition is driven by deeper insights into customer needs, innovative research, and differentiated offerings, rather than by engaging in detrimental price wars, the panel suggested.
The realm of augmented reality has also captured the imaginations of entrepreneurs and consumers alike due to developments such as the metaverse and the AI boom, but the uniqueness of different use cases makes the scaling of AR particularly difficult.
Xu Chi, founder and CEO of AR brand XREAL, shared that he feels it’s a pity that we haven’t seen the emergence of a definitive AR app for this era, in the same way that Angry Birds was a flag-bearer for the initial iPhone era. That situation motivates XREAL to actively experiment with forward-looking scenarios and collaborate with partner developers, Xu stated.
]]>Entrepreneurs are the driving force behind innovation, growth, and shaping the industry. Their role is paramount in building a startup bigger from day one, as unique perspectives and entrepreneurial spirit are key factors driving the vibrant growth of new enterprises. On Friday, five leading entrepreneurs spoke at BEYOND EXPO about how they have succeeded in their careers, sharing valuable experiences and insights into entrepreneurship.
Below are highlights from the renowned entrepreneurs in conversation with Phoenix TV anchor Richard Ren at the expo’s Founder Forum session. Their comments have been edited and condensed for clarity.
Justin Gong, Co-founder & Senior Vice President of XAG
Our goal is to make agricultural production more efficient, producing more with less. It’s an ongoing project, and in the short term, we want to introduce drones and autonomous technology to farmers, so they don’t need to worry about hiring people amid labor shortage.
In the long term, we want to utilize AI technology and robotics to help farmers manage uncertainties like climate environmental changes.
China is still a growing economy, and we have already proven to the world that we can produce world-class companies and startup companies.
For young entrepreneurs, my advice is to find a really good partner. Don’t trust yourself too much because you can sometimes be too positive or too negative. Find the right partner, but don’t trust them easily at the very beginning. For me, it took 10 years of working together with my partner to build a strong partnership. Now we are both best friends and partners.
David Lee, CEO & Co-founder of NEX
To start something, you always need to quit something. It’s always about making sacrifices and tough choices. Some are big choices. Leaving Apple was a pretty big choice for me as well, but it’s also about the lifestyle that you choose, it is your own personal pursuit of something that you really want to do.
I’m a very optimistic person, sometimes overly optimistic. I believe that I can change the world, do something really great, and solve significant problems. I have immense confidence in what my team and I can achieve. However, I am also paranoid enough to avoid making critical mistakes. That’s why we have a company. That’s why for the past seven years, we have survived the pandemic, weathered economic downturns, and we’re still going strong.
We can use the funding to crystallize our vision into simple hardware that delivers the best possible experience for the mass market. Once we release the product, it is loved by users. We send samples to all major retail stores, and they all want to carry the product. Eventually, what attracted investors was having a product that users love, which basically demonstrates market fit. With a proven market fit, every conversation [with potential investors] becomes a little bit easier.
Carl Wu, Co-Founder and CEO of New Frontier Group
I think we were at the right place at the right time because China was aging quickly, and home care was a lot cheaper. The cost of home care is perhaps about a tenth of that in senior living facilities. That’s what Chinese families wanted, and it aligned with what the government wanted, which is more than 90% of the people should age at home.
So, we were in the right place at the right time. We went from zero to providing 100,000 visits a day to homes. Today, we run the one of largest home health companies in China, offering everything from basic care and nursing care to managing diseases at home. We took the simple idea of addressing China’s aging population and built a home health service in a relatively short period of time.
Eric Cheng, CEO & Founder of Carsome
I think we have achieved a lot of success, especially in creating transparency in the region. Southeast Asia is not just one country, right? It comprises multiple countries like Indonesia with 600 million people, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines, each with very different markets. However, you will find one common issue when it comes to looking for a used car and selling it; the whole market is fragmented and inefficient, partly because most of the trading process is offline. When we first set out to solve this problem, we focused on the customers’ pain points.
For example, if you want to sell a car today, where would you go and what kind of pricing would you expect? We wanted to create a platform that could assess a car’s condition and match it to demand across the entire country. To do that, you really need to be able to develop digital tools to facilitate this matching process. We started very simple with one service – helping consumers sell their cars quickly. Everything could be done within an hour. We saw strong traction, for example, when we started operations in 2015, we sold 30 cars in the first month.
Now we are selling about 15,000 cars per month, showcasing our ability to scale and grow, year upon year, from strength to strength. I think a lot of this success is due to our ability to understand the original technology, to build digital tools in between the whole process of trading and layer on top of it, which is something that has not been done before in many parts of the world.
Chi Xu, Founder and CEO of XREAL
I don’t know what is a better fit for this industry. But to me, it feels like we’re in a brand-new industry, we need some other company. If you really want to stand out, you need to be disruptive, and that means all the technology isn’t there yet. That’s why having somebody who really knows the boundaries of different technologies is crucial, because this is a combination of optics, software algorithm, AI and hardware in general.
That’s why if you look at any AR company, you probably won’t find a single technology officer who knows all the different kinds of boundaries. Being an expert in most of these areas is definitely a plus because building hardware is really challenging, especially knowing the boundaries. And sometimes you need to push the boundary a little bit. This is the part where, I think, if you’re an expert, you really have a huge plus.
I think an entrepreneur is not trained. From my personal experience, I don’t want to be the CEO from day one, because I don’t think I’d ever be an entrepreneur. It would have been nice for me maybe to learn alongside someone but not lead from the start. An entrepreneur is always very lonely. Sometimes even if you have co-founders, you still feel lonely because you can’t tell them everything and you don’t expect them to share the same kind of workload and barrier as you do, so you have to be vision driven, you have to be very dedicated, you have to be very aggressive, and you have to have a very big heart and all of that. I don’t think one can ever be trained for it.
]]>Siddharth Chatterjee, the United Nations Resident Coordinator in China, said that technology, innovation, and big data can help overcome some of the critical challenges among 70 ongoing conflicts worldwide. He made the remarks while addressing the opening ceremony of the BEYOND EXPO 2024 on Wednesday.
Below is the transcript of Chatterjee’s conversation with Jason Ho, co-founder of BEYOND EXPO. The interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Jason Ho: UNSDG is the sustainable development goals proposed in 2012. Looking ahead, what key policy changes or initiatives do you believe are essential for driving technology and the adoption of different solutions globally?
Siddharth Chatterjee: I think we have gotten completely off track with the UNSDG. In the last three years with COVID-19, where the UN secretary-general was calling about rescuing SDG, what is clear is that for the first time post-Second World War, we are seeing an interlocking crisis. We have seen a crisis of health with the COVID pandemic, which has shown the fragility of human health and health systems.
The second is a crisis of the climate, which is hanging like a sword over humanity — whether it was the hurricane in Florida, which upended lives and livelihoods, or the floods we have seen in Europe and China, and today in Pakistan, 60% of the country was under water. So it is a major challenge.
Then we have ongoing conflicts. It’s not just Ukraine and Gaza. We have 70 ongoing conflicts. It is really a polycrisis.
But quite clearly, climate affects everybody. Therefore, we have to look at avenues where technology, innovation, and big data can help us overcome some of the critical challenges. How do we make sure that we stay faithful to the Paris Agreement?
Therefore, to me, events like BEYOND EXPO — and big credit to you for doing that — are how we harness new partnerships.
We have been talking about green tech, EV, where China already has 60% electric vehicles across its cities. I think what we need to do now is find a new multilateral space for bringing nation-states — and not just nation-states — but public-private partnerships to give velocity to the climate agenda because quite clearly that 1.5 degrees Celsius rise may become completely unachievable unless we get together to deal with it. We are going to see extreme temperatures.
The secretary-general has already warned that we have gone from global warming to global boiling. So that is something we have to remain mindful of.
Jason Ho: You often talk about multilateralism from the UN’s standpoint or your perspective. How can we further global development?
Siddharth Chatterjee: Back in 2022, I wrote a piece that if the U.S. and China collaborate, they can save the world when it comes to the current planetary crisis we are witnessing. I was very happy that much more exchanges have happened in 2023. The key point is we will need the leadership of China, and it will need the leadership of the United States. We will need the leadership of the European Union. It is because together they have the bandwidth, the intellectual capital, and the resources to be able to make a leapfrog moment.
We need a leapfrog moment, which means that countries have to remain faithful toward the commitment. In particular, developed countries have to remain faithful to their commitment to putting in that $100 billion a year for climate change adaptation. We are happy to see the Loss and Damage Fund is coming. I am much more optimistic now than I was in 2022 because then, ultimately, the U.S. and China did get together in Sharm El-Sheikh in Egypt. It was a reasonably good result. So I think I am seeing progress there.
We have to put our politics aside when it comes to the climate because everybody is affected.
And here is something very interesting about why the multilateral space is so crucial. Previously when Beijing used to get sandstorms, it used to come from Inner Mongolia. I would encourage a lot of people to go visit the Kubuqi Desert, the seventh-largest desert in China. It is an agricultural wonderland. It produced 3.2 gigabytes of electricity from solar and wind. The solar panels and the wind panels are so high that they have utilized the real estate below these panels, and it is a complete convergence of technology and innovation.
That place has a per capita GDP higher than the national average. Now, this is the kind of knowledge of combating desertification with the advent of technology and innovation that we can bring to bear in places like sub-Saharan Africa. If you do not have the sandstorms stopped in Inner Mongolia, you will continue to get sandstorms in Beijing.
So the key is you have to have a multilateral space in the climate agenda — air pollution. Now Beijing has cleared up its air. I run half marathons every month in Beijing. It has perhaps one of the best AQI levels. But what happens when the climatic conditions or pollutants from other parts of China come into Beijing’s space?
We will have to look at the whole and therefore the community of nations has to come together. The secretary-general has been faithful to his call to action that we have to deal with the climate agenda.
And here, again, I want to commend President Xi for the clearest articulation on the climate agenda, when he said China will go for carbon peaking by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060. Now the UN is working with the Chinese government to look at what kind of innovation and big data and technology can be used. But at the same time, what I am urging the government to do — and working with my counterparts in other countries — is what kind of knowledge can we share with them from this experience.
Jason Ho: How can we ensure the climate tech innovations are accessible and also affordable for people in need in these. I this is not just a challenge. This is an opportunity, right?
Siddharth Chatterjee: How did China make this leapfrog within itself with per capita GDP at $180 in 1979? It was about scale and volume and achieving economies of scale. This is precisely why we need high technology to get very cheap, but consumption will be huge. Now, that is the opportunity that opens up.
I have served half my life in Africa. Africa needs a leapfrogging into the Fourth Industrial Revolution. It does not necessarily have to go through the typical rise of Europe, China, and the rest of the world. They can jump into the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
I tell this to many partners in Beijing: I say that by 2050, Africa will have 2.5 billion people, and they will have 900 million young people. They will be the future of consumption and production. If you invest now, you will have a huge return on investment in the future.
This is one area where China can define a way forward in this climate transition that is there because of the amount of innovation, the amount of knowledge that is, the place where the world has to come together to look at how we become more efficient at carbon capture. Now, that is one place where we are way behind.
And while technology is moving forward, we have not been able to diagnose that space. Can you imagine if we could look at an entire continent like Africa for carbon capture? It could be a solution to many of the challenges that we are already confronted with.
So I think this would need, again, the resurrection of multiculturalism. And that is why the secretary-general is hosting the summit of the future. It is a once-in-a-generation, a lifetime opportunity to look at how we reposition multilateralism so that at least we can converge around the issues that challenge us in health, climate conflicts, inequalities, and economic disruptions.
These are the places where people can come together because the aspirations of an African parent are no different from the aspirations of a Chinese parent or that of an American parent. The future is really to make sure that the climate impact is now sustained because one thing is clear — it is impacting food security, it is impacting health. Today, 800 million people are going to bed hungry every night because of droughts, famine, and instability.
]]>TikTok owner ByteDance has surprised the artificial intelligence industry with the ultra-low cost of its Doubao model, which the company said is capable of processing 2 million Chinese characters, equivalent to 1.25 million tokens, for RMB 1 ($0.14). OpenAI’s most advanced multimodal model, GPT-4o, also unveiled this week, comes in at $5 per million input tokens handled.
“A good model works well and is affordable to everyone,” Tan Dai, president of Volcano Engine, ByteDance’s cloud computing services unit, said at an event on Wednesday. “Large usage polishes a good model and dramatically reduces the unit cost of model inference,” he added.
Why it matters: The radical pricing, which Tan explained is achieved through model structuring and hybrid scheduling of cloud computing power, is likely to initiate a price war in China’s AI field after a battle on parameters.
Details: ByteDance’s Doubao large model family consists of nine versions, ranging from a “lite version” to the advanced Doubao Pro, which is able to deal with up to 128,000 token inputs. The range also includes models centered on generating pictures and virtual characters.
Context: Earlier this year, ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming criticized employees for not being “sensitive enough” to the emergence of new technologies like ChatGPT in an internal meeting, saying that discussions among staff over ChatGPT only started in 2023. His remarks came after the company had already launched the Doubao chatbot in the second half of last year.
]]>Fast fashion retailer Shein is refueling its IPO ambitions by pivoting to a London listing, as its US listing remains in limbo, according to a Reuters report which cited two sources. However, the China-connected company, which moved its headquarters to Singapore in 2022, is said to still prefer a public debut in New York.
Why it matters: The choice of London as a listing venue is being seen as the second best option for Shein, whose potential US IPO continues to be viewed as a bellwether for the geopolitical state of play between the US and China.
Details: Shein reportedly said it would update China’s securities regulator over any change in its listing aim, and file with the London Stock Exchange as soon as this month, according to Reuters.
Context: Last year, despite stronger scrutiny of its business operations, Shein recorded over $2 billion in profits – a figure that had more than doubled from the previous year. The company sold a total of approximately $45 billion worth of merchandise globally during the period, according to a Financial Times report.
Baidu’s PR head, Qu Jing, has left the search engine giant after her controversial remarks on work culture exploded on Chinese social media. The surfacing of a series of videos made by Qu has led to the public casting doubt on the company’s corporate values.
“I’m not even obligated to find out if you cried or had a quarrel [with your boyfriend or husband], which does not serve my concern as a supervisor. I’m not your mother-in-law, also not your mum,” Qu commented in one of a series of short videos posted on Douyin, China’s TikTok sibling.
All four of Qu’s controversial videos on the platform have since been deleted, but clips can still be found on Chinese social platforms and her comments have sparked a firestorm of attention and debate.
Why it matters: The incident has escalated into Baidu’s biggest PR crisis in years. The company, which is facing a declining search engine share and is seeking an AI-centric transformation, has looked to calm public outrage in the wake of Qu’s comments.
Details: News of Qu Jing’s departure was reported on Thursday night, just hours after she apologized in a post on WeChat Moments from her personal account.
Context: Baidu, along with other major tech companies in China, has faced repeated scrutiny and criticism over its so-called wolf work culture in recent years. In one of the most notable examples, in 2019, Alibaba founder Jack Ma came under fire after he referred to the practice of “996”, working from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week, as a “huge blessing”.
]]>Alibaba’s marketplace Taobao has dropped its presale period for the upcoming 618 shopping festival, a promotional mechanism that it had been using for a decade to stimulate sales. Previously under the strategy, consumers were required to pay a deposit in advance, and then pay the final amount within a specified date range, but would not receive the goods until after the latter had cleared, leading to longer delivery times than usual.
Why it matters: Alibaba is expected to focus on optimizing user experience during the mid-year shopping bonanza in an effort to offer more straightforward shopping steps akin to rival Pinduoduo.
Details: According to local media outlet LatePost, Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu finally made the decision to cancel presale promotions after employees “overwhelmingly supported” the proposal in internal debates.
Context: The changes are in line with Alibaba’s newly revived “user first” approach, one of the two key strategic areas emphasized by Eddie Wu, who currently also holds the chief executive position at the tech giant’s domestic e-commerce group and its cloud computing unit.
]]>China’s food delivery giant Meituan is hiring Arabic- and English-proficient talent for its likely entry into Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia, as the company puts expansion beyond China on its agenda as domestic consumption falls.
Meituan is set to launch KeeTa, the food delivery brand which it launched in Hong Kong last year, in its first Middle East destination in the coming months, Bloomberg reported on Friday.
Why it matters: Meituan’s first expansion outside of China comes at a time when a string of Chinese companies have turned to overseas expansion amid uncertainty about the prospects of recreating the high growth situation that the tech sector has enjoyed at home for much of the past two decades.
Details: CEO Wang took direct control of the Beijing-based company’s global business in a February overhaul. He told investors on a fourth-quarter earnings call that Meituan is “very actively evaluating opportunities in other markets” after its Hong Kong entry saw “positive results.”
Context: After recording its lowest stock price in a year in February, at slightly over HK$60, Meituan’s shares are slowly recovering. The company’s stock price is still just a quarter of its value at its peak in mid-2021 however.
]]>TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew told the platform’s users that “we aren’t going anywhere” after US President Joe Biden signed the sell-or-ban bill targeting the app into law, giving TikTok’s Chinese parent company nine to 12 months to divest.
“The facts and the Constitution are on our side and we expect to prevail again,” Chew said in a video on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The passing of the bill after months of threats is a clear wake-up call for other Chinese apps that see the US as a top destination for their business expansion or have already entered the market there.
Details: The countdown to the forced sale of TikTok began when Biden signed the bill on April 24, but the short video app’s 170 million American users will continue to have access to it during this period. TikTok is expected to robustly challenge the move in the US courts.
Context: TikTok, along with its Chinese owner ByteDance, spent over $7 million on in-house lobbyists and digital ad campaigns this year in an effort to avert the bill passing, according to lobbying disclosure reports cited by CNBC.
]]>An avatar of JD founder Richard Liu participated in its third livestreaming show on Monday as part of a promotional event for this year’s World Book Day. Although the virtual Liu’s nearly 40-minute-long slot made for only a short section of the 11-hour-long e-commerce event, its appearance still suggests that the company sees use of the avatar as a headline- and hype-generating strategy as it looks to boost consumption on its platforms.
Why it matters: As JD gears up for June’s 618 event, China’s second-largest shopping festival, the attempt to introduce highly life-like digital personalities as sales anchors aims to reduce merchants’ operational costs and compete against rival platforms’ more-established human-hosted livestreams.
Details: “I am ‘procurement and sales manager Brother Dong,’” the digital Liu stated as part of Monday’s livestream. The avatar’s latest appearance featured a multi-camera set-up and added an interactive session after previous shows were criticized for its mechanical pronouncements and a lack of interaction with audiences.
Context: Earlier this month, JD announced a RMB 1 billion investment, awarded in cash, to incentivize content creators in short videos and livestreaming, aiming to drive the development of content creation on its platform.
]]>“Three, two, one! Show [shopping] link!” Richard Liu, founder of Chinese e-commerce company JD, debuted his livestreaming show on Tuesday – using an avatar in his likeness. The billionaire’s virtual doppelganger drove total sales volumes to exceed RMB 50 million ($6.9 million) in less than one hour, the company said.
Why it matters: JD is finally trying to capitalize on China’s online retail trend for combining content forms and shopping, with the firm making huge investment bets in new areas. Liu’s rare public appearance, albeit through an extremely life-like avatar, demonstrates the urgency of change for the company as it plays catch-up to rivals that have cultivated high-popularity influencers over many years.
Details: Liu’s avatar is powered by the company’s ChatRhino large language model, according to a WeChat post that JD published on Wednesday. The post added that its AI-driven virtual hosts now serve more than 4,000 brands.
Context: JD’s revenue grew by 3.7% in 2023 to RMB 1,084.7 billion, significantly slower compared to its 27.6% growth in 2021 and a 9.9% increase in 2022, as the e-commerce space has been slow to recover post-pandemic due to belt-tightening by price-sensitive consumers.
]]>China’s search engine operator Baidu said Tuesday the number of users of its AI-driven ERNIE Bot has doubled to over 200 million in four months, declaring itself a leader in artificial intelligence, as competitors rush into the sector. The company also added that ERNIE now handles 200 million daily queries.
Why it matters: Baidu’s chatbot has revived confidence in the company’s monetization of AI, with its 200 million users offering new potential avenues for growth.
Details: Co-founder and CEO of Baidu Robin Li expressed confidence that natural language will emerge as the new programming language in the future in his speech titled “Everyone is a Developer” at the company’s AI Create conference on Tuesday.
Context: China’s regulator approved 117 large language models for generative AI services on March 25, according to the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC). The scope of approvals signals stiff competition among tech companies scrambling to create potential from the technology’s commercial application.
Moonshot AI, an artificial intelligence startup founded in China a year ago, has quickly narrowed the gap with rival Baidu’s ERNIE Bot in terms of users after upgrading its large language model Kimi to be able to handle text inputs of up to two million Chinese words in March.
According to a survey conducted by data website AIcpb, Kimi saw its combined website and app traffic top 12.6 million views last month, bringing its ranking up to second place behind Baidu’s chatbot, which received 2.29 million more views.
Why it matters: The quadrupling of Kimi’s visit count in March meant the ChatGPT-like tool surpassed Alibaba’s competitor Tongyi Qianwen. Its ability to handle long texts is fueling Kimi’s popularity among users, raising hopes among its backers that it will soon break Baidu’s months-long hold on the top position in China’s AI sector.
Details: Moonshot focuses on longer textual inputs and outputs, a new battlefield for Chinese LLM companies. Alibaba opened up a free long-document processing feature that can handle 10 million characters following Kimi’s upgrade, while Baidu plans to support longer text conversations later this month.
Context: Moonshot AI reportedly raised over $1 billion in funding earlier this year from existing shareholders such as Alibaba, Sequoia China, and Xiaohongshu, marking the largest single-round financing for a Chinese AI big model company to date. The company raised nearly RMB 2 billion ($277 million) last year.
]]>Alibaba’s chair Joe Tsai commented that by not focusing on truly creating customer value, they had “stepped on our own foot” in recent years, when explaining why he thought the e-commerce giant had been “falling behind”. Tsai’s remarks were made in an interview with Nicolai Tangen, chief executive of Norway’s Norges Bank Investment Management, at a time when the Chinese tech giant has undergone frequent organizational restructures.
“We forgot about who our real customers are,” Tsai told Tangen. “Our customers are the users who use our apps, that are shopping, and we did not give them the best experience.”
Why it matters: Tsai’s conversation with Tangen ranged in topics from Alibaba’s internal reckoning and competitiveness in artificial intelligence, to China’s consumer market potential, in a major signal to the outside world that Alibaba is aware it needs to make changes to keep its customers.
Details: The biggest reorganization in Alibaba’s history, which began last March when it decided to split the group into six units and give multiple businesses the freedom to seek funds or go public, has been fraught with twists and turns. It has now suspended its logistics arm Cainiao’s Hong Kong IPO application and canceled plans to divest from its cloud operation.
Context: Norges Bank Investment Management looks after Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, a major Alibaba shareholder with a stake worth $3.5 billion at the end of last year. The world’s largest sovereign wealth fund also owns shares in Alibaba’s top competitors, PDD and JD. The fund raised its position in Temu parent PDD by 117.9% last year, compared to a less than 10% increase in its Alibaba holding.
]]>Alibaba’s logistics operation Cainiao will double employees’ annual bonuses next year after the company announced it was canceling its planned IPO in Hong Kong. Wan Lin, chief of Cainiao announced the annual bonus decision late Tuesday in a staff-facing email, shortly after Alibaba said it was abandoning the subsidiary’s anticipated IPO.
Why it matters: Alibaba’s offer to buy remaining Cainiao shares up to $3.75 billion and the bonus incentive plan should give a double boost to investors and staff amid the unexpected listing withdrawal. Cainiao’s public offering was originally expected to be the largest IPO in Hong Kong in 2023.
Details: As part of the new incentive plan, Cainiao employees will receive their standard year-end bonus in April 2025, with an additional bonus of the same amount in August 2025. This plan will cover all of the firm’s regular employees who are on duty and eligible for the year-end bonus at that time.
Context: Driven by income from cross-border fulfillment solutions, Cainiao’s 2023 fourth-quarter revenue grew 24% from a year earlier to $4 billion. The company’s adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization (EBITA) reached RMB 961 million ($135 million) during the period, a $550 million improvement compared to the previous quarter.
]]>Baidu has reportedly won a deal to power iPhones and other Apple devices in China using its generative artificial intelligence, domestic media outlet China Star Market reported on Monday, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter. The Apple tie-up is a potentially major boost to the Chinese search engine giant’s vision of extra AI-generated revenue.
Why it matters: China’s regulations have pushed Western tech companies to fully comply with the country’s rules if they want to lure the Chinese market, and that benefits Baidu, which serves many of the functions that Google does in the US and Europe. Following the Beijing headquartered firm’s rapid rise to prominence in the early 2000s, it appears poised to gain a major advantage from restrictions on Google once more.
Details: Apple previously engaged in discussions with Alibaba and another unnamed Chinese AI company, according to the China Star Market report, before finally tapping Baidu as its partner for AI services for its upcoming iPhone 16.
Context: Beijing-based Baidu, seen as China’s AI leader, is among the companies hoping to turn the much-hyped technology into a fresh revenue engine. Its chief executive Robin Li has said that generative AI could add several billion yuan in incremental revenue for the firm in 2024. In the fourth quarter, Baidu’s AI-related revenue stood at RMB 656 million ($91.0 million).
]]>Alipay owner Ant Group has appointed current chief financial officer Han Xinyi as its new president, according to an internal email from chairman and CEO Eric Jing on Tuesday. The move is part of the firm’s biggest overhaul since the cancellation of its IPO in late 2020, with the fintech company also deciding to grant three of its units operational independence.
Why it matters: The restructuring is likely to grant more flexibility for businesses within the fintech affiliate universe of Alibaba and is intended to unleash their growth potential under Ant’s globalization strategy.
Details: The reshuffle is “just one of many” in Ant’s future growth, said Jing, adding that, “we will create an environment that encourages more emerging businesses, and creates greater value for society” (our translation).
Context: On Nov. 3, 2020, two days before Jack Ma-founded Ant’s scheduled dual listing debut which was supposed to take place simultaneously in Hong Kong and Shanghai, the major IPO was surprisingly halted by China’s financial regulator.
TikTok’s efforts to continue operating in the US under Chinese parent company ByteDance appear doomed after a majority of House lawmakers passed a bill that aims to force the Beijing headquartered tech firm to divest from the wildly popular short video platform or see it removed from app stores in the country. The bill still needs to pass the Senate, but President Joe Biden has indicated he will sign it into law if it reaches his desk.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted 352-65 on the bill. Of the 65 legislators who voted against it, 50 were Democrats, casting some uncertainty on whether the bill will pass in the Democrat-majority Senate. The potential legislation is also likely to face legal challenges from TikTok.
Why it matters: If ByteDance agrees to sell TikTok, one of China’s most successful apps worldwide, it would bring the Beijing-based company billions of dollars in immediate income, but the longer-term impact on the firm’s value is uncertain. The tug-of-war over the app also reflects the high-profile tensions between the US and China.
Details: TikTok labeled the House’s voting process “secret” in a statement released after the result. The platform insisted on characterizing the bill as a “ban”, while emphasizing that it hosts 170 million users and 7 million small businesses in the US market in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
Context: According to OpenSecrets, a nonprofit organization that tracks lobbying data, ByteDance spent a record $8.74 million on federal lobbying last year, nearly double its spending in 2022.
]]>Baidu co-founder Robin Li has used the example of a Tang dynasty poetry meter to demonstrate what he says is ERNIE 4.0’s superiority to OpenAI’s GPT-4 on Chinese language tasks. In an interview broadcast by Chinese state television last week, the Baidu chief executive said the company’s latest AI chatbot had shown higher aptitude when tasked with creating poetry in the form of a complex Tang dynasty scheme known as Qinyuanchun.
“If I asked GPT to compose a poem following the Qinyuanchun scheme, the tool would become totally confused,” Li said, “because it lacks the understanding of whether the first sentence should consist of four words or five.”
Why it matters: Li’s attempt to emphasize ERNIE’s competitive advantage in certain areas follows a raft of Chinese AI ventures receiving outside capital injections from Baidu’s rivals. His comments also come as OpenAI’s text-to-video model Sora kicks off a new round of AI mania worldwide.
Details: In the same interview, the CEO did acknowledge that ERNIE lags “a little bit behind” GPT in understanding English, as it hasn’t been trained on as much English language data.
Context: Baidu’s investment in AI has yielded results in its financial reports, with its AI models and ERNIE chatbot contributing RMB 656 million ($91.5 million) to the firm’s revenue in the fourth quarter last year. However, such contributions amounted to just 1.9% of the company’s total earnings.
Alibaba is reportedly joining as a lead investor in the latest funding round for Chinese AI startup MiniMax, the second major investment deal that the e-commerce giant has made in the emerging sector in 2024.
China Star Market, the local media outlet that first reported the news, noted that the financing has yet to be finalized, while a Tuesday report by Bloomberg said that Shanghai-based MiniMax is seeking at least $600 million.
Why it matters: Despite Alibaba’s cloud computing department’s focus on its own large language model, Tongyi Qianwen, the company remains actively engaged with external investments, casting a wide net as it looks to increase its bets on potential leaders in the country’s artificial intelligence sector.
Details: Minimax, founded by former vice president of SenseTime Yan Junjie in December 2021, has already launched services akin to ChatGPT. It also provides various LLM capabilities for Chinese word processing software WPS and the lifestyle-sharing platform Xiaohongshu.
Context: “Artificial intelligence” was mentioned three times in this year’s government work report, delivered by China’s Premier Li Qiang on Tuesday. Li highlighted ongoing innovations in the field since 2023, while also stressing the need to “deepen research and development applications of artificial intelligence” this year, signaling the Chinese leadership’s desire to accelerate the development of “new productivity”.
A 48% drop in net profit from a year earlier overshadowed Baidu’s record revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023, which was led by advertising income, but also featured a minor contribution from earnings related to artificial intelligence. Baidu’s Hong Kong-traded stocks have plunged nearly 30% since last July.
Why it matters: A 6% year-on-year increase in advertising revenue is the main driver of the search engine giant’s revenue growth, as Baidu’s hopes that AI will serve as a significant revenue stream remain unconvincing to investors, in contrast to US tech firms that saw a share uptick based on an AI boom last year.
Details: Baidu’s AI model and ERNIE chatbot added RMB 656 million ($91.2 million) to revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023, CEO Robin Li told investors on the firm’s earnings call, with incremental revenue expected to jump to several billion yuan in 2024.
Context: Baidu’s ChatGPT-style service has recorded more than 100 million users given its first-mover advantage and integration with China’s largest search engine,. But competition has increased, as Baidu’s tech counterparts in the country have also bet strongly on generative AI and there are an increasing number of AI startups that have received large amounts of funding from its rivals, such as Moonshot AI.
]]>Alipay hired a significant number of staff with expertise in advertising last year as it seeks a shift away from being a pure payment tool, according to a report by China Entrepreneur. Despite having over 700 million monthly active users, the payment app lacks the features to entice its huge user base to stay on the platform beyond making transactions.
Why it matters: Developing a sustainable content ecology based on short videos, livestreaming, and social engagement would pave the way to new revenue streams for Alipay.
Details: Alipay is reportedly beta testing a social feature called “Community of Interest”, where users with shared interests, ranging from camping, coffee, and hiking to fishing, can join groups to discuss or organize offline activities.
Context: WeChat and Alipay were level in 2021 in terms of usage by mobile payment customers, but in 2022, WeChat took a 2.6% larger share of the market after expanding its range of payment scenarios, the latest figure from China’s payment & clearing industry association showed.
]]>The European Commission has opened a formal investigation into TikTok to assess potential violations of the Digital Services Act (DSA). Companies found in breach of the act could face fines of up to 6% of their global revenue.
Launched on Monday, the investigation into the Chinese-owned platform will involve looking at various aspects of TikTok’s operations including safeguarding of minors, ensuring advertising transparency, facilitating access to data for researchers, and managing the risks associated with addictive and harmful content.
Why it matters: The move extends the EU’s investigation of the ByteDance-led video-sharing app from previous concerns regarding its handling of disinformation related to content around Hamas and its management of children’s accounts, and intensifies the company’s immediate need to address the escalating scrutiny of major tech firms by the EU.
Details: TikTok was defined as a Very Large Online Platform (VLOP) by the European Commission under the DSA in April 2023, following its announcement of 135.9 million monthly active users in the EU.
Context: In 2023, the Douyin sister app was fined €345 million in Ireland and £12.7 million in the UK by local regulators, who cited violations of the law in the platform’s handling of children’s account data.
]]>Chinese tourists returned to outbound travel during the recent Year of the Dragon break as a range of data showed that the number of overseas transactions and tour bookings by Chinese citizens rebounded to the pre-pandemic levels seen in 2019.
According to an Alipay email sent to TechNode, overseas transactions by users of the mobile payment platform from Feb. 9 to 12 were up 7% compared to 2019, with Hong Kong, Japan, and Macao being the top destinations for Chinese travelers based upon their Alipay spending.
Why it matters: By the numbers, China’s overseas tourism is making a solid recovery a year after the country’s authorities removed Covid-19 related restrictions on its citizens traveling abroad following more than three years of almost-closed borders. Major Southeast Asian countries loosening visa requirements for Chinese tourists has also had an impact.
Details: Chinese visitors could be spotted in more than 1,700 cities in 125 countries, said Beijing-headquartered online travel agency Qunar, ranging as far as Madagascar and Cuba.
Context: The China Tourism Academy predicted earlier this month that the number of outbound tourists from the country in 2024 will reach 130 million, 50% up from the previous year.
]]>Chair of iFlytek Liu Qingfeng told employees that the Chinese voice-recognition company has “resisted the extreme pressure from the US” and is entering “a new period of strategic opportunity,” at his firm’s annual general meeting. Speaking on Tuesday, Liu again benchmarked iFlytek’s upgraded Spark against GPT-4 Turbo, saying it expects to be as powerful as OpenAI’s most advanced model in the first half of 2024.
Why it matters: Liu’s confident tone throughout his speech is being seen as a sign that the company seems to have passed its dark days in the grip of US sanctions due to its “seizing of the strategic opportunity of large language models.”
Details: In his speech, Liu stated that the top goals for iFlytek in 2024 would be to be the fastest Chinese company to catch up with GPT-4, to “empower 10 million intelligent hardware terminals”, to produce “industry-leading applications taking the largest market share in six industries including education and finance”, and to “amass one million LLM developers to build an AI model ecosystem”.
Context: The US government blacklisted A-share listed iFlytek in Oct. 2019, meaning China’s top artificial intelligence company was banned from buying critical components from US companies without US government approval.
]]>TikTok turned against its former cooperation partner Universal Music Group (UMG) overnight after the world’s largest music copyright owner threatened to remove all of the music it owns from the video-sharing platform, which lambasted UMG’s “self-serving actions” and characterized them as putting their interests above those of artists, songwriters, and fans.
Why it matters: The dispute would reportedly also affect TikTok sibling Douyin, potentially causing both platforms to have to remove Universal songs from the huge number of videos using them as background music. The falling out with UMG may also lead to a similar response from other music companies.
Details: The collapse of the deal would likely remove the pop songs that myriad TikTok videos use as background music, affecting tracks by Universal artists including Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish, as well as Chinese language singers Stefanie Sun and Eason Chan.
Context: This is not the first dispute involving a major tech platform and Universal-signed artists. In 2014, Taylor Swift decided to remove her entire discography from Spotify due to issues around royalty payments, with her boycott of the streaming service lasting three years.
]]>The past year has seen Tencent’s TikTok-like short video service “deliver the expected results,” chairman and chief executive Pony Ma said at the tech titan’s annual staff meeting on Monday, while reaffirming his confidence in the company’s long-term development despite the sluggish general market.
Why it matters: In contrast to his sharp-tongued speech a year ago, where the emphasis was on cost-cutting, Ma’s more positive comments this year signal that he seems to think the company has overcome its challenging times.
Details: A year after Ma positioned WeChat Channels as Tencent’s major hope for the future, he said that the short video-sharing function has brought “lots of surprises” and committed to fully supporting livestreaming-based commerce in 2024.
Context: Tencent shares have suffered in the past year but have not seen as big a slump as those of its Chinese internet peers, with the firm seeing a 16% decline in the value of its Hong Kong-listed shares. The company’s largest shareholder, South Africa-headquartered Naspers, added to the downward trend by cutting its stake in Tencent to less than 25% through frequent share selling in 2023.
]]>Alibaba’s secondhand trading app Xianyu is on track to open an offline marketplace in the Gongshu district of Hangzhou, the resale operation’s latest eye-catching move after the platform was anointed one of Alibaba’s four “strategic-level innovation businesses” last November.
Why it matters: Alibaba is giving Xianyu three years to prove its value and operate as an independent subsidiary, with this attempt at a physical store seen as the first major step.
Details: The bricks-and-mortar flea market, scheduled to open this Sunday, will see local customers sell their used items and purchase items from other secondhand sellers directly, the platform said in a post on its official WeChat account.
Context: The popularity of Xianyu has been overshadowed by e-commerce retailers Taobao and JD in recent years as consumers have tended to seek brand-new goods, but, when it comes to collectible toys or cards, the platform has become a popular destination, especially for young people. This status has meant that Gen Z users, born between 1995 and 2010, account for more than 60% of Xianyu’s 500 million account holders, the company’s latest figures show.
In a brief letter to Kuaishou staff from CEO Cheng Yixiao on Tuesday, the short video platform operator announced it had achieved its first yearly profitability since listing, and was offering staff vouchers of up to RMB 2,866 valid for purchases on Kuaishou as an expression of gratitude for employees’ efforts.
Why it matters: The rival to ByteDance’s Douyin (China’s TikTok sibling) accelerated its monetization efforts in real estate and short dramas after achieving its first quarterly profitability in the second quarter of 2023. Rapid growth of these sectors in turn appears to have boosted the Beijing-based company’s further attainment of quarterly profits.
Details: China’s second-largest short video platform, Kuaishou deepened its focus on the real estate industry in a recent restructuring following impressive sales results.
Context: In the first nine months of 2023, Kuaishou reported a net profit of RMB 2.79 billion compared with a loss of RMB 12.15 billion in the same period of the year before.
]]>Get ready for the annual insights from TechNode Content Team! The year 2023 can be considered a groundbreaking year in the technology field. As wrapping up this year, we gathered different insights from our content team. We’ll be presenting nine Q&As, with timely updates every Wednesday and Friday in the following weeks!
Today, our Q&A comes from Cheyenne Dong, reporter at TechNode. Cheyenne is a tech reporter now based in Shanghai. She covers e-commerce and retail, blockchain, and Web3.
OpenAI. OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT at the end of 2022 led directly to the following year belonging to the wild year of generative artificial intelligence. Despite the subsequent launch of ChatGPT-like services by worldwide tech firms, OpenAI’s overwhelming success in AI has made it a challenge for rivals to keep up with its pace.
Alibaba. The Chinese e-commerce giant conducted eye-catching organizational overhauls throughout the past year, and each adjustment has been a big deal, both internally and to the public. What kind of energy the company will unleash in the new year to take on the competition in industries under its startling overhaul?
TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew. He was able to face around five hours of questioning by dozens of US lawmakers in March.
OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman was in the center of media spotlight even before the board abruptly fired him, and this unexpected 72-hour-long firing event gives me a feeling that it’s more exciting than any TV series.
PDD’s market value exceeds that of Alibaba. This landmark event shows that Pinduoduo, which offers ultra-low-priced goods at a time of economic uncertainty, is emerging as the most challenging and disruptive force in China’s e-commerce sector.
AI, companies in almost every field are looking to rebuild their services and products with the power of AI.
Juan or in the English context it can be understood as competition for even some small factors has reached unhealthy levels, like which platform offers ultra-low prices for the same items, delivery times, or providing near-zero threshold after-sales service.
OpenAI’s GPT-5.
Not at this stage, instead, human beings could be significantly more productive if they had better AI tools, but the future is not easy to predict.
]]>After a more than $80 billion market value wipeout since last January, Meituan on Wednesday spent $51 million (HK$399 million) on its first share buyback since it listed in Hong Kong, in a bid to support investor confidence in the company’s resilience amid fierce competition in a local life sector replete with fresh entrants.
Why it matters: Meituan’s first share buyback since going public more than five years ago comes after executives warned of a slowdown in its main takeaway business in the fourth quarter and as Douyin, China’s TikTok sibling, swoops into its business segments.
Details: The food delivery service provider bought back a total of 5.63 million Class B shares, costing an average of HK$71.07 each, according to its latest filings. Meituan’s stock price responded by rising 5.4% today in Hong Kong.
Context: Besides Meituan, China’s most valuable tech firms including Alibaba and Tencent have exhibited a downward trend in share price that has lost them hundreds of billions of dollars since their peak around 2021. Alibaba and Tencent conducted record buybacks last year, with e-commerce giant Alibaba repurchasing $9.5 billion of ordinary shares, and WeChat owner Tencent spending a total of HK$48.429 billion on buybacks in the same period, meaning the latter topped the Hong Kong stock market’s repurchase list.
]]>TikTok is seeking to significantly expand its e-commerce business in the US, with plans to achieve a tenfold increase in merchandise sales in the world’s largest economy this year, a target of $17.5 billion, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing unnamed sources.
Why it matters: TikTok’s ambitious goal will see it push harder to redirect users’ attention from short videos to in-app shopping in a potential threat to established US e-commerce giant Amazon. The move also signals that the ByteDance-owned short video app, which has 150 million users in the US, will compete more directly with its Chinese counterparts Temu and Shein in 2024.
Details: The global value of goods sold on TikTok was expected to reach around $20 billion last year, according to Bloomberg, with its Southeast Asian platforms contributing the bulk of these sales. Singapore-based research company Momentum Works projected in mid-2023 that TikTok Shop was poised to capture a 13.2% share of the Southeast Asian e-commerce market by the year’s end.
Context: Since its initial trial in 2021, TikTok’s foray into e-commerce has sought to replicate the proven path taken by its Chinese counterpart Douyin in the online retail field, guiding loyal users previously attracted by viral short videos to engage in shopping on the platform.
China’s two largest bubble tea chains Mixue and GoodMe both filed prospectuses for Hong Kong listings on Tuesday, with the aim of broadening the companies’ financing access through share sales, providing vital support for the new-style tea brands to navigate an extremely competitive industry.
Why it matters: Three China-founded beverage retailers have now lined up to apply for IPOs in Hong Kong in less than five months, incluing fruit tea chain ChaBaiDao submitted its application last August, signaling that the industry leaders are betting big on store expansion and tea consumption in China’s delayed post-Covid economic recovery.
Details: Mixue, which also sells ice cream for RMB 2 (less than $0.3) per cup, generated RMB 15.4 billion ($2.17 billion) in revenue and recorded a net profit of RMB 2.5 billion in the first nine months of last year. Mixue’s numbers are nearly triple those of rival GoodMe on both metrics.
Context: Mixue shifted to exploring a Hong Kong IPO instead of a mainland China listing due to a lack of progress following a proposed RMB 6.5 billion Shenzhen IPO filing back in 2022. The tea chain’s decision to put its mainland listing on hold is widely seen as a sign that Chinese regulators have imposed strict rules discouraging companies that rely heavily on franchise business models from listing.
]]>Alibaba’s China-focused online shopping platform Taobao is streamlining its refund process, in a move that mirrors rival Pinduoduo’s strategy for retaining customers.
The new rules for handling refund issues took effect on Tuesday, allowing the platform to use big data analysis of store quality and complaint frequency to handle returns and refunds directly when buyers make after-sales requests that meet certain conditions.
Why it matters: This update brings Taobao’s after-sales mechanism closer to that of rival Pinduoduo, with the company emphasizing a commitment to consumer rights and cutting the influence of merchants in the refund process.
Details: Pinduoduo’s “Refund only” strategy has met with controversy in recent years. The approach, coupled with Pinduoduo’s consistent low-price strategy, has attracted a large number of price-sensitive consumers. Merchants on the other hand have come to find the platform’s rules too strict, generating widespread dissatisfaction.
Context: In recent weeks, Alibaba executed an executive level overhaul at Taobao, its most-profitable Chinese e-commerce group. Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu tapped six young leaders to take charge of key operations at twin e-commerce sites Taobao and Tmall, after he took the reins of the business on Dec. 20.
Shares of Gaotu, a Chinese online education firm, slumped nearly 20% on Monday as a previous influx of livestreaming viewers returned to rival East Buy’s Douyin channel after a recent screenplay dispute at the latter, which had driven users to seek alternative platforms, came to an end.
Why it matters: The 58% surge in New York-listed Gaotu’s share price last week has now been halved with the previous surge seemingly an exception that does not accurately reflect the sustainable growth prospects of Gaotu’s e-commerce business at present.
Details: China’s Gaotu was once a provider of after-school tutoring courses, but transitioned to the live commerce sector a year ago, in a similar move to East Buy, which found viral success after blending online language lessons with e-commerce. Gaotu witnessed eightfold growth in followers on Douyin in the last two weeks, taking it to almost 2.5 million followers on the TikTok sibling platform.
Context: Gaotu’s current stock price is still nearly 97% lower than its peak in 2021, when the Chinese government introduced a policy known as “double reduction” that dealt an unprecedented blow to private for-profit educational companies, and prompted them to seek rapid transformation to stay afloat. East Buy, a subsidiary of New Oriental, found unexpected success with a livestream last June as a host, who was once a tutor, taught English and simultaneously sold products, gaining significant attention on the internet.
Chinese tech giant Alibaba is doubling down on artificial intelligence to spur the growth of its e-commerce division, after founder Jack Ma wrote an internal memo saying the era of AI e-commerce “has just begun.” The company’s domestic and international retail businesses are testing multiple AI-driven tools and are on a hiring spree for AI-related roles, according to local outlet LatePost.
Why it matters: Alibaba hopes that by integrating generative AI into its core e-commerce business, it will further boost sales in the highly lucrative sector and create new forms of customer experience to up business retention rates.
Details: Taobao and Tmall Group have channeled their AI focus into four key areas: marketing platform Alimama, customer apps, merchant apps, and industry-specific apps. Before the reorganization led by Alibaba’s chief technology officer Wu Zeming, there were around 20 teams within the group exploring AI-related businesses, the report said.
Context: AI appears to be a top priority in Alibaba’s strategy since new management took over in September. In his first letter to all staff, CEO Eddie Wu announced “user first, AI-driven” as his vision for the 24-year-old company, a business that has recently been overshadowed by rivals. “We will realign our operations and refocus our business around these two core strategies,” said Wu.
Chinese tech giant Tencent is planning to expand its short video and livestreaming e-commerce team as sales surge, according to a Monday report by LatePost, which said WeChat’s in-app shopping feature has achieved a total of RMB 100 billion ($13.9 billion) gross merchandise volume this year via its TikTok-like short video service.
Why it matters: The figure shows Tencent has increasingly drawn in users to spend more time shopping on Video Accounts, a service that launched in beta mode in January 2020.
Details: WeChat Video Accounts, Tencent’s short video feature also known as Channels, has been seen as the “hope” of the company since founder and CEO Pony Ma highlighted it in an end-of-year meeting in 2022.
Context: WeChat, which started as an instant messaging service, now offers users a rich ecosystem of services via its mini-programs (in-app mini-apps) and Video Accounts. Tencent’s hope is that it can continue to offer the company more routes to profitability.
Food delivery giant Meituan has shown its ability to defend its moat advantage in local services amid a challenge from ByteDance-owned TikTok sibling Douyin, with the company achieving RMB 2 billion single-month livestreaming sales this October, up from the less than RMB 600 million recorded in July when it officially introduced its in-app livestream feature, local media outlet 36Kr cited multiple sources as saying in a Monday report.
Why it matters: Meituan, a newcomer to the livestreaming domain, is employing a high-subsidy strategy within livestream rooms to attract both customers and merchants. Despite the strong growth momentum indicated by sales figures, the company’s profit margin has seen a decline for two consecutive quarters.
Details: Livestreams conducted by Meituan itself are the main focus of the newly launched function, where hosts are sourced from external multi-channel network (MCN) companies and generate more than 70% of live gross merchandise volume (GMV), according to the 36Kr report. However, this balance is shifting as small- and medium-sized merchants flow in to sell vouchers via independent livestreams.
Context: Meituan has increased its marketing expenses this year in an attempt to resist TikTok sister app Douyin’s push into the local life services sector, spending RMB 16.9 billion in the last quarter, a 62.5% increase from the first quarter. Meanwhile, the operating margin of its core local business has continued to decline over the last two quarters, dropping below 20% in the three months from July to September to 17.5%.
A federal judge has blocked a law in the US state of Montana that sought to bar the use of TikTok, saying it “oversteps state power”, a month before the ban was due to take effect.
Why it matters: The move suggests efforts to prohibit use of the Chinese-owned video sharing app in the US will face significant legal challenges. Montana was the first state set to implement a blanket TikTok ban.
Details: In a statement, the US District Judge Donald Molloy said the ban targets “China’s ostensible role in TikTok” rather than protects Montana consumers.
Context: TikTok has continued to face criticism during its rise in the US, but its popularity and ad revenue point to a continued upward trend in use of the app nationwide. Its parent company ByteDance reportedly generated $54 billion globally in the first half of 2023, a figure close to Facebook owner Meta’s $60.6 billion. The video platform also officially launched an in-app e-commerce feature in September.
]]>Fast fashion giant Shein has confidentially filed for an IPO in the US, Reuters reported on Monday, citing two sources. The move puts to an end long-running speculation around the China-founded company’s intentions to go public.
Why it matters: A successful listing for the fast-fashion giant would help Shein expand its global reach while diversifying its sources of funding.
Details: Shein has hired Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley as lead underwriters for the share offering and expects to go public sometime in 2024, according to Reuters.
Context: In 2022, eleven years after its founding, Shein recorded $23 billion in revenue and $800 million in net income, according to the Wall Street Journal. A company executive reportedly told investors in July that it had achieved record profitability in the first half of 2023 thanks in large part to strong sales in the US.
Baidu said on Tuesday it has “comprehensively reshaped” its product portfolios thanks to its AI foundation model ERNIE, resulting in increased operational efficiency, after the Chinese search giant company reported 6% year-on-year revenue growth to RMB 34.4 billion in the third quarter. However, the company’s cloud unit reported its first decline in revenue in almost three years.
Why it matters: Baidu pointed to artificial intelligence bringing about positive changes in key performance indicators across all of its businesses in its latest earnings report. The firm also highlighted that its ChatGPT-like service ERNIE Bot has already amassed 70 million users.
Details: Although the company’s overall growth was up, Baidu’s AI cloud revenue decreased by 2% in the three months to September. Robin Li, CEO of the firm, said this was due to weak demand in smart transportation projects, despite strong demand for generative AI. The figures marked the first decline in Baidu’s cloud business since it started announcing its earnings separately in the last quarter of 2020.
Context: Baidu’s large language model, ERNIE, was made available to the public at the end of August after receiving government approval. Last month, Baidu launched the latest version of its AI model, ERNIE 4.0, seven months after the release of its first version.
]]>iPhone maker Apple has reportedly asked China’s major app developers to refrain from using gyroscopic motion, a feature that tracks the motion of a user’s phone, for advertising, as it all too readily redirects users to third-party apps on detecting even the slightest shake of a device.
Why it matters: Open-screen advertising serves as a monetization method for many apps, while gyroscopic ads can boost the click-through rate of the target app. Those employing the feature have found that both parties can gain commercially, despite it taking control away from the user and thus impacting the user experience.
Details: Deployment of the function, criticized by numerous users, escalated during November’s three-week-long Singles Day shopping festival that has just ended. E-commerce platforms extensively used redirect ads across various apps, including the most widely used video and music streaming platforms, as well as social media apps. These ads can be triggered by clicking on an ad page or moving the phone, redirecting the user’s attention to another app.
Context: In February, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation made it clear in a guideline that advertisements should be clearly labeled using a closing icon, and should not deceptively induce users to click on or browse any advertisement. The new measures were supposed to further refine the norms of online advertising in China.
]]>Chinese video giant ByteDance will conduct a new round of layoffs from its virtual reality arm Pico as demand for headsets was not “as fast as expected,” said chief executive Henry Zhou, acknowledging at an internal meeting that projections for VR had been overly optimistic.
Why it matters: This large-scale downsizing is the latest restructuring effort by ByteDance in response to dim prospects in the VR industry. Despite significant investments in technology and marketing over the past two years, which failed to yield satisfactory sales results, the company has stated its intention to keep its hardware team intact.
Details: The biggest overhaul since Pico was acquired by the TikTok owner two years ago was announced in a ten-minute meeting on Tuesday, with staff from sales, videos, and platform operations hit the most.
Context: ByteDance acquired Pico for approximately RMB 5 billion in 2021, and launched an extensive marketing campaign for the Pico 4 standalone VR headset when it was launched a year later. The company enlisted musician Leah Dou and ping-pong star Sun Yingsha as spokespeople, covering major shopping malls and bus stops with advertisements.
China’s most populated social media platforms on Tuesday announced they will soon remove anonymity for content creators that have over 500,000 followers, confirming rumors that stirred up heated debate over personal privacy in recent weeks.
Why it matters: The new policy will force bloggers with large fan bases to disclose their real names to the public on social media, in a change to the rules that will likely further deter discussion online in China, especially when it comes to finance news and current affairs.
Details: At least seven social platforms serving hundreds of thousands of users daily issued statements urging influencers to reveal their real identities. These included X-like platform Weibo, messaging app WeChat, video sites Douyin, Kuaishou, and Bilibili, as well as lifestyle-sharing app Xiaohongshu and search giant Baidu.
Context: On Oct.21, users noticed that Weibo’s CEO Wang Gaofei gave his real name on his social media page, a move later confirmed by the executive who said he had decided to first test the policy on his own account.
Chinese kitchen appliances brand Hauswirt said on Monday that it had sent a legal letter to JD after the retailer lowered the price of one of Hauswirt’s ovens “without authorization” amid intense online battles over price in the run-up to Singles’ Day. Hauswirt claims the reduction led to a dent in the company’s profits.
Why it matters: Competition over low prices in a bid to attract consumers has intensified as China’s biggest shopping extravaganza kicks off, with this case suggesting an increasingly dysfunctional and imbalanced e-commerce ecosystem.
Details: Hauswirt’s home beginner oven normally retails for RMB 699 ($95.50), but this week consumers can get it on JD for RMB 319.50, a discount of more than 50%.
Context: The conflict over pricing control between e-commerce channels is growing more prominent in China’s latest online price war. On the one hand, online retailers are pursuing low prices amid a less-than-stellar consumer recovery, but on the other, this is adding pressure to merchants that have set up online stores on multiple platforms.
Chinese e-commerce platforms are racing to give consumers attractive deals during this year’s Singles’ Day festival, though the country’s biggest online shopping bonanza has slowly lost its luster as the pushing of low prices has become a standard marketing strategy throughout the year for platforms facing challenges in reviving consumer sentiment.
Why it matters: Emerging retailers such as Douyin and Kuaishou, along with established rivals Alibaba and JD, are turning to direct discounts for shoppers as the 11.11 pre-sale period kicks off because they continue to count on the mega event to encourage consumers to open up their wallets and submit their data, especially in the face of China’s uneven economic recovery.
Details: The Singles’ Day festival is now in its 15th year after it was first co-opted by Alibaba in 2009, who turned an organic, low-key celebration of singledom into a major consumerist event.
Context: In the third quarter, China’s economic growth outpaced expectations, indicating that a series of recent policy measures are aiding the initial recovery of the world’s second-largest economy. Retail sales increased by 5.5% last month, beating expectations and also surpassing the 4.6% growth recorded in August.
]]>Baidu released the latest version of its AI foundation model ERNIE on Tuesday at the Baidu World 2023 conference, a mere four months after the previous release. At the launch, the tech giant claimed the capabilities of ERNIE 4.0 were as advanced as OpenAI’s GPT-4 model.
Why it matters: Baidu has emerged as one of China’s fastest companies in leveraging AI models to transform existing products, ensuring its prominence in the competitive space.
Details: Co-founder and CEO Robin Li showed off ERNIE 4.0 during a one-hour presentation, showcasing the model’s ability to generate advertising posters and marketing videos in real time. Li also asked it to write a martial arts novel based on prompts, underscoring the enhanced memory capabilities of the iterated model.
Context: Rebuilding applications with large language models has been embraced by tech giants from Microsoft to Baidu and Alibaba. Robin Li sees the AI model as an opportunity to overhaul all of Baidu’s products, aligning with the vision of Daniel Zhang, former chairman and chief executive of Alibaba, who also stated that all Alibaba products would undergo a comprehensive upgrade through integration into its AI model.
Chinese video streaming platform Bilibili has proposed the goal of doubling its current daily active users (DAU), according to local media outlet LatePost. The target was discussed during a mid-year internal meeting, although the company did not specify a clear timeframe for its achievement.
Why it matters: User growth is crucial for content-based Bilibili as an increase in this figure could boost the firm’s advertising revenue and push to create new content, with the company aiming to achieve profitability by 2024.
Details: Increasing the supply of high-quality content, and expanding the scenarios available for Bilibili users are the platform’s core strategies for doubling its DAUs, LatePost reported.
Context: Bilibili, a long-form video platform primarily favored by Gen Z users, currently offers a wide range of content genres, including anime, TV shows, variety shows, documentaries, and live streaming. Notably, in response to the growing impact of short video platforms, Bilibili has bet big on shorter vertical videos over the past year, aiming to attract new audiences.
Baidu on Saturday appointed its chief information officer Li Ying to lead the company’s AI speaker subsidiary, Xiaodu Technology, after the sudden resignation of former chief executive Jing Kun.
Why it matters: As the Vice President of Baidu, Li’s taking over as the top executive of Xiaodu may signify the strengthening of the company’s ERNIE Bot support for various artificial intelligence product lines under Xiaodu, with the tech giant betting big on its subsidiary’s potential for transformation in the AI field.
Details: Officially launched in 2015 as a smart life business group under Baidu, Xiaodu was spun off from the search giant in 2020.
Context: In May, Xiaodu teased its first smartphone, Qinghe, which is intended as a child-focused smartphone and features English-speaking and location tracking functions. Although the independent Baidu subsidiary stated on its official WeChat public account in February that Xiaodu-created devices would integrate all the capabilities of ERNIE Bot, Qinghe ultimately utilized “a large AI model for studying” developed by the company itself.
Alibaba is to boost its e-commerce business outside China with a $2 billion investment in its Turkish unit Trendyol, Reuters reported, quoting a statement from Trendyol on Monday.
Why it matters: Alibaba’s decision to increase investment in Trendyol comes after the Turkish platform made an operating profit for the first time in the second quarter. The tech giant’s expansion into the Middle Eastern country, one that often serves as a bridge between Europe and Asia, will bolster its global business efforts.
Details: The financial commitment was made during a meeting between Michael Evans, president of Alibaba, and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan. While details were not disclosed, the investment is expected to materialize “in the near future,” said Evans.
Context: In 2022, the size of the Turkish e-commerce market grew 110%, rising from 382 billion Lira in 2021 to 801 billion Lira last year, according to research conducted by the Turkish E-Commerce Association (ETİD). E-commerce accounted for a 16.5% share of the retail sector in 2022, in contrast to China’s more than 31%.
]]>TikTok has officially launched its e-commerce business, known as TikTok Shop, in the US following months of testing, according to a blog post from the company published on Tuesday. TikTok is making a big bet on monetizing its more than 150 million users in the country, even as it faces increased scrutiny from US authorities.
Why it matters: The largest market for the short video platform, the US also represents the greatest political risk for the Chinese-founded company. TikTok will also encounter stiff competition from larger e-commerce rivals such as Amazon and from Chinese counterparts such as Shein and PDD-owned Temu.
Details: The shopping feature now enables TikTok’s US users to directly complete transactions through in-app links within videos or live streamings, eliminating the need to jump to external websites.
Context: TikTok’s e-commerce push was first launched in Indonesia in 2021, and has since been made available in the UK and multiple countries in Southeast Asia. A previous Bloomberg report noted that TikTok plans to quadruple its e-commerce merchandise sales to $20 billion by the end of this year.
China’s top livestreaming influencer Li Jiaqi has angered part of his fanbase after losing his temper with a consumer who questioned a product’s high price during a recent live broadcast. Li asked the viewer of the sales pitch to question if they had worked hard enough to afford the item, rather than niggle about the cost.
Why it matters: The social media uproar about Li’s remark comes a year after the influencer returned to the public eye following an unexplained three-month absence for livestreaming platforms. The incident also comes less than two months before China’s largest annual shopping extravaganza, Singles Day, where domestic and international brands do their utmost to leverage the huge following top influencers like Li enjoy, in order to expand sales.
Details: Li was forced to apologize twice as his remarks created a PR storm, as the popular celebrity lost nearly a million followers in a day on the Twitter-like social media site Weibo, even though this number represents less than 5% of his total fans on the platform.
Context: Chinese netizens’ dissatisfaction with Li is largely due to their belief that his comments made a mockery of low-income groups, as consumers are particularly sensitive to prices amid domestic economic sluggishness. His first apology was also widely viewed as insincere and failing to grasp the source of many users’ anger.
Correction: An earlier version of the article miscalculated the income of Li Jiaqi which is RMB 1.855 billion rather than the RMB 18.553 billion as mentioned.
]]>Chinese search giant Baidu launched its ChatGPT-like service ERNIE Bot for public use on Thursday, as one of the first batches of companies given permission to allow regular access to generative AI bots, having filed details of its algorithms with the government. The move signals a softening of Beijing’s regulatory stance towards artificial intelligence.
Why it matters: The approval comes two weeks after China’s new AI rules took effect, paving the way for an initial eight companies to cater their generative AI services to over 1 billion Chinese internet users.
Details: The first tranche of approvals has been granted to tech companies and research institutes headquartered in Beijing or Shanghai, from Baidu, ByteDance, and SenseTime to the state-backed Chinese Academy of Sciences and Shanghai Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
Context: China implemented detailed regulations for generative AI services on Aug. 15, making it clear that government approval of algorithms is a threshold that tech companies must cross before offering AI products to the public, as a way to better control content.
PDD-owned Temu made a quiet debut in the Philippines this past weekend, its first Southeast Asia destination, bringing the budget shopping app into head-to-head competition with Chinese counterparts Lazada and TikTok Shop.
Why it matters: Temu’s expansion into Southeast Asia is expected to ignite an already heated e-commerce sector in the region with its aggressive marketing strategies, even as major players already in place have secured enviable market shares.
Details: Since its launch in the US last September, Temu has reached consumers in 38 countries across six continents with its China-produced goods.
Context: The comparatively lower e-commerce penetration rate in Southeast Asia makes the region highly attractive to Chinese e-commerce companies, especially as they face a slowdown in domestic growth.
Chinese e-commerce giant JD on Wednesday lowered its free shipping threshold by almost half in an announcement labeled an “important notice” on its official WeChat account, as the retailer makes a further push in its low-price strategy.
Why it matters: Providing faster and cheaper delivery has become a new battleground among China’s domestic e-commerce platforms, as they bid to lure users from their rivals.
Details: JD cut its minimum order requirement for free shipping by nearly half from RMB 99 ($13.8) to RMB 59, its first lowering of the free shipping threshold in seven years.
Context: JD saw its total revenue grow 7.6% to RMB 287.9 billion in the quarter that ended in June, mainly thanks to China’s second-largest shopping festival 618, which boosted multiple e-commerce platforms’ sales through month-long discounts. The company’s retail segment only gained 4.8% growth in the second quarter following negative year-on-year growth in the previous quarter, casting a cloud over China’s fragile retail recovery. Revenue for its logistics unit however has experienced continuous quarter growth of over 30% since this year.
]]>China’s Instagram-like lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu has merged its e-commerce and livestreaming operations, establishing a new trading division in parallel with its community division, according to a report by local media outlet LatePost.
Why it matters: With the platform having met its milestone of 100 million daily active users earlier this year, Xiaohongshu has moved to solidify its previously vague strategy in e-commerce, aiming to diversify a revenue stream that has to date relied mainly on advertising.
Details: Xiaohongshu’s chief operating officer, widely known by the nickname Ke Nan, will assume leadership of the new department.
Context: While safeguarding its community content ecosystem remains a priority, Xiaohongshu has kept a quiet eye on the evolving e-commerce arena in recent years. Reports in March noted that the platform had elevated livestreaming operations to a standalone division, a move that centralized the oversight of livestreamed content and e-commerce activities.
Alipay, a digital payment service operated by Alibaba-affiliated Ant Group, is taking steps to monetize its 1 billion-strong user base by doubling down on livestreamed e-commerce, a route taken by many other Chinese platforms with vast user pools.
The fintech giant also announced an updated international version of Alipay on Thursday that promised to make it easier for foreign visitors to China to use the digital payment service using Visa, Mastercard, and other major credit cards.
Why it matters: Labeled an “important strategic partner” by Alibaba, Ant Group is focused on preparing for a Hong Kong IPO. This puts pressure on the Jack Ma-founded business to accelerate commercialization with a more diversified business ecosystem.
Details: The twin updates, unveiled on Thursday at this year’s Alipay Partner Conference, are a key part of the company’s expansion into “digital connectivity,” a term that refers to providing merchants with product and service interfaces such as mini-programs within their digital operations.
Context: The Jack Ma-backed Ant Group has reportedly been undergoing significant restructuring ahead of its listing in Hong Kong. This may involve the separation of certain non-core operations of its finance-related business. The decision comes after Ant was hit with a nearly $1 billion fine in early July, in a signal by the Chinese authorities that it was concluding its crackdown on the firm in the wake of its abrupt abandoning of what was expected to be the world’s biggest IPO in late 2020.
]]>Douyin, TikTok’s Chinese counterpart, has established a new department dedicated to entertainment ventures, according to a Monday report by 36Kr citing multiple sources. The move aims to centralize the management of activities ranging from live-streaming programs and variety shows to dramas and music.
Why it matters: Douyin’s emphasis on cultural and entertainment content not only enriches its product ecosystem but, more importantly, helps the platform to further diversify its revenue streams.
Details: Chen Duye, head of the recently established division and previously in charge of Ocean Engine, ByteDance’s marketing platform for business promotions across its various apps, will directly report to Han Shangyou, who now holds a prominent position within Douyin.
Context: As of last December, the China Internet Network Information Center reported that over 70% of the Chinese population had accessed short videos, highlighting the significant reach of these platforms as mainstream entertainment channels across the country. The report also noted that individuals spent an average of 2.5 plus hours on the platforms every day.
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Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba reported a solid quarterly performance on Thursday, attributed to improvements across all of its operations. Notably, its logistics unit Cainiao and digital media arm both achieved profitability for the first time. Total revenue reached RMB 234.16 billion ($32.3 billion), marking a 14% year-on-year increase and a 12.5% rise from the previous quarter.
Why it matters: Alibaba has successfully returned to double-digit growth after a year of relatively stable performance. This achievement comes despite a number of China’s economic indicators suggesting a gloomier overall picture.
Details: The results of the quarter to June mark the conclusion of Daniel Zhang’s leadership, as he prepares to fully focus on leading the company’s cloud business starting in September. The cloud and computer division experienced the slowest revenue growth (of 4%) among Alibaba’s six independent businesses, while the firm’s international commerce division saw the most rapid expansion with a robust growth rate of 41%.
Context: These are the first quarterly results from Alibaba since the Hangzhou-based powerhouse split its business into six divisions in March. Daniel Zhang will step down as CEO and chairman of the group on Sept. 10, to be succeeded by Eddie Wu and Joe Tsai, who will assume the positions of CEO and chairman, respectively.
]]>On Tuesday, Apple removed more than one hundred AI-related apps that offered ChatGPT-style services from its China App Store. In a notice sent to affected developers, Apple stated that the removal was “pursuant to orders by the Chinese government” as the related content is deemed “illegal” in China.
Why it matters: The targeted removal of AI-related apps comes two weeks before the implementation of China’s artificial intelligence regulations. The action may send mixed signals to AI developers who aim to offer AI tools for users in China while striving to comply with the country’s regulations.
Details: A source close to Chinese regulators said the reason for taking the apps off the store is that they are not standardized enough in terms of data collection and usage, according to local outlet China Star Market. The source added that it is expected to “take a long time” before these apps are allowed back to the store.
Context: As the latest wave of artificial intelligence-related products continues to spread worldwide, governments are racing to keep pace with the rapidly developing technology. China is set to implement new AI restrictions starting August 15, aiming to regulate the development and deployment of AI within the country.
TikTok is set to expand its online retail business to the US in early August, according to the Wall Street Journal, in a bid to replicate rivals Shein and Temu’s success in the world’s second-largest e-commerce market. The short video app was thought to be ready to launch the service earlier this year, but delayed the move in May amid concerns from merchants over geopolitical tensions, as previously reported by the WSJ.
Why it matters: The move indicates that TikTok is aiming to earn more revenue from its largest audience market, despite continued threats by American politicians over what they see as the firm’s links to the Chinese authorities. The short video operator has reportedly set a goal for its global e-commerce operation to increase its total sales more than fourfold this year to $20 billion.
Details: On a page called TikTok Shop Shopping Center, users can browse and purchase products, though the model differs slightly from its initial plan to establish a third-party sellers’ platform.
Context: The short video app, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, is used by over 150 million users in the US. However, as TikTok steps up its presence in the country’s e-commerce market, it is facing increasingly strict regulatory scrutiny. The Biden administration in March demanded TikTok be sold or potentially face a national ban in its largest market.
At least six Chinese tea chain companies are gearing up for IPOs, Bloomberg reported on Monday. Expanding at a rapid pace, China’s biggest bubble-tea chain Mixue is among them, with Zhejiang-based XSQ Tea, which has just a fraction of the former’s 28,000 stores, also looking to go public.
Why it matters: For these freshly made tea beverage companies, choosing to list in Hong Kong or the US may make their path to IPO easier while reducing the likelihood of regulatory scrutiny. Meanwhile, their concentrated entry into the capital market highlights the importance of raising funds for companies that rely heavily on investment to expand in scale, especially as China’s post-pandemic consumption recovery appears to be running out of steam.
Details: XSQ Tea, and new-style tea retailers GoodMe, Auntea Jenny, and ChaBaiDao each have more than 6,000 outlets, and are planning to be listed in Hong Kong, while Sichuan-based Chagee is preparing for a US IPO. Mixue is yet to decide on its listing location, Bloomberg reports.
Context: Under the banner of being the first tea drink firm of its kind to go public, Nayuki, a Chinese freshly made tea chain established by a married couple in 2015, made its Hong Kong listing debut two years ago. However, the company has not yet achieved profitability and is experiencing mounting losses, leading to a significant decline of about 70% in its stock price from its IPO level.
China’s biggest travel agency Ctrip on Monday introduced a vertical AI large model designed for the tourism industry. The AI-driven model, called Xiecheng Wendao, allows users to ask Ctrip travel-related questions. The company’s chair James Liang said the model is in its early stages and still “requires a long process of iteration.”
Why it matters: Many companies are fine-tuning existing general large models with industry-specific data to cater to their specific needs. Ctrip, in this case, said its specialized model is built on an undisclosed general model, filtering 20 billion high-quality unstructured streams of tourism data along with its own structured real-time data and search algorithms.
Details: Ctrip’s AI model will offer recommendations on destinations, hotels, and sightseeing, the firm said at the Monday launch event, and also can offer real-time search results for flights and hotels.
Context: Chinese companies are increasingly turning to industry-specific models, in a variation on the race to create artificial intelligence chatbots similar to ChatGPT. It seems a safer path for domestic firms to utilize the rapidly-growing technology, especially in a country that has recently taken a major step to regulate generative AI content.
China’s e-commerce giant JD on Thursday introduced its own large AI model ChatRhino during the JD Discovery tech summit. Positioned as a vertical AI model that offers industry-specific use cases, JD’s AI offering arrives a few months later than rivals Alibaba and Baidu.
Why it matters: JD is the latest Chinese tech major attempting to upgrade its offerings with AI and large models. The company said ChatRhino combines 70% generalized data and 30% native intelligent supply chain data, targeting a number of sectors including retail, finance, education, and government.
Details: CEO Sandy Xu, who took office in May, emphasized at the summit that ChatRhino has shown “clear practical results” within JD. The company has already utilized the AI model to enhance customer service, facilitate code writing, and improve product recommendations, she added.
Context: Beijing currently is home to approximately half of the more than 80 large models available in China, according to Jiang Guangzhi, the director of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Economy and Information Technology, who delivered a speech at the Global Digital Economy Conference held in Beijing earlier this month.
Renowned computer scientist and venture capitalist Kai-Fu Lee on Monday unveiled his new artificial intelligence startup, 01.AI (Lingyi Wanwu in Chinese), providing long-awaited details about his plans to “build an AI 2.0 platform and applications”. In an official announcement shared on theWeChat account of Lee’s VC firm Sinovation Ventures, the Beijing-based company said it had chosen “the most difficult path” of developing its own large language model (LLM).
Why it matters: In the lengthy official post, Lee wrote that he believes AI-powered LLMs present a “historical opportunity” that China cannot miss. Lee hopes the startup will develop a domestically-grown model capable of producing products similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Sinovation Ventures quoted Lee as saying China will see a variety of high-quality and creative applications once the country has truly native, high-quality LLMs, much like the era of mobile internet.
Details: 01.AI details its model training strategy in seven major modules, including pre-training, post-training, AI infrastructure, and multi-model technology. The firm hopes to equip each module with top-notch technical experts to build an LLM with greater capabilities.
Context: The vast success of OpenAI’s ChatGPT has prompted Chinese tech majors, startups, and research institutions to join the race to create something similar. Data from a state-backed scientific institution shows that China had at least 79 LLMs with parameters exceeding 1 billion as of late May.
Alibaba’s logistics arm, Cainiao, on Wednesday launched a new express delivery service that will put it in a position to compete directly with delivery companies such as JD Logistics and SF Express. The major move comes a week after Alibaba appointed Joe Tsai as the group’s chairman. Cainiao CEO, Wan Lin, unveiled the new service during Cainiao’s annual Global Smart Logistics Summit, promising that it will offer half-day, same-day, and next-day doorstep deliveries, along with other “high-quality” services.
Why it matters: Wan stated that the company was once “deeply conflicted” about whether to establish its own domestic logistics operations. However, as Cainiao has begun preparations for a listing in Hong Kong, it has become crucial for the firm to become sustainable and competitive in China’s crowded delivery industry.
Details: The new service, named Cainiao Express, is an expansion of the express delivery previously provided exclusively to select Alibaba-owned businesses such as Tmall Supermarket, Freshippo, and Tmall Global; e-commerce merchants on Taobao regularly rely on third-party courier services.
Context: Building an independent express network and creating cost-effective express services requires heavy upfront costs, as well as higher operational costs.
Chinese online retailer JD on Monday announced changes to its senior executive line-up, involving its logistic arm and healthcare unit, days after releasing ambitious growth targets at its 20th-anniversary celebration last week.
Hu Wei, former chief executive of JD Property, will succeed Yu Rui, who resigned for personal health reasons as CEO of JD Logistics, on June 26. Additionally, the chief financial officer of JD Health, the drug store operator, will assume the position of CEO for JD Property.
Why it matters: The top-level changes come at a time when JD experienced its lowest-ever pace of revenue growth. Just a month prior, the Beijing-based company made a surprise management reshuffle, with chief financial officer Sandy Xu replacing Xu Lei, who had served as CEO for only a year.
Details: In 2022, JD achieved a milestone by surpassing the trillion-dollar revenue mark, with revenues totaling RMB 104.62 billion. The company also recorded a net income of RMB 10.4 billion thanks to strict cost-cutting measures, compared to a loss of RMB 1.04 billion a year prior.
Context: Alibaba, a major rival to JD, has conducted several rounds of structural and management changes this year. Earlier this month, Alibaba appointed Joseph Tsai as chairman and Eddie Wu as CEO, succeeding Daniel Zhang. Alibaba also announced in late March that it will split its operations into six standalone units, each managed by a different chief executive and able to pursue separate IPOs or external funding.
Major Chinese e-commerce platforms have kept quiet on the gross merchandise volume (GMV) figures for the month-long 618 shopping festival, a key indicator of success in years past. JD said the event “exceeded expectations and set a new record,” while Alibaba’s e-commerce group said it saw users’ willingness to spend more time browsing on Taobao as their “greatest achievement” from this year’s festival.
Why it matters: Third-party data provider Syntun said total sales during 618 from Tmall, JD, and Pinduoduo increased 5.4% from a year prior to RMB 614.3 billion ($85.6 billion), signaling that China’s consumption growth is on a slower pace than expected, as consumers spend their money more cautiously.
Details: The mid-year shopping festival is still a major event to observe changing consumer trends and tastes. According to various surveys, this year’s event shows that livestream shopping has become increasingly influential in consumers’ shopping decisions.
Context: JD recorded an overall transaction volume of RMB 379.3 billion during last year’s 618 festival. However, its annual growth of 10.3% was a new low, slowing from the previous year’s 27.7% increase.
China’s 618 shopping festival, the country’s mid-year online deals event, is coming to a close after a month-long campaign. This year’s 618 is the first major shopping event since China reopened in December, offering some insight into China’s current consumer sentiment.
It’s also an interesting test for Chinese e-commerce giants Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo, all of whom have recently undergone management adjustments. Each company continues to face significant growth pressure in the face of fierce competition.
Alibaba, JD competing on lower prices with Pinduoduo
This year’s 618 festival encapsulates the escalating price war in China’s e-commerce industry. With the slowdown in economic growth, consumers are actively seeking cost-effective products. In response, multiple Chinese e-commerce platforms have followed Pinduoduo’s marketing strategy by offering higher discounts to attract buyers.
During the month-long mega promotion, Alibaba customers have received a discount of RMB 50 (about $7) for every RMB 300 spent across Tmall stores. In addition, Taobao has introduced an “RMB 10 billion subsidy” project, adopting a similar approach and bearing the same name as Pinduoduo’s signature campaign. Through this channel, products were directly sold at lower prices without the usually complicated coupon application.
JD, with former CFO Sandy Xu recently taking over as CEO, offered the most generous discounts compared to other platforms. Buyers have been able to get RMB 50 back for every RMB 299 spent. Prior to the festival, Trudy Dai, CEO of Alibaba’s newly independent Taobao Tmall Commerce Group, expressed the platforms’ commitment to making a “historical investment” in this year’s event, while JD announced its intention to undertake “industry-wide investment efforts” during the festival.
Pinduoduo, known for selling ultra-low prices goods, prominently displayed a slogan on its 618 promotion interface that roughly translates to “no need to compare with other platforms because we offer the lowest prices.” Pinduoduo has also been offering RMB 30 off for every RMB 200 spent.
“Encouraging consumption became the priority for the government, the market, and the e-commerce platforms in all aspects,” said Fabian Sinn, a managing partner at e-commerce marketing firm Genuine. “As a result, there were more subsidies and more affordable prices to attract consumers and stimulate the market’s economic recovery.”
Retail sales, as a key figure indicates consumer confidence, rose 12.7% in May, falling short of market expectations and down from 18.4% in April. The recovery in China’s consumption sector is not as strong as it appears.
The rise of Pinduoduo, which has steadily gained market share in an e-commerce industry once dominated by Taobao and JD, has combined with the emergence of live commerce platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou in recent years to have a significant impact on price-sensitive consumers. These consumers now consider the price differentials and after-sales services offered by various shopping outlets when making their purchasing decisions.
Copying from each other’s playbooks
In a heated competition, Chinese e-commerce platforms are copying strategies from each other. Rising content commerce platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou are copying from the majors, trying to offer more serious online shopping experiences like Taobao and JD on their apps, adding new dedicated shopping sections rather than directing people to shop while they are watching content like they used to. While majors like Alibaba and JD are trying to offer more video entertainment and content, making the shopping experience more casual in their apps.
Douyin and Kuaishou, known for stimulating consumption via livestreaming and short videos, have focused on leveraging various promotional activities to drive sales through dedicated shopping channels called “marketplace,” where product listings can be displayed in columns.
Wei Wenwen, president of Douyin’s e-commerce unit, recently highlighted at the TikTok sibling’s ecosystem conference that the GMV generated from the “marketplace” accounted for over 30% of its total sales in 2022.
Douyin and Kuaishou “have been steadily capturing more market share, despite offering similar products to other major platforms,” Jacob Cooke, CEO of WPIC, an e-commerce tech and marketing firm that helps foreign brands sell in China, told TechNode.
“People use these short-video apps for entertainment and knowledge acquisition,” added Cooke, “and the platforms have cleverly integrated e-commerce so that users are exposed to brands and products that relate to their interests, which has been a catalyst for impulse buying and consumer engagement.”
Mainstream shopping sites are adopting a content-driven approach as a defensive strategy to promote sales. The content-based browsing was repeatedly emphasized by Trudy Dai at the 618 Merchant Conference held on May 10. Dai promised that Taobao would provide a wide range of products, short videos, and livestreaming services to enhance user engagement.
Alibaba is investing heavily in its content ecosystem. The e-commerce giant announced at the Merchant Conference that over 50,000 new livestreaming hosts would make their debut during the annual mid-year discounts on Taobao and Tmall.
Notably, on May 31, US tech giant Apple made its first foray into livestreaming on Tmall, an event that drew 1.28 million viewers. Football celebrity Messi also joined Taobao Live for nearly 20 minutes on June 14, as part of his Chinese trip schedule, which drew over 2.5 million viewers and even caused the stuttering of the livestream event when Messi came onto the scene.
JD Live is also leveraging top influencers to attract user transactions. Smartisan Technology founder Luo Yonghao, who previously had an exclusive partnership with Douyin, joined JD’s livestream on May 31 and helped sell goods for more than RMB 150 million.
]]>Douyin is reportedly abandoning its goal of achieving RMB 100 billion ($14 billion) in total sales this year, as the business’ progress in the first half of 2023 has only reached one-tenth of the yearly target, falling extremely short of internal expectations.
Local media outlet LatePost first reported the news on June 10, citing a source close to the matter. While GMV is no longer the most important metric for the unit, the report said that exploring various ways to successfully run the food delivery business is now a more urgent priority for TikTok’s Chinese sibling.
Why it matters: Due to a lack of its own delivery logistic team, Douyin has relied on selling higher-priced set meal kits (which cut down the frequency of deliveries) and third-party delivery companies to offer its food delivery service. The approach is currently presenting challenges in scaling up the business.
Details: Starting in mid-2022, the short video platform has been testing food deliveries in Beijing, Shanghai, and Chengdu. Users in these three cities are able to order food for delivery within Douyin. But unlike market leaders Meituan and Alibaba’s Ele.me, restaurants selling goods on the Douyin platform need to use delivery riders from another service or deliver the food themselves, making the delivery cost run higher.
Context: Meituan and Ele.me now dominate the food delivery market in China, holding a more than 90% share of the market between them, highlighting the challenge for Douyin. Meituan has already begun a counteroffensive to maintain its leading position in the face of this new challenger.
TikTok has announced that it has 8.5 million monthly active users in Australia, in the short video platform’s first disclosure of its user numbers in the country. The platform, owned by Beijing-based tech firm ByteDance, also said TikTok is being utilized by 350,000 businesses as a marketing tool to reach and engage new clients in Australia.
Why it matters: The figure suggests that more than 30% of the Australian population is using TikTok. Australia banned TikTok on government-issued devices in April.
Details: Australia joined more than 10 countries (including the US, the UK, Canada, New Zealand, France, Denmark, and India) in banning the use of the ByteDance-owned short video platform on government devices in April.
Context: TikTok has long been questioned by Western countries on whether it shares users’ data with the Chinese government.
Chinese short-video platform Kuaishou reported impressive growth in home appliance sales on the platform as China’s mid-year 618 shopping festival gets underway. Kuaishou saw single-day GMV of home appliances on June 1 top RMB 100 million ($14 million), a 42-fold increase compared to last year, data from the company showed.
Why it matters: Kuaishou is seeing results from the continued expansion e-commerce on the platform. In 2022, the Chinese short video platform generated over RMB 900 billion from its livestream commerce business.
Details: In the first three days of June, the GMV growth rate of household appliances that have high unit prices on Kuaishou increased by nearly 500% from a year earlier, making it the category with the largest increase, according to data released by the firm.
Context: Categories with higher unit prices, such as home appliances and consumer electronics, are currently showing more growth on Chinese mainstream live-commerce platforms, although the timeframe of the statistics differs from platform to platform.
DingTalk, Alibaba’s workplace communications platform, is now inviting enterprise customers to test its new AI functions in the app. The AI functions are capable of generating text, images, and meeting summaries, as well as organizing meeting notes and creating chatbots based on provided materials.
Why it matters: Chinese tech majors have been keen to showcase their AI capabilities since ChatGPT’s launch made it a global phenomenon. DingTalk is one of the first major workplace communication apps to integrate AI functions into its offering. ByteDance’s Feishu (known as Lark in the overseas market) also announced in April that it will integrate a new similar AI assistant called “My AI” into the app, but has yet to begin open testing.
Details: Users can access AI capabilities by typing the forward slash “/” in DingTalk. The company first showed off DingTalk’s AI-powered capabilities in a demonstration in April.
Context: Alibaba also announced on Thursday that it is integrating its ChatGPT-like service into a meeting assistant called Tingwu that focuses on converting speech and videos to text in real-time.
ByteDance co-founder Zhang Yiming has set up an investment fund called Cool River Venture in Hong Kong, targeting tech-related investments.
Why it matters: Since stepping down as CEO of ByteDance in 2021, Zhang has kept a low profile, rarely making public appearances. Incorporated on May 22, the fund signals a move by Zhang to diversify his wealth.
Details: Zhang Yiming remains the second richest person in China with a net worth of $45 billion according to Forbes’ 2023 list of the 10 richest Chinese billionaires. Zhang was surpassed only by Zhong Shanshan, the founder of drinks brand Nongfu Spring, whose wealth is valued at $68 billion.
Context: Setting up a personal investment fund or family office, or taking roles in other venture capital firms has been a popular trend among successful Chinese tech founders to manage their wealth.
Kuaishou, China’s second-largest short video firm, has achieved a quarterly profit for the first time since its listing in early 2021, thanks to strong growth of its short video drama series, recovery ad revenue in China, growth in e-commerce revenues, and narrowed losses overseas. The company reported an adjusted net income of RMB 42 million ($6 million) in the January to March period, compared to a loss of RMB 3.722 billion a year earlier.
Why it matters: It is still uncertain whether Kuaishou can sustain its profitability going forward. The company’s first quarter profit was driven mostly by growth and recovery in the Chinese market, which generates 98% of the company’s revenue. Kuaishou has managed to narrow losses by 55% in its overseas revenue.
Domestic business: Short soap opera-style video series are a key offering that sets Kuaishou apart from other short video platforms, both in its domestic and overseas operations. These short video series, catering to mobile video audiences, have attracted more advertisers for the company and become a growth driver. In the first quarter of 2023, revenue from advertising sponsorship of Kuaishou’s short video dramas increased by more than 300% year-over-year.
Overseas business: Kuaishou’s overseas operations are currently focused on Latin America, with the short-form video app Kwai running in countries such as Brazil, while it also operates the SnackVideo app in Indonesia. This quarter, Kuaishou’s revenue outside of China grew more than six times year-over-year to RMB 338 million. The firm’s overseas business has maintained an extremely high growth rate for nearly a year, recording a 1,328.5% increase in revenue growth in the second quarter of last year alone.
Alibaba has approved a full spin-off of its cloud arm, with the unit set to become an independent publicly listed company. The Chinese tech giant has also approved moves by its logistic unit Cainiao and grocery brand Freshippo (Hema) to explore IPOs in the near future, according to an official announcement as part of its March quarter earnings release on Thursday.
The separation of Alibaba Cloud will be done through a stock dividend distribution to shareholders, the company said, adding that it foresees the process being completed within a year. Alibaba is targeting a public listing for Cainiao in 12 to 18 months, while Freshippo is due to be listed in the next six to 12 months.
Why it matters: The plan to spin off the cloud computing unit into a separate entity and allow the listing of Cainiao and Freshippo follows Alibaba’s announcement in late March that it was splitting the company into six standalone units while maintaining central control. The e-commerce giant said the major reorganization was aimed at making its operations more nimble and effective as it faces heated competition and sluggish revenue growth.
Details: With the spin-off of its core units, Alibaba is transforming from operating multiple group businesses into “a holding company that focuses on capital management,” the company’s CEO Daniel Zhang stated on the Thursday earnings call. Alibaba also announced that it has established a capital management committee at the board level to “undertake a comprehensive capital management” of the overall firm.
Context: Alibaba posted a modest 2% increase in overall revenue to hit RMB 208.2 billion ($30.12 billion) for the January to March period, which fell short of market expectations. The growth rate is the lowest that Alibaba has experienced since it went public in 2014.
Xiaoice, an AI chatbot brand formerly operated by Microsoft, announced on Tuesday that it is looking for 300 individuals to agree to be digitally cloned as part of a new AI trial.
The process of creating AI clones, which embed the tester’s own personality, voice, and appearance, needs as little as three minutes of data collection, the company claims. Xiaoice has opened registration on WeChat and said it is looking for influencers, experts, and ordinary people.
Why it matters: Li Di, CEO of Xiaoice and a former Microsoft executive, thinks AI-powered personal avatars can become a major consumer-facing business model for companies.
Details: The program is open for Chinese and Japanese participants, with the first batch of clones set to be operational within a month. The company plans to expand the scale of GPT clones to 100,000 people by the end of the year if the initial 300 AI clones are controllable, according to Caixin.
Context: AI technology has continued to generate new uses and applications in various sectors. Recently, Snapchat influencer Caryn Marjorie employed the GPT-4 API to develop her own AI clone. For $1 per minute, her fans can interact with the chatbot, Caryn AI, earning the influencer a reported $71,610 in revenue from a week of beta testing.
Alibaba Cloud has reportedly hired back its founder Wang Jian, a decade on from his departure. The cloud computing unit is seen as Alibaba’s new growth engine but has recently experienced stagnant growth and faces increased competition from the cloud computing units of China’s state-run telecommunications companies.
Alibaba Cloud didn’t immediately respond to TechNode’s requests for comment.
Why it matters: Wang Jian’s return comes at a time when Alibaba’s cloud unit saw revenue growth slow significantly in recent years, going from 92.5% in 2018 to only 7.3% in 2022. Although Alibaba Cloud remains the largest cloud service provider in China and Asia, it is losing market share to rivals, such as the cloud units of Huawei and China Telecom, a state-owned telecommunication provider.
Details: Wang, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Engineering and an expert in human-computer interaction, founded Alibaba Cloud in 2009 under Jack Ma. He stepped down as the president of the tech giant’s cloud arm four years later after the unit established its own proprietary cloud computing products. He is set to “take an important role” at the company once more, SCMP reported, though the details have not been officially confirmed by Alibaba.
Context: As the first Chinese company to develop its own cloud computing tech, Alibaba has opened up a new segment for Chinese tech giants to compete in, but it’s also facing various problems in recent years. The unit suffered its “longest large-scale outage” in a decade on Dec. 18 2022. The more than 12-hour-long service breakdown affected multiple government and media websites in Hong Kong and Macao. Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang took over the Cloud division after the incident.
Investing in the crypto market carries inherent risks, even as the traditional banking system increasingly recognizes the significance of blockchain technology. Establishing a sandbox environment for this emerging industry to thrive and creating the necessary conditions for mass adoption of Web3 is crucial for its future growth and development.
At the BEYOND Expo 2023 tech conference held in Macao, Leo Li, the Web3 Ecosystem Development lead at Alibaba Cloud, and Zheng Bin, the deputy CEO of ICBC (Macao), discussed the development potential of Web3, and the role of the digital yuan in striking a balance between innovation and regulation.
Their comments have been edited and condensed for clarity.
Leo Li, Web3 Ecosystem Development Lead, Alibaba Cloud
Those of you who have a crypto wallet, please raise your hand. Okay, it appears to be around 5%. What does this indicate? It suggests that most people are not yet using crypto wallets, which serve as the basic entry point for Web3. But is the trend towards adoption inevitable? In my opinion, it is inevitable because Web3 offers an experience that maximizes personal value and profit. Its fundamental difference from Web2 is its emphasis on value. Web3 is a technology that aligns closely with our inherent human nature; therefore, I am very optimistic about its future.
Today, we all have a basic understanding of, or have used OpenAI’s ChatGPT. It does present barriers to entry, but the value it brings outweighs those barriers, motivating people to use it. In comparison, most people don’t have a crypto wallet and don’t use Web3 technology because it is not yet widespread.
Web3 is a robust and cutting-edge technology that can benefit the public, but in a framework that lacks regulation or compliance, various human desires can emerge, including the FTX fallout. The event occurred in an unregulated environment, and I don’t think it would occur in traditional banks.
The absence of regulation is the reason why we say that Web3 is fundamentally a decentralized technology. However, I think it still needs some form of regulation to inspire public confidence and achieve mass adoption.
Zheng Bin, Deputy CEO, ICBC (Macao)
I believe the use scenarios for the digital yuan can be divided into two main categories. For domestic use, the digital yuan may not bring significant changes to people’s daily experiences, but it does offer some advantages, such as legal tender status and mandatory acceptance by merchants in certain environments or scenarios. Merchants have no reason to refuse the digital yuan as it is a legal currency.
At the same time, establishing connections with foreign countries is of strategic significance. Many countries have their own frameworks for digital currency. The digital yuan’s ability to serve as a bridge between different digital currencies presents a valuable opportunity for the yuan to disrupt or shape the existing currency system that has evolved over many years. From a personal standpoint, this is a very good strategic opportunity.
How can we achieve a balance between innovation and regulation? The digital yuan as I just mentioned is a good example of striking such a balance. It leverages blockchain technology but does not rely entirely on it to establish its credibility. It ensures anonymity but can also be traced if regulatory authorities require it. It has integrated and resolved certain contradictions, resulting in the current outcome, and I think this may become one of the possible directions for the future development of the entire industry.
]]>With its peak daily order volume for food deliveries surpassing 60 million last year, Meituan continues to sit pretty at the top of the tree when it comes to China’s local life services sector. The app spans everything from movie tickets and restaurant bookings to medical appointments, and recorded a total of 677.9 million users making transactions in 2022.
Yet Meituan’s dominance is increasingly facing challenges. Major Chinese companies including social media platform Xiaohongshu and ByteDance-owned TikTok sibling Douyin have been making inroads into the local life services market as Covid restrictions have eased. By linking consumers with nearby service providers or merchants and encouraging them to make purchases digitally before going to have the experience offline, these newcomers are looking to such transactions as a way to monetize their huge user bases.
For the moment, Meituan claims to be unperturbed. Meituan CEO Wang Xing described Douyin’s expansion into food delivery as having “a limited impact” on the company during its Q1 earnings call. However, the delivery platform recently made takeout livestreaming a monthly event and has launched group-buy delivery services in what many see as a bid to stay competitive in the face of these new entrants.
The total size of the local life services market is expected to reach RMB 35 trillion in China by 2025, though its online penetration rate was only 12.7% in 2021, according to data from Chinese research firm iResearch and cited by Chinese media outlet 21jingji, meaning there’s still plenty to play for.
Here’s a short introduction to new players in this vibrant market.
Xiaohongshu
Experience-sharing lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu, the latest major entrant to this competitive sector, has over 260 million monthly active users. The platform has maintained a thriving user base and sense of community for years and serves as a lifestyle search engine for many of its users. Now, it is making one of the biggest moves in the local life sector.
Xiaohongshu is currently inviting caterers and service providers to test the sale of group-buying packages on its platform. Participating merchants can sign up without paying a deposit or commission to Xiaohongshu for revenue earned through the service, according to tech media outlet GeekPark. Meanwhile, the platform’s influencers are able to earn commission by posting information about retailers that offer group buy options.
If the Shanghai-based company can leverage its feed algorithms while encouraging users to complete transactions within the app, it may see Xiaohongshu emerge as a serious challenger to Meituan, while also accelerating the company’s monetization quest. In 2020, 80% of Xiaohongshu’s revenue was generated by ads, the Financial Times previously reported, citing research firm LeadLeo, but the company is increasingly looking to diversify its revenue streams.
READ MORE: Xiaohongshu bets on e-commerce livestreaming to accelerate monetization: report
Douyin
Douyin has made significant strides in expanding its presence in the local life market, with its services sector reportedly generating over RMB 77 billion ($11.1 billion) in total sales last year, while advertising revenue amounted to just RMB 8.3 billion.
Growth in the platform’s brightest business continues to be strong. Local media outlet 36Kr reported that the unit generated more than RMB 10 billion in GMV in every single month in the first quarter of this year.
The TikTok sibling app has expanded its offerings to include group-buy delivery, sightseeing tickets, hotel reservations, and manicures in recent months. In mid-2022, Douyin allowed short video viewers to order meals directly on the app through a mini-program operated by Alibaba’s food delivery service Ele.me. In March, the service was introduced to 15 new cities, expanding the service to a total of 18 locations in China.
These efforts reflect the fact that ByteDance, Douyin’s owner, is stepping up its push to monetize users on the widely popular platform.
The head of Douyin’s local life business, Zhu Shiyu, recently stated that life services was a vast market worth more than ten trillion yuan, and that only a small proportion of transactions were currently being conducted online.
Kuaishou
Kuaishou, another leading short video-sharing platform in China with 366 million daily active users, has been expanding its presence in the local life services space in an effort to also capture market share, although it currently has less of a presence than rivals Douyin and Meituan.
Kuaishou had been active in offering lifestyle services in Shanghai, Qingdao, and Harbin, with Hangzhou the next major city to see local services rolled out. Kuaishou aims to provide local life services for different cities through a replicable model developed through experimentation. The short video operator incentivizes local merchants to sign up for the service while supporting local influencers who are willing to promote shops on the app.
Xiaogu, head of Kuaishou’s local life business unit, noted that since it entered the Qingdao market on Feb. 10, it has added over 300 local businesses. Kuaishou reportedly recorded around RMB 5 million in local sales in the seaside city in its first month, and already saw some influencers generate around 200,000 yuan in a single month.
]]>China’s service sector has made a promising start to its recovery from its Covid-induced doldrums as the country saw tourism and spending surpass pre-pandemic levels during the five-day Labor Day holiday that ended Wednesday.
Why it matters: About 274 million domestic trips were made during the holiday, the second longest holiday since Covid restrictions were lifted last December, China’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism announced on Wednesday. Figures recorded over the period signal the country is seeing a resurgence in offline services and long-haul travel.
Details: Chinese domestic travel revenue surged to RMB 148.1 billion ($20.3 billion) during the May holiday, but while this marked a 128.9% year-on-year increase, per capita spending has only recovered to 90% of 2019 levels, government data showed.
Context: The recent holiday was China’s first in three years in which large scale travel was unimpeded by the Covid pandemic or restrictions imposed to prevent the virus’ spread. The lengthy pandemic severely hampered the country’s spending and dampened travel enthusiasm nationwide.
]]>Chinese search giant Baidu said on Tuesday that ERNIE Bot, its competitor to ChatGPT, has achieved a 10-fold improvement in inference efficiency just one month after its release, while reducing the cost of large language model (LLM) inference to one-tenth of its original level. Inference, which refers to the process of running LLMs, mostly takes place on graphics processors or GPUs.
Why it matters: Baidu isn’t alone in looking to offer lower-cost AI products. Other tech majors in China such as Tencent and Alibaba have announced recently that they are introducing lower-priced AI products due to efficiency gains in the field.
Details: This development enables more small and medium companies to access large model technologies at reduced prices through tech firms’ cloud services. Meanwhile, the efficiency gains allow the tech giants to grab cloud market share at a low cost.
Context: Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT gained worldwide popularity, numerous Chinese tech companies have declared an intention to enter the field of generative AI based on large models. However, training such models can be pretty expensive. According to a report by state-owned financial services company Guosheng Securities, training GPT-3 costs about $1.4 million per session, while over $2 million is needed when training larger LLMs.
]]>Meituan delivery workers in Shanwei, a city in southern China’s Guangdong province, have entered a sixth day of strikes in protest at Meituan’s diminishing benefits and rewards, according to various Chinese media reports and Shanwei delivery workers’ posts on Chinese social media.
To ensure regular services, Meituan has brought in workers from neighboring cities to Shanwei. The transferred drivers were offered a reward of RMB 10 ($1.45) per order with RMB 200 per day guaranteed, which is more than two times the pay of local drivers, according to screenshots shared on short video platform Douyin.
A Douyin user called Tukushuhai commented in a video post on Tuesday that some riders from outside the city were unfamiliar with Shanwei’s road conditions, which resulted in delivery time overruns and user complaints.
Why it matters: Meituan’s problems with its workers comes at a time when other Chinese tech majors such as ByteDance and Alibaba are accelerating their moves into the life services sector. ByteDance began testing delivery services via TikTok sibling app Douyin in selected cities in the first quarter of this year.
Details: A Meituan delivery worker in Shanwei who participated in the strike and preferred to remain anonymous told TechNode that the company had deleted “hundreds” of strikers’ work accounts, preventing them from logging into Meituan’s worker-specific app and therefore cutting off their income during the strike.
Context: According to Meituan’s earnings report, the company’s core local commerce unit (which includes food delivery, hotel and travel bookings, and in-store purchases) generated RMB 70.6 billion in delivery service income in 2022, while delivery-related costs reached RMB 80.19 billion, suggesting that the revenue generated from the delivery service was insufficient to cover delivery workers’ costs.
Major Chinese microblogging platform Weibo is set to launch an artificial intelligence-powered creation assistant in the second quarter, executives announced at the firm’s annual creator festival in Changsha on April 15.
One of China’s largest social platforms, Weibo plans to unveil a host of incentives aimed at helping creators monetize their content during the two-day festival held in the central Chinese city.
Why it matters: Weibo has been under significant pressure from lifestyle platform Xiaohongshu as well as short video apps, with the platform recording falling total revenue and advertising income for several consecutive quarters. Its upcoming AI assistant and a series of monetization incentives for creators aim to improve efficiency in content creation while increasing creators’ earnings, a move the company hopes will help it stay competitive.
Details: Weibo plans to invite 100 creators with more than 5,000 original blog posts to be the first to use the AI assistant when it launches in the second quarter.
Context: Weibo had 586 million monthly active users by the end of 2022, which the latest earnings reports show was twice the number of Xiaohongshu. However, Xiaohongshu users have been recorded as spending nearly 20 minutes longer every day on the app than users on the Weibo app. As of last July, the average daily use time of Weibo was 36.43 minutes, according to statistics from analytics company Qianguan and cited by local media outlet 21Jingji.
]]>Chinese food delivery and life services giant Meituan launched an enterprise edition on Thursday, offering a one-stop shop for companies to manage employees’ meal, work trip, and transport expenses. The service, mainly focused on dining options for corporate clients, plays on one of Meituan’s core strengths.
Why it matters: Meituan’s pivot to business clients brings the Beijing-based firm new areas for revenue growth as it faces greater competition from rivals in the local services sector, including ByteDance’s Douyin, which has been testing food delivery services in some Chinese cities with plans to expand nationwide.
Details: The new app evolved from Meituan Shangqitong, a platform initially designed for Meituan’s own employees, before being opened up to a broader user base from early 2021.
Context: In 2022, Meituan’s annual revenue stood at RMB 220 billion ($32.1 billion), with its core local businesses, which include food delivery and no-demand delivery service Meituan Instashopping, contributing over 70% of total revenue.
Tech giant Alibaba unveiled its Tongyi Qianwen AI chatbot on April 7, joining the rush of Chinese tech majors to bring out a home-grown large-scale model to compete with ChatGPT. The service, launched without any advance notice, is currently only available to corporate clients and a limited number of media outlets on an invite-only basis.
The chat application is described on its official website as “an efficiency assistant and idea-generator.” The site offers little in the way of specific details about Alibaba’s new product, simply asking visitors for a phone number and email address by which to request an invitation code.
Why it matters: Alibaba is the second major Chinese tech company to use a self-developed large-scale model to unveil a chat application following the launch last month of Baidu’s ERNIE Bot. It is expected that other local tech heavyweights, including SenseTime, Huawei, and JD, will soon introduce their own alternatives to ChatGPT.
Details: As with rivals ChatGPT and ERNIE Bot, Tongyi Qianwen can generate articles and poems in response to user prompts. It can also write outlines, find complimentary expressions, offer recipes, and write in various styles and tones. A number of Chinese media outlets have tested the bot and compared its performance with Baidu’s ERNIE Bot and ChatGPT.
Context: Major Chinese tech companies and entrepreneurs are joining the AI chatbot race after search giant Baidu’s high-profile release of ERNIE Bot last month.
Correction: An earlier version of this article misidentified Tongyi Qianwen as the first AI model with 10 trillion parameters, it was Alibaba’s M6 model, first released in 2021.
]]>Chinese tech giant Alibaba will reportedly launch its large-scale model next week at the Alibaba Cloud Summit on April 11 in Beijing, with an industry application model expected to follow on April 18. A source at the firm’s cloud unit confirmed to TechNode that the summit is scheduled for April 11, but declined to say whether it would debut a ChatGPT rival at the event.
Why it matters: As one of the biggest companies in China, Alibaba’s move to introduce a ChatGPT-like product would further increase the buzz around AI chatbot technology in the country, following search giant Baidu’s release of chatbot service ERNIEBot and an enterprise-facing large model platform last month. Alibaba has a wide range of businesses that could use AI and has been investing in cloud computing infrastructure since 2009.
Details: In February, Alibaba said it was working on a ChatGPT-style tool and that it was undergoing internal testing.
Context: The popularity of ChatGPT has spurred tech majors and AI entrepreneurs in China into action. A number of Chinese AI experts have recently left roles at China’s tech majors, including JD, Alibaba, and ByteDance, to form new AI enterprises amid the continued hype around ChatGPT. Former Google China head Kai-Fu Lee and Meituan co-founder Wang Huiwen have also launched separate AI-focused businesses.
Several popular content creators on the Chinese video site Bilibili recently announced they were taking a pause in updating their channels, citing a decrease in income as the main reason. The news soon spread on Chinese social media and developed into a wider discussion on the relationship between Bilibili and its video creators, with some claiming a creator exodus while others seeing it more as an individual phenomenon.
Similar to YouTube, Bilibili largely relies on user-generated videos. The loss-making platform is facing increasing pressure to turn a profit and has promised to reach break-even by 2024.
Why it matters: With profitability goals in sight, Bilibili has been adopting multiple strategies, including reducing incentives for some creators and introducing a short video format called Story Mode. These new strategies have hit creators with fewer followers and clout the most.
Details: Back in January 2018, to spur growth, Bilibili launched a creative incentive program to encourage creators to “make high-quality videos,” whereby the streaming site provides cash bonuses to creators based on views and engagements. Since last year, in an effort to reduce losses amid an economic downturn, Bilibili has reduced creator incentives, and prioritized commercial advertising and other integrated marketing.
Context: Bilibili launched a TikTok-like service called Story Mode in 2021 in an attempt to expand profits. Despite the effort, the YouTube-like video platform is facing increasing competition from short-video platforms such as Douyin and Kuaishou, as well as other grassroots online platforms like Xiaohongshu.
]]>Chinese tech giant Tencent has launched an AI-powered video editing tool called Zenvideo, integrating a variety of features for short-form video creators, such as text-to-video generation and digital narration.
Why it matters: With its growing emphasis on short video, Tencent is looking to further challenge current market leaders in the sector such as Kuaishou and ByteDance’s TikTok sibling Douyin. Tencent’s new offering comes with similar capabilities to ByteDance’s CapCut, which recently surpassed 200 million monthly active users in the US.
Details: Zenvideo is available to use both through web browsers and WeChat’s mini-program, but is more powerful as a web app. The version within Tencent’s superapp has comparatively limited AI features, only supporting AI painting and digital narration.
Context: This week, Tencent’s super app WeChat also announced several changes to its ecosystem, especially for its short video section WeChat Channels.
The global hype surrounding ChatGPT has sparked a rush among Chinese AI experts and internet entrepreneurs to launch their own startups, each with a claim of working on the transformative potential of ChatGPT-style models.
Here is a list of Chinese tech specialists who have recently made announcements regarding new ventures in AI technology:
Meituan co-founder Wang Huiwen started an AI startup called Guangnian Zhiwai (meaning beyond light years) in February and quickly secured support from Meituan’s current CEO Wang Xing. The startup will acquire AI Infrastructure company OneFlow Technology, through a stock swap, local media outlet Caixin reported on Monday.
OneFlow is both the name of the acquired company and the product name of its deep learning framework, whose competitors include Baidu’s PaddlePaddle and Facebook’s PyTorch.
The acquisition demonstrates the Chinese tech executive’s openly-stated ambition to create the Chinese version of OpenAI, ChatGPT’s parent company backed by Microsoft.
Despite only publicly announcing his entrance into the artificial intelligence field less than two months ago, Wang has already secured a commitment from Meituan CEO Wang Xing, his long-term ally, to invest in the A-series round of fundraising for Guangnian Zhiwai, and take a seat on its board.
“I do not understand AI technology currently, and I’m trying to learn,” Wang Huiwen wrote in a social media post on the microblogging platform Jike in February. He later updated his social media platform with news that the newly-launched company has three co-founders, including a co-creator with an infrastructure background, a co-creator with an algorithm background, and himself.
Wang Changhu, former director of ByteDance’s AI Lab, is also reportedly starting a new venture that will specialize in generative AI using a visual multi-modal algorithmic platform for generative AI.
The visual-related direction aligns with Wang’s expertise. He had previously developed visual, pan-AI, and business solutions during his time at ByteDance, which were applied to the company’s news aggregation app Jinri Toutiao, as well as to short video platforms Douyin and TikTok.
While at the Beijing-based firm, Wang also played a significant role in launching an AI tool called Lingquan, which supports image and text recognition to combat “vulgar content” on apps.
After working at ByteDance for four years, he left in late 2021 to join major Chinese property developer Longfor Group, where he was appointed as general manager in charge of the AIoT artificial intelligence engine team.
Kai-Fu Lee, a renowned AI talent and entrepreneur, has founded a new AI startup called Project AI 2.0 to build not only a Chinese version of ChatGPT but an ecosystem for AI-powered productivity tools.
The former president of Google China sees ChatGPT as a major breakthrough in deep learning, with AI offering the opportunity to reconstruct almost all existing applications.
Several technical experts who have led teams at major tech companies have reportedly expressed interest in joining Lee’s newly-launched project.
Jia Yangqing, a prominent figure in the AI field and author of the deep learning framework Caffe, has resigned as vice president of Alibaba to pursue his own startup venture. Jia’s entrepreneurial direction will focus on AI infrastructure.
A well-known expert in AI and cloud computing, Jia previously worked for Google and Meta before joining Alibaba. He also led the development of PyTorch and TensorFlow during his time at Google and Meta. While studying for a computer science doctorate at UC Berkeley, he wrote Caffe, a widely adopted open-source deep-learning framework, used by multiple major tech companies including Adobe, Microsoft, and Nvidia.
In 2022, Li Yan, ex-lead of Kuaishou’s multimedia understanding unit, left the short video company after seven years and founded Yuanshi Technology to develop a large multimodal model. The AI start-up confirmed this to local media outlet 36Kr earlier this month.
Li was seen as the core of Kuaishou’s AI tech development, having formed a deep learning team in late 2015 with the support of the then-CEO of the company Su Hua.
The initial goal of the team was to use algorithms to detect pirated and offensive video content and later expanded its focus to include the development of algorithmic models for various types of speech, text, and images.
Zhou Bowen, the former president of JD’s Cloud & AI unit, wrote on Feb. 26 that he was looking for talented individuals with a strong belief in “AI’s ability to change the world” to join his startup, Xianyuan Technology.
Three days later, the Beijing-based company, which was founded less than two years ago, announced it had secured hundreds of millions of yuan in an angel round led by Qiming Venture.
“China’s answer to ChatGPT doesn’t necessarily need an OpenAI imitator, but it certainly needs a team with a clear vision to help accelerate the development of AI technology and industry digital intelligence,” Zhou wrote in his WeChat post announcing the financing.
]]>Tencent’s super app WeChat plans to share revenue with short video creators and launch a paid subscription service on its short video product WeChat Channels, the Shenzhen-based company announced on Tuesday night at a public event. Tencent also announced the launch of a new Quora-like question section in WeChat.
Why it matters: Tencent is expanding its monetization efforts with regard to WeChat’s short video section, after seeing rapid growth in the channel but also facing direct competition from rivals Douyin and Kuaishou. This strategy aligns with CEO Pony Ma’s speech late last year in which he hailed short videos as “the hope of the company.”
Details: Zhang Xiaochao, leader of the WeChat Channel unit, spoke first at the event and shared that in the three years since its launch, the short video section of the super app has seen creators grow two times more active, while creators with more than 10,000 fans grew more than four times in 2022. Leaders from other WeChat units — WeChat Pay, WeChat mini-programs, office automation-focused WeCom, and WeChat search — also spoke at the event.
Context: With just over 1.3 billion monthly active users, all-in-one messaging app WeChat primarily monetizes via livestreams, e-commerce, and advertising on its short video section Channels.
ByteDance has hired Yang Hongxia, former head of the team overseeing Alibaba’s large AI multi-model M6, to lead its AI Lab and to build its generative large language model (LLM), local tech media outlet 36Kr has reported.
Prior to joining Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, Yang received her doctorate in statistical science from Duke University and worked as Yahoo’s principal data scientist. Her expertise in cognitive intelligence helped Alibaba launch its 10-trillion-parameter M6, improving the search and recommendation accuracy of shopping app Taobao and payment app Alipay, according to Yang’s account to the ISI World Statistics Conference.
Why it matters: ByteDance is keen to develop its own AI language model, as the success of ChatGPT pushes tech majors to re-evaluate the application of AI in their products and services to stay competitive.
Details: ByteDance is reportedly planning to prioritize imaging and language in its AI model, with the former to be integrated into its short video platform Douyin and video-cutting tool CapCut, the company’s two most successful apps alongside Douyin sibling platform TikTok.
Context: Major tech companies and AI startups are chasing experienced AI talent as they rush to develop their own AI offerings.
Kai-Fu Lee, former president of Google China and now CEO of Sinovation Ventures, announced on Monday that he’s building a new AI company called Project AI 2.0 that will focus on developing ChatGPT-like apps, as well as an ecosystem for AI-powered productivity tools.
Lee shared his thoughts on the latest AI trends, including the concepts of AI 1.0 and 2.0 on March 14, at Sinovation Ventures’ headquarters in Beijing. He said he considers ChatGPT to be a major breakthrough in deep learning, driving AI into the 2.0 era.
Why it matters: As a renowned AI expert and venture capitalist, Lee said he sees AI as providing an opportunity to reconstruct almost all existing applications, just as Microsoft redesigned Microsoft Office into Copilot, giving Word, Excel, and other mainstream productivity tools AI and generative capabilities.
Details: Lee is currently seeking global talent in the fields of large language models (LLMs), natural language processing (NLP), multi-modality, AI algorithm, and infrastructure. The newly established company is also seeking fundraising.
Context: Lee is the latest tech leader in China tech to turn his attention to launching AI startups. Meituan co-founder Wang Huiwen is setting up an AI startup Guangnian Zhiwai to develop an alternative to ChatGPT, with his closest ally Wang Xing, who is also a co-founder of Meituan, committing himself to invest in Series A financing of the startup.
]]>Chinese search giant Baidu on Thursday introduced its artificial intelligent chatbot ERNIE Bot, with the company’s founder Robin Li demonstrating the capabilities of the chatbot in several pre-recorded clips.
“ERNIE Bot is not a tool for China-US confrontation,” Li said at the launch event, claiming instead that it was the result of Baidu’s years of effort in the field of artificial intelligence.
The chatbot service is currently available by invitation only, but Baidu announced that its cloud computing unit will immediately begin offering application programming interfaces (API) to enterprise clients. The company said that 30,000 corporate users applied for the ERNIE Bot Enterprise Edition API testing within an hour of the launch event, however investors appeared disappointed at the lack of a live demonstration, with Baidu’s stock price dipping slightly before the end of Thursday trading.
Baidu did not specify when its ERNIE Bot service will be publicly available.
Why it matters: Baidu has become the first major Chinese tech company to unveil a comprehensive AI chatbot service that has the potential to rival ChatGPT, with the launch event taking place just a day after OpenAI released its new AI model GPT-4.
Details: Li showcased the capabilities of the ERNIE Bot via a series of pre-recorded videos where it was able to perform various tasks including coming up with a name for a newly established company, writing a poem, and generating images as well as videos based on prompts.
Context: ERNIE Bot’s launch day landed between two significant events involving other tech giants. US startup OpenAI unveiled its newest and most advanced AI model, GPT-4, without any prior announcement on Wednesday, and Microsoft launched Copilot, an Office suite that utilizes the power of GPT-4, just hours after Baidu’s ERNIE unveiling.
Xiaohongshu will turn its livestream shopping business into an independent unit, local media outlet LatePost reported on Mar. 10, as part of efforts to accelerate its monetization campaign. The head of the lifestyle app’s new department will also be in charge of the firm’s community ecology.
Why it matters: Xiaohongshu’s recent adjustment indicates a push for further monetization at a time when the country’s mainstream shopping platforms have seen live commerce thrive. The move follows the recent livestreaming e-commerce success of Chinese actress Dong Jie on the platform, which demonstrated to Xiaohongshu the possibility of diversifying its revenue growth path amid uncertainty over whether the company will file for an IPO.
Details: Xiaohongshu first tested its livestreaming e-commerce feature in mid-2019, officially launching it in 2020 at a time when China was experiencing a boom in livestream selling. However, the company was initially cautious about the emerging sector, with particular concerns about its impact on Xiaohongshu’s community ecology.
Context: Live commerce is now a key driver of revenue growth for video platforms. Xiaohongshu, founded in 2013, was slower to monetize than its competitors Douyin and Kuaishou, only beginning the process cautiously in late 2019.
Chinese social e-commerce app Xiaohongshu is gaining traction in the livestream shopping sector thanks to Chinese actress Dong Jie, who generated over RMB 30 million ($4.3 million) in sales in a livestream on Feb. 24, with many goods costing thousands of yuan per unit.
Dong sold out of all products in six hours. Her performance, seen as less aggressive than those of her livestream shopping rivals, has garnered significant attention for Xiaohongshu, with some observers believing it may have finally found a way to differentiate itself from mainstream e-commerce platforms after quietly launching the livestream shopping feature in mid-2019.
Why it matters: Dong’s success could give Xiaohongshu’s livestream e-commerce business a significant boost, opening up a new revenue stream for the company. Many e-commerce platforms made their livestream shopping breakthrough through star hosts. For example, Alibaba-owned Taobao’s live commerce became a phenomenon after host Li Jiaqi gained mainstream attention; Kuaishou found success through star host Xin Ba.
Details: Although Dong has so far only streamed twice, she sold more than RMB 50 million and RMB 30 million worth of products during the two sessions, according to Xiaohongshu. The celebrity attracted 2.2 million viewers to her latest livestream on Feb. 24. For comparison, Chinese tech celebrity Luo Yonghao attracted 48 million viewers and generated RMB 110 million from his debut on Taobao Live last October.
Context: Xiaohongshu’s income heavily depends on digital advertising, with 80% of its revenue in 2020 coming from ads, and the rest coming from e-commerce, according to figures from Chinese research firm LeadLeo cited by the Financial Times.
]]>As China and its economy regain momentum after three years of strict Covid control policies, the country’s top lawmakers and political leaders are meeting in Beijing this week to discuss the country’s governance, economy, budget, and various key issues. The meeting is part of a week-long annual gathering known as the “two sessions,” or lianghui.
Increasing domestic demand is a top priority for the government in 2023. In 2022, China failed to reach the 5.5% GDP growth rate target it set last year (China grew 3% instead). For 2023, China has set an annual GDP growth target of 5% and hopes that its people will spend more to support the country’s economy.
Much of this year’s growth plan is centered around stimulating consumer spending. Particularly in areas related to technology, the country is relying on people to make more big-ticket purchases like cars, and spend more on various shopping platforms, while building more network infrastructure this year. These include continuing to increase the steady growth of new energy vehicles and charging stations, supporting newer models of e-commerce, building 5G network infrastructure in smaller cities, and constructing national data centers in planned regions.
China will continue to push the adoption of electric vehicles as part of its stimulus package to boost consumption and to “enhance its leadership position” in the new energy vehicle industry, policymakers said in this year’s annual government work report. It will also promote the wider use of battery swap technology and continue to support the battery industry.
The two sessions is also an opportunity for enterprise leaders (both private and state-owned) to present policy recommendations to the country’s top political and advisory bodies.
Most proposals from leaders of domestic auto companies have echoed the government line. Feng Xingya, general manager of GAC, a manufacturing partner of Toyota and Honda in China, urged the government to roll out supportive policies to reduce the construction cost of battery swap facilities and push for a standard battery design among different manufacturers. CATL chairman Zeng Yuqun called for the establishment of a quality assessment framework to pave the way for the spread of lithium-ion batteries for grid energy storage.
Lei Jun, CEO of Xiaomi and also a delegate to China’s top legislative body the National People’s Congress (NPC), suggested that China issue data security standards for automobiles and promote data sharing among companies for intelligent connected vehicles. In addition, He Xiaopeng, CEO of Xpeng Motors, called for new legislation to clarify liability in traffic accidents involving autonomous driving cars.
Expanding consumption is key to China’s 5% economic growth this year, as the country tries to recover after stringent Covid-19 controls slowed economic growth. The country’s economic planner sees huge potential for e-commerce platforms as drivers of growth.
Strong export growth in the first half of 2022 has boosted China this year, with the country’s total trade of goods reaching a record high of RMB 42.07 trillion ($6 trillion). In particular, cross-border e-commerce exports grew by 11.7%, reaching RMB 1.55 trillion in 2022, reflecting the rise of overseas retail as a major component of China’s export trade. This year, the government pledged more support for cross-border e-commerce and overseas warehouse development in the annual report.
For the domestic market, Chinese authorities vowed to guide the development of new models such as live commerce and on-demand retail, and lead the sector towards high-quality growth.
Wang Yinxiang, an NPC deligate from Cao county, a garment and coffin manufacturing hub in eastern Shandong province, found in her search that e-commerce in her rural county has helped increase the average lifespan of people in the region. The county is known for being a Taobao village (where at least 50 households own shops on Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao).
This year, China will continue to upgrade to modern infrastructure systems such as 5G, data centers, and the Internet of Things. Specifically, China will focus on expanding internet networks in small- and medium-sized cities. The government aims to accelerate the development of 5G and broadband networks, and achieve greater integration of cloud networks. In addition, the country will continue the expansion of data centers and data hubs planned under the national data center project the “East-to-West Computing Capacity Diversion Project,” aiming to move more data processing from the country’s prosperous but land-scarce eastern regions to the country’s less-developed but sparse western regions.
In addition to networking and data infrastructure projects, the country also said in its work report that it plans to support the construction of smart highways, civilian space infrastructure, and a commercial space launch center on the southern island of Hainan.
Voice recognition company iFlytek CEO Liu Qingfeng proposed that China should accelerate the construction of artificial intelligence models to enjoy the AI boom. Liu pointed out that while Chinese institutions and enterprises have published a series of large-scale models, the intelligence level of the large-scale models is still significantly lower than OpenAI’s ChatGPT. He asked China to accelerate the development of AI.
]]>Duoduo Video, a vertical short video offering from Chinese e-commerce company Pinduoduo has reportedly recorded comparable watch time statistics to Tencent’s WeChat Channels, sparking a sudden uptick in attention from Chinese tech media. Local media outlet 36Kr said in a Wednesday report that the video section on Pinduoduo’s shopping app is seeing users spending about 30 minutes a day watching, a number that puts it roughly on a par with tech giant Tencent’s similar platform.
Why it matters: Pinduoduo’s use of short vertical videos is another example of Chinese online retailers’ increasing competition with content platforms such as Kuaishou and ByteDance’s Douyin, as the latter two ramp up in-app shopping functions. Alibaba’s Taobao shopping app also has an embedded content section called Guangguang, using a combination of photos, articles, and videos to attract more users.
Details: Pinduoduo added the short video section to its app in February 2022, according to a report from Chinese media outlet Jiemian. Pinduoduo incentivizes users to watch more videos by giving out cash rewards, which users can withdraw directly to other digital wallets.
Context: As China enters a relatively slower growth period, competition among the country’s top tech companies is heating up, with more cross-sector rivalry. For example, ByteDance’s Douyin, the equivalent of TikTok in China, has recently increased its investment in offering on-demand services, a core business offering of the life services giant Meituan.
Chinese video streaming site iQiyi achieved an annual profit for the first time in 2022, according to its earnings report posted on Wednesday. The Baidu-backed long-video platform posted a non-GAAP net profit of RMB 1.3 billion ($186.2 million) and a 5% fall in revenue from the previous year to RMB 29 billion.
The Nasdaq-listed company is eyeing “high-quality growth” in 2023, aiming for simultaneous growth in operating profit and revenue, its CEO Gong Yu said in a related earnings call.
Why it matters: iQiyi has been losing money since its founding in the early 2010s. Its current profitability is largely thanks to aggressive cost-cutting since the end of 2021, fine-tuning content production, and new subscriber growth. Its competitors Tencent Video and Youku have yet to turn an annual operating profit.
Details: iQiyi managed to decrease its revenue costs by 19% in 2022. The platform produced a number of widely popular original video series, and grew its members to 120 million, offsetting some of its losses in ad revenue as the content business as a whole saw less ad expenditure last year.
Context: Although The Knockout has proven an early 2023 hit for iQiyi, the steaming site has faced multiple controversies over membership rights in recent months.
MOSS, a ChatGPT-style chatbot platform developed by Fudan University’s Natural Language Processing Lab, crashed a day after its launch on Monday due to high demand, forcing the lab to set up an invitation-only waitlist to use the AI tool.
The model, similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, was named MOSS after a quantum computer in the hit Chinese science fiction film Wandering Earth. Rolled out on Monday, MOSS was seen as ChatGPT’s first Chinese rival, but its server crash means it will no longer be directly available to the general public.
The team at Fudan University apologized for disappointing users of the experimental software, issuing a statement on the chatbot platform that read, “MOSS is still a very immature model and has a long way to go. Our academic research lab is unable to make a model with similar capabilities to ChatGPT.”
Why it matters: Amid a wave of excitement in the Chinese tech sphere around ChatGPT, MOSS’s overwhelmed server illustrates the technical and modeling challenges that Chinese research teams and tech companies will need to overcome before they can successfully develop and operate their own ChatGPT-like tools.
Details: MOSS is able to perform a variety of natural language tasks based on user instructions, ranging from answering questions to text generation and summarization, as well as code reviewing and generation, according to examples posted by the Fudan MOSS team on GitHub.
Context: At least ten Chinese tech companies are competing to develop large-scale conversational language models like the ChatGPT, but none have launched products yet. Baidu’s ERNIE Bot is expected to launch as soon as March.
Baidu is weighing whether to embed its ChatGPT-like service Ernie Bot into its main search platform, similar to Microsoft’s Bing, or launch it as an independent service, local media outlet 36Kr has reported, citing multiple Baidu employees.
Why it matters: Baidu’s reported indecision on Ernie Bot reflects the unpredictability surrounding the launch of artificial intelligence-powered chatbots, as the search giant looks to avoid some of the missteps seen with Bing and Google’s recent projects.
Details: Baidu, which has increasingly put AI capabilities at the heart of its strategy in recent years, announced in early February that its Ernie Bot tool would go live in March.
Context: Baidu is part of a crowded field of Chinese companies to have announced their own AI chatbot projects in the wake of the huge popularity of ChatGPT.
On Thursday, Chinese tech giant Tencent dismissed reports claiming that it was disbanding parts of its XR team, with the Shenzhen-based company saying that it is set to change the hardware development path of its XR business by making some personnel adjustments.
Why it matters: Tencent is the latest tech company to overhaul its metaverse-related activity, a move that comes less than a year after the company established its XR unit and follows its failed attempts to acquire AR hardware maker PICO and gaming phone maker Black Shark. XR hardware usually requires large amounts of capital over a long period of time, but as Tencent continues to cut costs and focus mainly on software, the company has been more cautious with its investments.
Details: Local media outlet 36Kr first reported on Thursday that Tencent was disbanding part of its XR team, which was established in June 2022. The report said that employees in the unit would be given two months to find new opportunities inside or outside of the company. However, Tencent later dismissed the report, saying it was simply making personnel adjustments within the unit.
Context: The global metaverse frenzy, kickstarted in 2021, caused Chinese tech firms to race to become front-line players in the sector, but lower-than-expected sales and user metrics are making them reconsider and adjust their investments.
Guangzhou-based agricultural drone producer XAG recorded triple-digit growth last year in its overseas markets, with revenue from Latin America increasing 248% year-on-year and that from Southeast Asia growing by 155%. The company didn’t disclose its specific sales totals.
Why it matters: Markets outside China are a new revenue stream for XAG, which has been losing money for years. While the drone maker’s revenue continued to grow between 2018 and the first half of 2021 largely thanks to the Chinese government’s support of smart agriculture, its net loss continued to widen during this period, according to a prospectus filed in November 2021.
Details: Farm drones are the main source of revenue for XAG, accounting for more than two-thirds of its total revenue since 2018, and are also the company’s main offering overseas.
Context: In November 2021, XAG filed for an IPO on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, intending to raise RMB 1.51 billion, before withdrawing the application last April.
On Monday, Shanghai-based online grocery company Dingdong Maicai reported its first quarterly GAAP profit, posting a figure of RMB 49.9 million ($7.3 million) for the fourth-quarter. The company’s revenue for this period was up 13.1% from last year, reaching RMB 6.2 billion.
Why it matters: The latest financial result shows that online grocers like Dingdong Maicai – which use front-end warehouses as their main operation model, something the industry has long viewed as costly and unprofitable – can still achieve profitability.
Details: Dingdong Maicai’s profit is largely thanks to increased revenue from its own-branded meal kits, as well as cost reductions. A company executive emphasized on the earnings call that the profitability is sustainable.
Context: Founded in 2017, Dingdong Maicai reported its first non-GAAP net profit of RMB 20.6 million in the second quarter of 2022.
On Feb. 10, China’s National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA) released its approval list of domestic online games for February 2023 on its official website, with titles by Tencent, ByteDance, and NetEase among those given the green light.
Why it matters: The new list is the ninth batch of games approved in China since the NPPA resumed its issuing of licenses in April 2022 following an eight month pause. As with January, the number of new licenses this month exceeded 80, higher than any month in 2022 and a sign that China’s gaming regulators may be returning to a more consistent approach to approvals after months of uncertainty.
Details: Some 87 new domestic games have been granted licenses by the NPPA, including 79 mobile games, seven PC titles, and one game for Nintendo Switch.
Context: China’s gaming industry has been sluggish over the past year due to tightening regulations on the industry and strict limits on young gamers.
Despite not being officially available in China, the AI chatbot service ChatGPT has dominated headlines in the country. This week, days after search engine giant Baidu announced it will launch its own ChatGPT-like service in March, at least five other major Chinese tech firms revealed plans to tool up with the powerful AI technology.
Starting with Alibaba, the e-commerce giant Alibaba said it is developing its own AI chatbot. NetEase’s online learning unit Youdao said it will launch a similar AI service focused on the education industry, and JD, another e-commerce major, boasted that its rich experience in AI means it can soon incorporate these technologies into its services.
Developed by OpenAI, ChatGPT is an AI chatbot that can answer natural language questions with human-like responses. It is built on GPT-3, the third iteration of a language model trained on a large amount of data.
The feverish popularity of ChatGPT has sent investors chasing related stocks on China’s stock market. The market is already experiencing a boost in so-called “ChatGPT concept stocks.”
On Chinese social and search platforms, ChatGPT has also become the top search keyword. On Feb. 4, daily searches for “ChatGPT” on WeChat increased 515.7% to nearly 38 million, and the search volume kept growing rapidly in the following days, seeing 2.5 times the number or 95 million searches only five days later.
As advanced AI technology gains momentum to disrupt the status quo, Chinese tech companies are not the only ones racing to prove their ChatGPT-like abilities. Google introduced on Tuesday its AI chatbot Bard, while ChatGPT’s main investor Microsoft launched a new version of its search engine Bing on Tuesday with ChatGPT built in.
Baidu: Baidu said on Tuesday that it will launch its own AI chatbot tool called “ERNIE bot” or Wenxin Yiyan in Chinese. The bot will be built based on the company’s large language model ERNIE, which was launched in 2019. Some see Baidu’s service as the most likely one to come close to ChatGPT.
NetEase: NetEase’s online education team Youdao said it has been working on applying AIGC (AI-generated content) technology to teaching scenarios such as AI oral English teaching and Chinese essay revision. The company expects to launch a relevant demo version of the product soon, which will mark the first landing of AIGC technology and a ChatGPT-like model in China’s online education scene.
iFlytek: Responding to investors’ questions, the company that specializes in speech recognition and natural language processing technologies said it has a solid accumulation of relevant AI technology. For example, in 2022, iFlytek won first place in the authoritative evaluation of several cognitive intelligence fields such as CommonsenseQA 2.0 and OpenBookQA. Meanwhile, iFlytek has developed a series of pre-training language models which include 40 general fields of cognitive intelligence.
Alibaba: The online retail major said on Wednesday that it’s conducting internal testing on a ChatGPT-like service, and the tool is likely to be used in combination with the group’s workplace communication and collaboration tool DingTalk.
JD: Beijing-based e-commerce platform JD said it sees ChatGPT as an “exciting and cutting-edge exploration,” adding it will incorporate the related methods and technology into its products, especially in customer service.
]]>ByteDance-owned video-sharing platform Douyin, China’s equivalent of TikTok, plans to offer its “group-buying delivery” service in more cities, but has no timeline for a national rollout, TechNode has learned.
Why it matters: The gradual entry into the food delivery sector of Douyin, the most popular short-form video app in China with nearly 700 million daily active users, poses a serious challenge in an industry which has been dominated for years by Meituan and Alibaba’s Ele.me.
Details: In contrast to the food delivery services offered by its established competitors, Douyin’s “group-buying delivery” service enables merchants to promote and sell food packages that are generally for two or three people, via short videos or livestreams. Packages are then delivered to paying customers within a selected time frame.
Context: China’s takeaway market has continued to grow in size in recent years, with Meituan dominating the industry to date. According to a report conducted by Zhiyan Consulting, Meituan took a 69% share of China’s food delivery market in 2020, while Ele.me accounted for 26%.
ByteDance has moved Douyin’s vice president Zhi Ying to lead TikTok’s products and content business as TikTok becomes an increased focus of its parent company’s attempts to diversify revenue streams, according to a Wednesday report by local media outlet 36Kr.
Why it matters: Zhi Ying’s move reflects the importance of TikTok to ByteDance’s revenue growth, with the Beijing-based company set to involve more of its successful executives in TikTok’s development. In December, ByteDance also moved Chen Xi, former head of news app Jinri Toutiao, to head up TikTok’s e-commerce product development.
Details: Zhi Ying worked for PricewaterhouseCoopers and Uber before joining ByteDance in 2016, where she led the operation and marketing of short video platform Huoshan. Later, she moved to oversee Douyin’s marketing and ran the company’s video-sharing app Xigua video.
Context: ByteDance is sending more senior executives from China with successful track records to TikTok at a time when US officials continue to heighten scrutiny of the app. TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is reportedly due to appear before the US Congress next month in connection with the platform’s privacy and data security.
Chinese search engine giant Baidu is working on a ChatGPT-like bot service to embed in its search engine. Baidu’s CEO Robin Li believes that artificial intelligence tech has reached a tipping point and will produce “a generational revolution in the search experience,” China Star Market reported Monday, citing unnamed sources.
Why it matters: With its own deep-learning platform (PaddlePaddle) and large-scale pre-trained model (Wenxin or Ernie in English), Baidu is one of the few Chinese tech companies investing heavily in generative AI as the technology becomes more mainstream.
Details: ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot service debuted by OpenAI last November, is built on OpenAI’s large-language model GPT-3, and can output human-like responses in seconds. The aim is for Baidu’s version, which is using its large-scale model Ernie as a foundation, to do the same. Baidu’s upcoming chatbot is being trained with both Chinese and English sources, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Context: Since launching in late 2022, ChatGPT quickly sparked wide discussion, attracting 1 million users in just five days, and pushing many tech companies to prepare for the revolutionary potential of artificial intelligence technology.
As millions of Chinese re-emerged from the sudden wave of Covid-19 infections experienced after China relaxed control measures in early December, the country’s consumption and travel saw promising rebounds during the week-long Lunar New Year holiday (Jan. 21 to Jan. 27). This recovery may set the stage for major Chinese tech companies to recover some of their losses in the coming months.
Why it matters: China’s major mobile payment platforms, WeChat Pay and Alipay, each saw about a 20% yearly increase in transactions. Meanwhile, food, travel, and entertainment businesses saw a similar yearly increase during the festive period, with spending on restaurants and movies returning to 2019 levels.
Details: The Lunar New Year holiday this year marked the first time in three years that people were able to travel freely across the country. Although it is traditional for people to reunite with their families during the period, since early 2020, the Chinese government had discouraged people from traveling home due to fears of large outbreaks of Covid-19.
Context: An executive meeting of the State Council held on Jan. 28 emphasized consumption as the main driver of the economy. Multiple provinces and administrative regions, including Shanghai and Guangdong, have made reviving consumption and boosting growth a priority, with Guangdong projecting a 6% increase in total retail sales of consumer goods for 2023.
China saw smartphone sales slump 14% in 2022, marking the fifth consecutive year of decline, according to a Friday report by Hong Kong-headquartered consultancy firm Counterpoint.
Why it matters: Chinese smartphone sales reached their lowest level in a decade as consumers delayed replacing their smartphones due to sluggish macroeconomic conditions and Covid-19 containment measures.
Details: The top three companies in the Chinese smartphone market last year were Vivo, Apple, and Oppo, holding 19.2%, 18%, and 17.5% of the market respectively.
Context: Chinese smartphone shipments also reflect an uncertain market, with total shipments of about 286 million units in 2022, down 13.2% from a year earlier and the largest drop ever, market research firm IDC said on Sunday. This is the first time shipments have fallen below 300 million since 2013.
Finding new revenue streams outside China became urgent for major Chinese online retailers as Covid control measures and a turbulent domestic regulatory environment hurt economic growth and consumer confidence in the country.
Shein, which started as a small cross-border wedding dress supplier, turned into a unicorn worth $100 billion by April 2022, demonstrating a successful path for other shopping platforms trying to sell outside of China.
Chinese overseas-focused online shopping apps were a bright spot in a year otherwise characterized by high inflation and weak demand in the world’s major economies.
Fast fashion giant Shein maintained strong growth despite sustainability, imitation, and labor rights controversies, while the more established Alibaba saw its turnover decline in Europe despite narrowed losses in Southeast Asia. Pinduoduo-backed Temu, seemingly out of nowhere in September, shot to the top of the US app downloading chart by the end of 2022. ByteDance-owned TikTok tried to navigate the same successful path as its sister app Douyin in e-commerce, but with less impressive results in the UK.
Here’s what you need to know about the overseas adventures of Shein, Temu, TikTok Shop, and Alibaba in 2022.
Shein was the most popular fast-fashion brand worldwide in 2022, according to research conducted by price comparison site money.co.uk, which shows that Shein experienced tremendous global growth over the year. The company reportedly surpassed its full-year 2021 sales of $15.7 billion just midway through 2022 and was expected to have made sales of $24 billion by the end of the year.
In April, Shein received a $100 billion valuation from General Atlantic, Tiger Global Management, and Sequoia Capital China, but as one person who declined to invest in Shein at a roughly 30% discount told Financial Times, the firm may well have been overvalued.
The company’s continued problems over environmental and sustainability issues overshadowed its initial preparations for a possible IPO in the US as soon as 2024, as investors increasingly bet on companies that are more responsible in those areas. Shein became increasingly vocal in its commitment to environmental, social, and governance efforts, planning to eliminate a quarter of emissions by 2030 and pledging $15 million to improve factory standards.
Every day, Shein posts thousands of new items for sale and relies on third-party suppliers in China for its low clothing prices. However, the company has faced controversies over appropriating designs from independent and emerging fashion designers. Shein or its Hong Kong-based parent company Zoetop Business Co., have been named in at least 50 federal lawsuits in the past three years, according to a June report by the Wall Street Journal.
In other moves, Shein opened pop-up stores in multiple major cities worldwide in 2022. Local media reported seeing long queues, Shein fans chasing particular items, and limited shopping time due to limited stock. But Shein said it “remains digital-first,” a Shein spokesperson told TechNode.
The buzz around Shein shows no signs of abating in 2023, and the company seems to be expanding its business model, reportedly exploring a marketplace platform that would enable other merchants to sell directly to customers, in a move to compete more directly with e-commerce giants like Amazon and Alibaba-owned AliExpress.
Less than four months after its launch, Temu, the cross-border e-commerce platform owned by Pinduoduo, has already shown strong appeal with its big discounts and generous coupons, and for most of the past two months, it has been the most downloaded app in the US.
Temu’s sales growth rate cannot be underestimated. In October, its average daily sales generated more than $1.5 million, reportedly slightly below internal expectations. Temu reached a peak weekly GMV of over $40 million around Black Friday, with sales topping $10 million in the first week of November, according to data provider Sandalwood.
Temu came to the US with super-low prices when the country’s consumers were facing high inflation. Temu’s China-focused sister app, Pinduoduo, has long relied on low prices to quickly capture market share from established retailers like Alibaba and JD. The platform didn’t respond to TechNode’s question on whether its ultra-low prices were sustainable. While gaining fast popularity, Temu is also facing customer complaints about long delivery times, incorrect orders, and “unresponsive” customer services, according to a report by the Time magazine.
Pinduoduo debuted its 10 billion subsidy campaign – in which the company subsidizes high-volume items down to a competitive price compared to other platforms – during 2019’s June 18 online shopping festival, China’s second-largest annual e-commerce event. The initiative became Pinduoduo’s signature and a regular program after it proved to drive user growth.
This significant subsidy is recorded as “sales and marketing expenses” in its financial reports and has remained above RMB 10 billion per quarter since 2021, reaching RMB 14.05 billion, or 40% of total revenue, in the third quarter of 2022.
The marketing-for-growth strategy has resulted in continued user growth for Pinduoduo, with the company achieving an annual profit for the first time in 2021, six years after its founding.
In 2022, TikTok expanded its e-commerce business in Southeast Asia, initially finding success in the region, but facing setbacks in Europe.
According to a report by Chinese online media outlet LatePost, TikTok made more than $1 billion in total sales in the first half of 2022 — equivalent to more than half of the RMB 12 billion GMV goal the company set for its e-commerce business this year.
The sales growth achieved by TikTok was mainly driven by its Southeast Asian markets, especially Indonesia — the largest e-commerce market and economy in the region. TikTok Shop already had tens of thousands of sellers in the country, most of whom were micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises, by November 2022, said Desey Muharlina Bungsu, fashion and category lead of TikTok Shop Indonesia, at a TikTok Shop event in November.
The reception in the UK, its first market in the West, was quite the opposite. Different work cultures, as well as market conditions, exacerbated TikTok Shop’s woes. The Financial Times said TikTok Shop had “struggled to gain traction” in the country, reporting that influencers had dropped out of the scheme.
TikTok’s e-commerce business hit $200 million in monthly GMV in the Indonesian market, while only $24 million in the UK, LatePost reported.
Consumers were more receptive to live commerce in Southeast Asia, which helped TikTok find success in the region, with a survey conducted by market research firm Ipsos revealing that 71% of Indonesian consumers had accessed live commerce events, and 56% had made purchases during such events.
However, Shopee and Alibaba-owned Lazada still dominate most e-commerce markets across Southeast Asia. In Malaysia, Shopee holds 71% of the region’s overall e-commerce web traffic, followed by Lazada at 18% and PGMall at 9%, tech news site Tech Wire Asia said.
TikTok Shop made a quiet test debut in the US in November 2022. The short video platform’s ambitions to push e-commerce business in the US market appeared cautious and low-profile, with no officially confirmed full rollout, and only brands or merchants with an invitation code can sign up.
Meanwhile, it remains to be seen how well American consumers embrace the new shopping feature that enables merchants, brands, and influencers to showcase and sell products directly via in-feed videos.
The Chinese e-commerce giant’s overall performance in international commerce retail in 2022 was muted, with revenues in the first three quarters essentially flat compared to the same period a year earlier, up just 1.6% to RMB 31.15 billion.
According to details revealed in the company’s earnings report for the first three quarters of 2022, Trendy, Alibaba’s shopping platform in Turkey, recorded the most significant growth among all other international retail units, maintaining a growth rate of more than 40% in each of the three quarters. A precise order volume was not disclosed.
In the quarter ending September 2022, Southeast Asia-focused Lazada’s order growth posted its first year-over-year decline in orders in two years, which Alibaba said was largely affected by a lifting of Covid-19 restrictions that lured consumers back to offline channels. The platform saw exponential growth in the January to March period in 2021 as the initial Covid wave forced many people to shop online. Despite a slowdown in growth, Lazada managed to narrow the loss per order by 25% compared to last year.
Alibaba-owned AliExpress recently gained notable success in South Korea, with the app ranked first in terms of downloads in the shopping section in the country’s app store, according to Chinese media outlet The Economic Observer, citing mobile data analytics provider App Annie.
A person in charge of the platform’s Korean market told the media that AliExpress currently has nearly 3 million monthly active users, which covers around 10% of the country’s e-commerce users.
But the tech giant said it faces challenges in Europe amid supply chain and logistics issues resulting from the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict. Moreover, the EU’s removal of tax exemptions for cross-border packages under 22 euros also hurt AliExpress’s orders.
Although the Chinese e-commerce giant has been in Europe for more than a decade, AliExpress has captured only a small market share in the region, with 4% in Western Europe at 4% (compared to Amazon’s 20%) while holding 5% in Eastern Europe in 2021, according to Reuters.
]]>ByteDance-owned short-video platform Douyin, China’s equivalent to TikTok, has set RMB 150 billion ($22.2 billion) as its annual target for local life service sales in 2023, twice its actual gross merchandise volume (GMV) of RMB 77 billion in 2022, Chinese media outlet 36Kr reported on Jan. 15. Douyin’s local life services unit head told 36Kr that the figure of 77 billion for last year was inaccurate, but declined to give specific data.
Why it matters: Climbing sales for local life services – encompassing food delivery, travel bookings, and other retail sales – point to the business becoming increasingly important for Douyin’s revenue growth in 2023 as the platform continues to take on established delivery and life services giant Meituan. ByteDance CEO Liang Rubo previously acknowledged that the company saw slower revenue growth than expected in 2022, while growth in daily active users for its products was also lower than the targets set early in the year.
Details: Douyin is confident of hitting the full-year 2023 sales goal of RMB 150 billion for its local life services unit, as internal estimates show the unit’s GMV ceiling to be between RMB 260 billion to RMB 280 billion, a source told 36Kr.
Context: Douyin’s entry into local life services, which began in 2021, is seen as a big threat to industry giant Meituan, which brought in RMB 129 billion in revenue from core local commerce, including food delivery, in-store purchases, and hotels and travel in the first three quarters of 2022.
All businesses under Tencent’s content unit achieved profitability at the end of 2022, according to a report by local media outlet LatePost. The platform and content group (PCG) unit includes Tencent Video, which turned profitable for the first time according to the report, and Tencent News, which saw a turnaround in the October-December period after a difficult first three quarters.
Why it matters: The division’s profits are largely thanks to Tencent’s ongoing and widespread cost-cutting measures and provide a key insight into how the tech giant intends to weather the macroeconomic slowdown. The several billion in profit from the unit is likely to provide a bright spot in the tech giant’s 2022 annual financial report. However, it does not mean PCG employees can rest easy, with continued profitability remaining far from certain and Tencent CEO Pony Ma previously warning he would cut any part of the business that was unable to sustain itself.
Details: LatePost reported that reaching profitability across the PCG will enable Tencent to “increase its annual profit to several billion yuan” for 2022. Established in 2018, the platform and content division integrates Tencent’s online video business unit (including long-form video platform Tencent Video, short-video app Tencent Weishi, Tencent app store Yingyongbao, and Tencent Comics), Tencent News, instant messaging app QQ, QQ Browser, Sogou search engine, and Sogou Pinyin Input.
Context: Tencent recorded year-on-year declines in both its domestic gaming revenue and advertising revenue in the first three quarters of 2022, after Chinese regulators tightened time limits on young gamers and effectively froze the issuing of new game licenses.
Tencent’s short-video product WeChat Channels reported impressive growth at its annual flagship event on Tuesday. The unit saw a 200% yearly growth in the total number of video views, and an 800% growth in total gross merchandise value (GMV) from livestream shopping content.
Why it matters: WeChat Channels’ strong growth in creator numbers and view counts offers a wider basis for monetization plans. Tencent will likely see the short-video unit play a bigger role in its advertising revenue, with CEO Pony Ma recently declaring it “the hope of the whole company.”
Details: The total time users spent on WeChat Channels exceeded 80% of the time they spent on WeChat Moments (a feature similar to Facebook timeline) in 2022. The messaging app hasn’t revealed the amount of time users spend on the Moments feature since 2019, when WeChat founder Allen Zhang said the figure had been roughly the same over the years at an average of 30 minutes per day.
Context: Tencent urgently needs to find a new revenue growth point as it faces slow growth in video games and advertising operations. The company’s overall revenue has declined in the last two quarters. The company’s CEO Pony Ma sees WeChat Channels as a major source of hope for the future of Tencent, with the unit already initiating various attempts to monetize.
Major Chinese video streaming platform iQiyi recently announced a membership price increase and rival Youku began limiting membership logins to a single device in the latest moves by China’s mainstream long-form video sites to try and improve their profitability amid heated competition with short-video apps.
Why it matters: The push by mainstream video platforms to increase membership prices, limit member account logins, and tighten control over content investment all highlight the struggle of long-form video platforms to achieve profitability as they face increased competition from short-form video apps such as Kuaishou and ByteDance’s Douyin. They also demonstrate the pitfalls of such adjustments: both iQiyi and Youku’s new policies have triggered a wave of user complaints.
Details: iQiyi’s new membership rates have increased by as much as RMB 20 ($2.95). The Baidu-backed video streaming platform said the price increases would help fund better quality content.
Context: With cost-cutting and efficiency measures, iQiyi achieved three consecutive quarters of profitability in 2022, while Youku and Tencent Video’s losses continued to narrow.
Freshippo said it achieved profitability with its main grocery brand Hema Xiansheng for the first time in 2022, after seven years of investment, according to an internal letter to employees from Freshippo chief executive Hou Yi seen by local media outlet Jiemian.
Why it matters: At a time when many other tech-funded grocery chains are still finding ways to break even, the Alibaba-owned chain’s news of partial profitability is a milestone in the ultra-competitive fresh grocery industry.
Details: Hou said that the company had realized “the profitability of Hema Xiansheng,” calling it “a big step for new retail” without revealing Freshippo’s current customers or sales figures. He added that Freshippo aims to serve one billion consumers and reach RMB 1 trillion ($145.2 billion) in sales nationwide in the next ten years.
Context: Freshippo was launched in 2015 as Alibaba looked to leverage its expansive logistics network and enter the fresh produce market. It runs on a model of using offline stores as warehousing, sorting, and distribution centers, in contrast to its competitors’ use of a front-end warehouse model, which often carries higher fulfillment costs.
A week after Tencent’s co-founder Pony Ma emphasized that short video is key to the tech giant’s future, the company’s short video service WeChat Channels announced that it is set to charge e-commerce merchants a 1% to 5% commission fee in the coming year, according to a report by local media outlet Tech Planet.
Why it matters: Tencent’s rebounding profit growth in the July-September period after four consecutive quarters of decline is a sign of the company’s gains from its ongoing cost-cutting measures, but finding new revenue streams remains a priority. With 800 million monthly active users, WeChat Channels (a TikTok-like short video platform within the messaging app) provides a clear monetization opportunity.
Details: The total value of live commerce sales generated from WeChat’s short video platform is between RMB 40 billion to RMB 50 billion ($57.5 billion to $71.9 billion), a service provider close to the unit told Tech Planet.
Context: Tencent has seen users’ total time spent on WeChat Channels exceed 80% of the time spent on WeChat Moments (the app’s friend feed). The total number of viewers of video on the platform increased by 200% compared to the same period last year, the firm’s President Martin Lau said on the company’s second-quarter earnings call.
Richard Liu, founder of Chinese online retailer JD, is set to become more involved in the daily management of the company in 2023, according to local media outlet Huxiu, whose report cited an unnamed source.
In a recorded company meeting, the firm’s former CEO told staff that the company should refocus on the low-price strategy that helped it rise to prominence, while expressing frustration over executives’ tendencies to exaggerate their own performances. Many staff were surprised by Liu’s direct tone, the report noted, adding that he used phrases such as “feeling cheated by some mid-level leaders.”
Why it matters: JD is facing intense competition from cut-price e-commerce platform Pinduoduo and the growth of social e-commerce at companies such as short video giants Douyin and Kuaishou. JD’s yearly revenue growth rate has slowed from 20% in the first quarter of 2022 to 3% and 5% in the second and third quarters of the year, a significant drop from last year’s 36% annual growth rate.
Details: In his nearly 90-minute speech, Liu criticized what he claimed was the company’s currently out-of-focus strategy and overall organizational inefficiency, according to Huxiu’s report.
Context: Liu’s emphasis on a low-price strategy quickly gave JD a foothold in China’s booming e-commerce market in the company’s early days, but it was also the main reason behind the company’s persistent loss-making. The Beijing-based e-commerce giant didn’t achieve an overall full-year profit until 2019.
Tencent’s founder and CEO Pony Ma has warned employees that any part of the business could be shut down if it underperforms, adding that short video is key to the tech giant’s future. Ma made the remarks at a Dec. 15 internal staff meeting held online. Part of his speech was first reported by the Chinese news outlet Jiemian on Thursday.
Why it matters: Focusing on profitability has become even more important as Tencent’s core revenue streams in advertising and gaming have been hit by the macroeconomic slowdown and Chinese regulators’ tightening of gaming limits for young people. Tencent’s billionaire co-founder insisted the company should make cost-cutting a long-term habit, a clear bellwether for current sentiment in China’s tech sector.
Details: Pony Ma, who rarely expresses frustration at internal meetings, was unrelenting in his criticism of some of the company’s best-known and established units, such as Tencent News, according to Jiemian’s report. He also emphasized that Tencent should continue to focus on its core businesses while making short videos its new priority.
Context: In the April-June period this year, Tencent posted its first quarterly revenue decline since it went public in 2004, with revenue falling another 2% year-on-year the following quarter. Tencent’s core gaming revenue and revenue from its online advertising business both recorded year-on-year declines in the first three quarters of 2022, hit by China’s economic slowdown and ongoing regulatory scrutiny.
On Tuesday, Chinese electric-vehicle maker Nio announced that certain data related to its users and vehicle sales in China before August 2021 had been leaked and was being illegally sold by third parties on the internet.
Why it matters: Nio said in its statement that it deeply regrets the incident. The company also said it has set up a dedicated hotline and an email address to respond to the data leakage. Moreover, a Nio customer service representative told Chinese media CLS (in Chinese) that it will not take the initiative to seek out customers to compensate but will take responsibility for the losses incurred.
Details: The EV maker said in the Chinese version of the Tuesday statement that it received an email on Dec. 11 from hackers demanding $2.25 million worth of bitcoin in exchange for not disclosing Nio’s internal data.
Context: Automakers are facing increased threats from data breaches and their impacts — affecting customers’ lives and bruising companies’ reputations.
As China rapidly dismantles its Covid zero measures that have gone on for almost three years, consumers are feeling a number of major impacts. Notably, fever-reducing drugs and rapid antigen test kits are in short supply through both online and offline channels, especially in major Chinese cities. Backlogs in courier services, delays in food delivery, and even the accumulation of trash in neighborhoods are now also being witnessed in Beijing, one of the first batches of cities seeing wide infection, and a growing number of other cities.
Last week, Chinese authorities began loosening the country’s stringent Covid-19 policies, which have helped keep infections low since the initial pandemic outbreak but have also led to reduced individual movement and shocks to the economy. In the latest sign of change, China’s National Health Commission announced on Wednesday that it will no longer count asymptomatic cases, saying accurate data is now impossible to capture given the reduction in mass testing.
While some analysts are hopeful the shift in policy will help revive China’s economy and remove some of the recent supply chain disruptions in the country, consumers in major urban centers are experiencing a particularly bumpy period of adjustment.
Drugs used to significantly reduce fevers, including Ibuprofen and Tylenol – as well as canned peaches and lemon-related foods that are rich in Vitamin C – are currently out of stock on online shopping platforms such as Taobao and JD.
The shortages have led consumers to explore creative ways to buy these essentials for the ongoing Covid-19 winter wave.
Early this week, some users on social e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu went viral for sharing a little-known method for buying fever and cold drugs from pharmacies in remote areas at the original price.
One Xiaohongshu user claimed that people could easily get Ibuprofen when modifying their location on life services platform Meituan to counties in the southwest of China in provinces such as Yunnan, Sichuan, and Guangxi. They could then ask couriers to pick up the goods from the pharmacy and mail them to their home location, albeit with a delivery wait of two or three days.
While such a move allows people thousands of miles away to get the fever drugs that are now scarce in many Chinese cities, it has led to a succession of stock-runs in more remote areas.
Users were unable to search for content related to purchasing drugs in other places in Xiaohongshu from Tuesday afternoon, according to the Chinese media outlet Jiemian.
Strict nationwide controls have been imposed on individuals buying antipyretic, cough, antiviral drugs and antibiotics since the beginning of the Covid pandemic, with authorities focusing on finding infected persons as early as possible. Anyone looking to purchase these medicines has been required since early 2020 to register their personal details with the pharmacy selling them.
In January in Beijing, for example, new rules required purchasers of such drugs to undergo a nucleic acid test within 72 hours or receive a risk alert preventing them from entering public places.
Such curbs have dissuaded many from buying these drugs in the last two years, but with Covid infections now surging across the country, demand for the products has suddenly sky-rocketed.
Saya, who lives in Shanghai, told TechNode that a friend of hers working in Hong Kong has recently started to help people on the mainland who can’t buy over-the-counter drugs – including antigen test kits and cold medicine – from local pharmacies. The friend then packages the medicine up and sends the goods by courier to the buyers, who can expect to receive them in as little as two weeks for a shipping fee of around HK$ 200 ($26).
Meanwhile, Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao reported early this week as saying the panic buying among mainlanders has already affected the city, with local pharmacies also running low on fever-reducing drugs.
According to The Paper, Meituan’s medicine channel has launched a “city-wide drug search” feature in Beijing, Shanghai, and six other cities with soaring demand.
China’s sudden reopening has also presented on-demand delivery and courier service providers with multiple new challenges.
In addition to the rush to buy fever-related drugs, consumers across the country have turned to online delivery services for daily necessities, with few willing to visit high-density locations such as supermarkets and shopping malls. In addition to this sudden uptick in demand, employees responsible for sorting and distribution at courier firms are themselves testing positive for Covid, causing staffing shortages.
As of Dec. 11, more than 400 distribution points nationwide were still closed, according to an official statement from the State Post Bureau.
More than 1,000 couriers temporarily mobilized by e-commerce giant JD arrived in Beijing on Wednesday, aiming to help ease delivery issues in the city. The company says hundreds more will follow this week.
Several Beijing residents told TechNode that they can still order take-out on Meituan and Alibaba’s Ele.me as usual, but that the delivery time is longer than before. – Some said that food deliveries that used to take an average of 40 minutes to receive now have a wait time of at least 90 minutes.
In an attempt to stabilize its services in Beijing, Meituan is reportedly hiring part-time couriers. Meanwhile, the food delivery has said it is providing couriers with antigen test kits, ibuprofen, and VC effervescent tablets in 23 cities.
For Alibaba-owned supermarket chain Freshippo, half of the clerical staff in Beijing have been reassigned to support positions like packing, with some store employees working part-time as delivery riders, local media outlet China Times reported on Tuesday.
]]>As much of the world grapples with slow growth and high inflation in 2022, Hurun Research Institute’s annual Global 500 list shows the damage that has been inflicted upon the world’s top companies in the past year.
The top 500 companies lost $11 trillion — a 19% drop in valuation from 2021 and equivalent to all of the value they created last year. Energy companies enjoyed strong growth, while retail and e-commerce were the hardest hit. Companies from four countries accounted for 80% of the loss: US firms lost $5 trillion, Chinese firms $2.9 trillion, and German and Japanese businesses lost $600 billion each.
Overall, 35 Chinese companies made the list in 2022, 12 fewer than the previous year. Sixteen companies dropped out of the list, including some notable leaders in their sectors such as short video platform Kuaishou, pharmaceutical company WuXi Biologics, electric vehicle maker Nio, ride-hailing giant Didi, and video content platform Bilibili.
Four Chinese companies made onto the list for the first time. They are: Shein, Webank, JD Technology, and Tongwei.
Here’s what you need to know about the four new entrants:
1. Shein
Ranking: #355
Fast fashion retailer Shein broke into the Hurun Global 500 list for the first time with a valuation of $40 billion, ranking at number 355.
Formed by Chinese entrepreneur Chris Xu in 2008 as an online wedding dresses platform, the business expanded to women’s fashion and took on the brand name Shein four years later. Today, it has become one of the biggest names in fast fashion.
The e-commerce site was valued at approximately $15 billion in 2020, according to figures from PitchBook Data Inc. cited in the Wall Street Journal; the US newspaper also stated that Shein’s valuation has risen nearly sevenfold in two years, hitting $100 billion this April. Shein’s total sales are expected to grow by 50% to $30 billion in 2022, the Wall Street Journal cited a source close to the company as saying in early November.
Various factors contributed to Shein’s rapid rise: low prices, a constant flow of new products per day, and popularity among TikTok users.
Shein is able to maintain lower prices than rivals Zara and H&M as it sells most of its products directly to consumers. The firm produces 700 to 1,000 new products in small batches per day, with mass production carried out only when an item sees high sales volume.
The fast fashion platform has received 7.5 billion views on TikTok with the hashtag #Sheinhaul, well ahead of the 4.2 billion views for #Zarahaul.
2. WeBank
Ranking: #433
As the first private internet bank in China, WeBank has been valued at $33 billion according to the Hurun Global 500 list.
Co-founded by Tencent in 2014, WeBank has attracted a significant number of users in a short period of time, relying on the tech giant’s messaging super apps WeChat and QQ. The digital bank posted more than 320 million active users by the end of 2021.
Weilidai and Weiyedai are the two main services the Shenzhen-based firm profits from; the former targets micro loans to individuals and the latter provides loans to small businesses. WeBank also offers auto loans.
According to Webank’s 2021 annual report, it achieved a revenue of RMB 26.99 billion that year, with net interest income accounting for 66.6% of total revenue. The internet bank recorded a net profit of RMB 6.88 billion in 2021, up 38.9% year-on-year; for comparison, Alibaba-backed MYBank posted RMB 2.09 billion net profit in 2021.
3. JD Technology
Ranking: #483
As the fintech arm of e-commerce retailer JD, JD Technology was reorganized in January 2021 on the basis of the former JD Digits, JD Cloud, and artificial intelligence units. The company mainly provides digital solutions to financial institutions and enterprises as well as local governments.
JD Digits filed for IPO on Shanghai’s Star Market in September 2020, with a valuation of up to RMB 200 billion. However, the firm later withdrew its IPO application in the middle of the process after Ant Group’s abruptly terminated IPO brought regulatory uncertainty to the country’s fintech sector.
The main source of revenue for JD Digits is its financial businesses. According to the prospectus filed by the firm at the time, it recorded a total revenue of RMB 10.33 billion in the first half of 2020, of which the revenue of two credit products – JD Jintiao and JD Baitiao – was RMB 2.64 billion and RMB 1.79 billion respectively, accounting for a combined 43% of the total revenue.
Reuters reported last month that the JD fintech unit is seeking Chinese regulatory approval for a new attempt at a Hong Kong listing as soon as the end of this year, adding that the size of the IPO is likely to be smaller than the previously suggested $2 billion.
4. Tongwei Co. Ltd
Ranking: #483
Based in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan, Tongwei is mainly engaged in the production and sale of agricultural feed. The company is also the world’s largest polysilicon supplier.
In the first three quarters of 2022, Tongwei achieved a net profit of RMB 21.73 billion, 1.65 times that of the last full year. The figures saw Tongwei better LONGi Green Energy Technology, the leader in the solar photovoltaic industry. LONGi posted RMB 10.98 billion in net profit in the January to September period, compared with a net profit of RMB 9.09 billion for the full year of 2021.
Tongwei attributed its rapid growth in the past two years to the continued strong market demand for high-purity crystalline silicon products, which has driven up market prices significantly.
The price of silicon materials has increased by 315% in the past three years, from RMB 73/kg in early 2020 to RMB 303/kg in the third quarter of 2022, according to Chinese financial and stock information provider Eastmoney.
Meanwhile, the company’s solar cell unit – which makes the core component for photovoltaic power generation – saw significant year-on-year growth in production and sales, enabling it to maintain strong market competitiveness.
]]>Chinese bubble tea chain Naixue (formerly known as Nayuki) has acquired a 43.64% stake in rival Lelecha for RMB 525 million ($75 million), becoming the largest shareholder in the company, Shenzhen-based Naixue announced on Monday.
Why it matters: Together with HeyTea, Lelecha is one of Naixue’s direct competitors with similar brand positioning – and the move is a sign of consolidation in the new-style tea industry against the backdrop of a macroeconomic slowdown and consumers tightening their spending.
Details: Naixue’s acquisition of a 43.64% stake in Lelecha will make it the company’s largest shareholder, though a statement from Naixue made it clear that Lelecha will continue to operate independently. Naixue’s equity acquisition price values Lelecha at around RMB 1.2 billion ($171.5 million), a 30% cut from the RMB 1.71 billion valuations reached by the company during its latest financing round in July 2020.
Context: China’s new-style tea market has boomed in recent years, with the overall market size expected to reach RMB 200 billion by 2030, up from RMB 77.29 billion in 2020, according to iiMedia Research.
Tencent-backed Tims China, the Chinese venture from coffee giant Tim Hortons, saw its revenue increase 67.9% to RMB 182.1 million ($25.5 million) for the third quarter of 2022, while its net loss widened by 72.4% from last year to RMB 195 million, according to the firm’s first financial report since listing on the Nasdaq following a SPAC merger in September.
Why it matters: The nearly 70% revenue growth in the third quarter shows the Chinese arm of Canadian coffee shop Tim Hortons’ aggressive expansion plan has already translated into sales figures, with the company’s adjusted store earnings margin seeing an increase of 4.1%. However, it remains to be seen whether Tims China can maintain the momentum.
Details: Tim Hortons has a total of 486 stores in China as of September, covering 27 major cities. Tims China opened 46 new stores between June and September, on average opening one store every two days.
Context: According to Chinese market research firm iiMedia Research, the market size of China’s coffee industry is expected to maintain a 27.2% annual rise in growth to reach RMB 10,000 billion by 2025. The huge growth potential of the Chinese coffee market has led major domestic and international coffee brands to regard the world’s second-largest economy as a significant growth frontier.
Major Chinese tech companies like Xiaomi and Baidu are increasing their offerings in fictional short video series, an area in which established short-video platforms Douyin and Kuaishou excel. These short dramas are typically low-budget, under 10 minutes per episode, made for verticle viewing and target mobile users. Many of these short video dramas are adapted from web fiction, some are original content.
Local online media Tech Planet reported on Monday that ByteDance, Baidu, and Xiaomi have recently increased their offering in short video series and are looking to “deeply cultivate the online literature and short drama industries”.
Why it matters: The adaptation of web fiction and online literature into new “mini-dramas” offers Chinese internet companies a new model for monetization amid sluggish advertising growth – potentially attracting new users and increasing time spent on the app. Tencent, Kuaishou, and Alibaba are all considering expanding their presence in the sector according to the report.
Details: The report said that Baidu, Xiaomi, and ByteDance are keeping the production cycle for these short video series within 10 days, with production costs mostly within hundreds of thousands of yuan (under $1,400).
Context: China’s web literature market size has exceeded RMB 30 billion with 502 million users by the end of 2021, according to a report conducted by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
More than 20 small- and medium-sized digital collectible platforms in China are shutting down as funds and interest dry up in the industry, Chinese media outlet Caijing reported on Wednesday. Due to the country’s strict rules regarding cryptocurrencies, Chinese platforms refer to NFTs as digital collectibles.
“The nature of NFT platforms determines that its profit model depends on liquidity,” Liu Yang, a counsel at Deheng Law Offices in Beijing, told TechNode. “Due to the lack of new funds to enter this industry currently, the fees for platform profits are far from able to cover the users’ losses, and the collapse is inevitable.”
Chinese regulators have yet to take a clear stance on NFT trading. It is still allowed in the country. However, in April, with the rising popularity of NFTs in China, there were warnings from three official banking associations to make investors aware of fraud associated with investing in NFTs.
Why it matters: Bigger platforms like Tencent have recently pulled out some NFT projects. The new closing wave highlights the slowdown of hype around digital collectibles and the difficulties of maintaining investment amid regulatory uncertainty.
In July and November, Tencent News and QQ music shut down their NFT trading feature without any advanced notice. And in August, Tencent closed its digital collectible platform Huanhe only a year after launching. Huanhe strictly limited non-profit transfers to other users. At the same time, most of the platforms allow buyers to trade their collectibles privately after purchase, offering the opportunity to profit from these digital collectibles.
Huanhe gave users two options when it decided to shut down – a full refund or continuing to hold collectibles, but it was difficult for small- and medium-sized platforms to provide full refunds, with most of them only refunding 5%-30% of the original purchase price.
Half of these closing platforms were set up within six months before shutting down, records on Chinese corporate data provider Qichacha show. In their announcements, most platforms attributed dwindling users as part of the reason for exiting.
Such a slowing trend has been evident since this summer. According to local media outlet Jiemian, Huanhe’s newly released digital collections had been slow to sell since June, which is quite a different situation from the platform’s earlier collectibles, which sold out in just a few minutes.
Many users have been negotiating with the platform, trying to recover their losses with minimal success.
Xiaoye is an investor in a platform that has only been in existence for two months, and the platform announced on Oct.31 that it will only buy back 10% of the initial cost of the collectibles.
Xiaoye told TechNode that he learned about this platform through a WeChat group, where someone said collectibles would appreciate in value after users are able to trade in the secondary market.
“But after investing almost RMB 1,000 into it, the collectibles that I held were at a price far below the initial price,” Xiaoye said, adding that he cannot accept only getting 10% back and he will continue to complain.
In China, it’s not a difficult task to build an NFT platform. Through a quick online search, TechNode found a company that promises to build an NFT platform business. One of the firm’s staff said it only takes RMB 39,000 ($5445) to build an H5 site supporting NFT trading, and it can be active in as little as three days.
The number of digital collectible platforms reached 2,303 as of Nov.15 in China, according to a report by think tank 01Caijing.
The platforms make money through the initial price of collectibles, as well as by commission, which is generally 5% of the secondary transaction price. By comparison, the maximum commission charge for stock trading is 3‰, and crypto exchanges generally charge 0.2%.
]]>ByteDance-owned Douyin has achieved its yearly target set for local life service ahead of schedule, reaching RMB 50 billion ($6.98 billion) GMV in October, Chinese media outlet 36Kr reported, citing several unnamed sources.
Why it matters: The short video app, which has more than 600 million daily active users, introduced functions like ordering food and tickets, and booking travels directly into it. These moves put the content giant in direct competition with Meituan and Ele.me — two established local service players.
Details: Douyin’s local life unit has now provided a variety of daily services, including buying food ordering recommendations and sightseeing tickets, and booking hotels, parent-child activities, and sports and fitness events. Users can complete those purchases in the video app.
Context: The popular short video platform is being used by merchants as a new way to get a broader range of consumers, while Douyin is also expecting to accelerate the monetization process from the local lifestyle unit, which has huge development potential.
Correction: an earlier version of this article miscalculated the US dollar amount of the GMV.
]]>Though sometimes not as visible, family offices are having an influential impact on the investment industry, as their existence allows the assets of wealthy families to have a positive social impact while generating financial returns.
At the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online in the BEYOND Metaverse, Rochel Leah Bernstein, Founder of RLB Partners; Michael Smith, Partner at Regeneration.VC; and Andrew Rubinstein, Founder of Shorewind Capital, joined moderator Robert Grimaldi, CEO at Ad Infinitum, to discuss how family offices impact the tech industry and explore investment strategies for family offices over the next two years.
Family offices play a big role in the tech industry, a lot of them are investors themselves in those big VC funds. I think they do that for two reasons: One, for their own sort of investment returns, so they can kind of invest directly in some of the companies that those venture funds will first invest in and identify the winners. So they absolutely played a role, though they tend to be more behind the scenes, because they don’t have to put in as much effort into marketing, one because they don’t have to go invest or they don’t have to go raise outside capital. And two, their value-add is sort of inherent in their family name a lot of the time, so if you’re a small venture fund you sort of have to position yourself to entrepreneurs, to say we can add value by doing X, Y and Z. If you’re a family office with a big name behind you, you don’t really have to make that pitch as much of the time. So they definitely play a big role both in the sense that they invest in many of those companies directly and in the venture funds that source them.
My sense is that family offices are a little bit more sort of risk-off right now. I think part of that is because they don’t know exactly how to value their current portfolio, because if they were investing in round seeds stages, a lot of those companies probably are a little bit overvalued. And because they’re private companies, they don’t really have to get remarks until they go and raise subsequent funds, so a lot of family offices are fairly content to sit on the sidelines right now and say let’s see how the dust settles and kind of evaluate exactly how much our portfolio is right now. For us, we’re a family investment vehicle but we’re also a new venture fund on the block. We launched fourteen months ago and we’re excited that valuations are coming down, we’re also excited that other venture investors are staying on the sidelines a bit more because it means we get more access to deals we otherwise wouldn’t.
As I continue my investment career, I’ll always be someone around the family, I still want to prioritize at the center of that Venn diagram, or drift more to just we’re looking purely for returns. And I think that’s probably something that a lot of family offices deal with because they have flexible mandates where they can invest in anything from an early stage, private to public. So trying to hone in on your vision as a family office, or just as individuals within a family office, I think is pretty key to help kind of guide you towards exactly how you want to spend your time.
There’s a risk aversion piece I’m definitely seeing, but the interest in co-invest is very strong. So what I do hear a lot behind closed doors is a desire for people to see each other’s deal flow within families and to sort of share what they’re looking at because there is more trust. The other thing I’ve seen in the last, I would say, two years since Covid-19 is more of an interest in mental health, healthcare, and education, those are spaces that are really shifted. There’s more of a desire to look at edtech and sort of alternative sources of education and more equity around education. From a public health perspective, a lot has changed. I’m seeing more and more offices that are trying to leverage their networks and their resources to solve some really big global problems because everyone was affected. I have a family office friend who came out of Shanghai and was incredibly traumatized by the lockdown. It was shared with me that it had such an effect on his mental health and he is now really interested in some of these spaces he had never looked at before. So I think it left an indelible impact on all of us and how we think about how we leverage capital for social good.
I’ve been passionate about child protection and child sexual abuse prevention and impact investing for years, but I think during Covid-19 I was especially terrified. I use that word deliberately because children globally were essentially locked up, often with people that were hurting them, whether that’s domestic violence or child sexual abuse or poverty or other issues. So I believe that we’re going to see a tremendous uptake in reporting child sexual abuse globally within the next fifteen years. Considering the average length of disclosure of seventeen years, I believe we’re about fifteen years out from a massive crisis. And in such an anemic space, I’ve sort of doubled down on my focus on both raising dollars for advocacy and for lobbying, legislation, and parent education, because I do believe that parents ultimately sit at the nexus of all of the institutions and all of the places that their child exists. So I feel called to really spend a lot of my time and energy on [the issue].
And it is global, I was actually in Asia recently and someone approached me and said you know I looked you up and we don’t know how to talk about that here and it’s not a topic that we know how to address. And it really hit me very hard, sort of emotionally, thinking about how many children and how many families were affected by Covid-19 from a safety and a mental health perspective. The other thing that we’re seeing increasing worldwide is also suicide and adolescent suicide, and so for me, those are areas that I spend a lot of time on, from an investing perspective, advocacy, and philanthropy.
The last thing I’ll say is that I think we really need to focus as an investment community on unity. We see so much divisiveness and so much heat in our world. I know it sounds cheesy, but whatever ways we can come together and bring our stories and our cultures and what unites us as humanity together for the planet, for humanity, for human health, for our children, for the future, is something that I think would be incredibly important for all of us as family offices and investors and philanthropists to be focusing on.
When you look at all the different places that family offices invest, it’s a big question. But from our day-to-day within climate tech, it’s actually become a very good time with this recent climate bill, with a lot of momentum on corporate and regulatory, tailwinds. So we’re seeing a flood of interest coming in and people wanting to learn more and how do they get smart and how do they figure out who are the right managers and the right opportunities to focus on, and where things are really headed. So there are a few bright spots, but overall there’s just a whole heck of a lot of uncertainty and most family offices have that ability to be long view.
I remember a few months back before things were getting really choppy, it was like “oh I’m so over-indexed in venture” because I’m having all these good outcomes and I’m just trying to figure out how to get a better balance to my portfolio construction and things like that. This is changing day by day, but right now it’s been exciting to see all the interest with what we’re doing within the family office community.
We won’t change how we’ve been doing things in the next 12 to 24 months. When I started focusing on the same issue, I got to know what was happening with this crisis in a way that really motivated me to fully focus on doing everything I could to address it. Regeneration in our work with pine valley is really an expression of that, and it’s not a short-term issue. This is very much a long view issue, so our goal is thinking how over the next 10, 20 years, how do we move the needle on putting atmospheric carbon back into natural systems and regenerating, planning, and building more resilient structures and adapting to changes were already feeling right now. So the time is not to slow down now depending on all the different indicators and where they’re going. This is really urgent and important work that we do take it very, very seriously.
]]>E-commerce giants Alibaba and JD kept silent on their Singles Day sales totals this year, the first time they chose not to publicize the data from their gross merchandise volume (GMV) performance. Alibaba said the results were “in line with last year’s GMV performance,” while rival JD claimed its growth rate exceeded the industry average.
Why it matters: The decision of Alibaba and JD, the two main participators in the year-end shopping festival, to not disclose their sales totals is in stark contrast to previous years when both have been quick to trumpet the amount of money brought in. The move comes against the recent backdrop of the Chinese authorities’ reining in of tech companies and could also indicate an underwhelming performance after years of rocketing growth.
Details: Although the two major players failed to publicly confirm their sales totals, Chinese media outlet Yicai cited statistics from Xingyun Data on Nov. 13 showing that overall sales across all platforms during this year’s Singles Day hit RMB 1.1 trillion ($157.1 billion), up 13.7% year-on-year.
Context: Over the past two years, China’s tech companies have been dealing with weak consumption, especially after many local governments imposed strict Covid control measures earlier this year. Data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed that the total retail sales of consumer goods were only up 0.7% year-on-year from January to September.
In the run-up to this year’s Singles Day shopping festival, a number of high-profile livestream stars moved freely between different major platforms like Taobao and Douyin, highlighting newfound cross-platform freedom in China’s online retail sector.
Why it matters: This trend shows Chinese livestream retail sector is being more open amid increased antitrust pressure from regulators. Previously, there was a tacit agreement within the industry that top livestreamers were bound to certain platforms. The loosening provides new opportunities for e-commerce stars, platforms, and for brands.
Details: Livestreamers being able to sell products across different platforms helps them avoid overdependence on a single platform and also means that they can gain support from other platforms in driving traffic, shorten the time needed to monetize their livestreams, according to a research report by Zhao Lingyi, chief analyst of retail e-commerce at securities firm Shenwan Hongyuan, and cited in Chinese media outlet Chinese Securities Journal on Monday. Livestreamers earn commissions on the products they promote and can also convert virtual gifts from their fans into cash.
Context: The livestream e-commerce industry has grown rapidly since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. According to a report released by consulting firm iResearch in 2021, the total revenue of China’s live e-commerce industry will hit RMB 1.2 trillion ($166 billion) by the end of 2022, with the figure expected to increase to RMB 4.9 trillion in 2023.
In a world of increasing challenges and uncertainties, women investors are making prudent choices to help build a more resilient future. Yet there is still a lot of work to be done when it comes to diversity in the venture capital industry.
At the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online in the BEYOND Metaverse, Helen Wong, managing partner of AC Ventures; Shuo Chen, general partner of IOVC; and Gwendolyn Regina, investment director of BNB Chain, discussed the path for women in the investment field and offered their advice for young entrepreneurs.
Their comments have been edited and condensed for clarity.
Helen Wong, Managing Partner, AC Ventures
When it comes to investment, women do make different results from men. I think women are as capable as men, but in certain areas, women are maybe more in tune with.
In general, I wouldn’t say that there’s a gender bias, I’ve seen people who are very good at analyzing business models and they are female, and I’ve seen very good ones that are male as well. So we just shouldn’t have this gender bias toward investing.
On the whole, there’s no difference between women and men, but there are maybe certain characteristics which are different, for example on the board of a company, female board members I’ve seen tend to have more empathy, they are able to put aside the egos. Generally, many female board members don’t have as big an ego, and they can communicate more effectively.
When I started my career in venture capital in Silicon Valley, I still remember a very prominent male VC who told me that it’s harder to succeed as a female VC because most of the founders were male and they prefer male VCs. So I think it’s sometimes chicken and egg: do you have female GP funds that would invest more in women or would you have more female founders and then make it easier for females to become GPs as well?
When I came to China, it was quite a pleasant change because there were a lot more women in the workforce. Even though we are still the minority, on the whole there have been very successful female VCs in China. I do think that over time, what I’ve seen is that there’s been a lot more awareness of this issue and a lot more emphasis on trying to do the right thing, which is good both for women and as well as for the funds that you may have overlooked a certain demographic group, so I do believe that we’re moving in the right direction.
At AC Ventures, we found that we have 40% of our founders are female and 40% of the ones in high senior management positions are also female. This is without setting up any gender-focused fund and even prior to me joining the firm, so I think that a lot of progress has been made and it would be nice if one day we don’t even have to talk about this topic and we just have no gender bias at all.
Do not let any gender bias prevent you from achieving your dream. You might encounter it, but you know it’s not something that should hold you back, and do see if there are other people that can help you – you don’t have to feel that everything is just falling on your own shoulders, whether it’s child care or other aspects. Find people to help you along the way to mentor you; people have gone through the same challenges as you, so it would be very helpful.
Shuo Chen, General Partner, IOVC
It’s really hard to put stereotypes to what female founders versus male founders are like because I’ve seen folks that break the stereotype, whether female founders or male founders, but at the high level, I would say a couple of things. First, it acknowledges that female founders have received less funding, at least in the US. We’ve seen that actually out of all the venture capital that has been written out just in terms of the proportional split, more money has gone to male founders throughout the pandemic and less money than before in history written to female founders, which I think means that there is an opportunity to identify female founders running startups that are relatively undervalued just because female founders as a population are receiving less capital.
And then the second part is that we’ve seen the data in the US, over a decade-long longitudinal study, that companies that have a female co-founder on the team tend to be 67% more likely to stay alive ten years later than if it was an all-male team.
On a board level, on American boards of public companies, if they have one additional female board member, they are significantly less likely as a company to get into situations of fraud and get in trouble and be persecuted for all of that, so it is proven – whether it is among co-founders or board members – that additional diversity of thought is helpful.
As we think about supporting female founders, we should make sure that we have an equitable system set up from day one. If you keep on building a legacy system, technical debt just builds up further and further, but I have a lot of faith in younger generations not having that diversity debt from day one because I think at least the Gen Z founders who we work with now are much more thoughtful about including a diverse team and when you have a diverse group of co-founders you are more likely to hire a more diverse team of employees. Those kinds of effects ripple throughout the ecosystem.
We should better feature role models like Helen and Gwen here, because it’s really hard to be what you can’t see, and if you never even knew this was a possibility, how can you ever even aspire to be that?
I had no idea what venture capital was for most of my educational career, I think it was really after I had accidentally stumbled into entrepreneurship that I even knew that being an investor was a career path. So getting exposure as early as possible to all these career options and seeing other amazing women is such an important point.
In terms of advice for young entrepreneurs when they start careers, I would mention if relationship building or even the concept of networking feels like too many things, just break it down into a super manageable piece that you feel you can repeat on either a weekly or monthly basis. For example, if it means reaching out and catching up with someone once a month, if that feels manageable, then stick to that and make sure you do it once a month. If that feels like too much, make it once a quarter to reach out to someone and make sure you maintain that relationship, so if you just set one area of focus that you feel is important and helpful to you and stick to that habit and repeat it regularly that adds up to tremendous benefits in the long run, I couldn’t recommend that more.
Gwendolyn Regina, Investment Director, BNB Chain
(Moderator: Shuo brought up a point that females get fewer funds than males when it comes to doing startups. Do you think setting up female-focus funds to support investing in female advanced startups is a good way to promote women’s entrepreneurship?)
Female-focus funds, I mean to each our own right. I think there are many funds without biased agendas and focused on investing in underrepresented minorities, which are all good in different ways.
There’s some systemic bias against underrepresented minorities in general, so I think I probably would not do a female-focus fund, but for people focusing on women-focus funds. Because looking at a targeted segment does really make sure that you’re more open-minded, you’re almost forcing your team and people who are joining your fund to be more open-minded, it’s almost like a key thing if I tell you not to think of a pink elephant, you will think of a pink elephant, right? So not saying that investing in underrepresented minorities, females or others included but more like there is a certain positive to be said about female-focused funds.
(Moderator: In addition to female-focused funds, do you think there’s a better way to promote female entrepreneurship in this ecosystem?)
Many many different ways, and in general we need education on all the stats that show again mentioned. This is education that we need across the board to feed to males as well, so I do think that there is value to just be more inclusive from the get-go and educate the non-represented, the non-minorities essentially, so in this particular case talking about gender, we just need more people to be more aware, because we cannot assume that just because a female you know that there is a lack or know that they’re underrepresented, this is gender-free bias to some extent, so we do need all kinds of people to be more aware of the stuff that we’ve talked about.
And I would say that if you face bias, it reflects more on them than you, so don’t let that affect your own self-confidence. And I would say, in general, people who create bias often do so just because they lack awareness, in a sense ignorance, so doing some education on your part also helps the other person and the other person can be grateful.
]]>Chinese local service platform Meituan initiated a new round of layoffs involving core business units after cutting up to 20% of staff in April this year, Chinese media outlet LatePost reported on Thursday.
Why it matters: Meituan faces high losses in its group buying business, leading it to continue laying off staff in related units. Meanwhile, the company also significantly reduced its campus hiring starting in September, with the actual number of hires less than half of the 5,000 planned. Chinese internet companies often replace higher-paid employees with cheaper ones to reduce operating costs.
Details: The redundancies mainly affected people from the Beijing-based company’s group buying unit called “Meituan Select,” according to LatePost’s report.
Context: After the massive layoffs in April, Meituan’s marketing expenses in the second quarter decreased by RMB 1.86 billion yuan, down 17.1% year-on-year.
On Monday, Chinese online retailers kicked off the annual November 11 Singles Day shopping festival. The festival, originated by e-commerce giant Alibaba in 2009, has long been a major retail event across the industry. This year, amid a slowing economy, weakening consumer demand, and growing competition from short-video platforms, established retailers are shifting their focus away from chasing high growth in gross merchandise volume (GMV).
For this year’s Singles Day festival, new e-commerce giants Douyin, Kuaishou, and Pinduoduo are increasing their rivalry with stalwarts Alibaba and JD. The crowded market has given merchants and consumers more choices, while the latter is more concerned about better deals in a year when budgets might be tight. Chinese livestream hosts are also diversifying their appearances as platforms cultivate new stars following the fallout from scandals affecting several top hosts. Moreover, Chinese tech giants are keeping a lower-than-usual profile as they continue to navigate pressure from both China’s tech crackdown and the capital markets.
As China’s largest e-commerce shopping festival, Singles Day is popular with consumers because of its perceived discounts. The major platforms continue to offer straightforward price cuts and faster home-delivery services this year, with the most obvious being that they’re offering the deepest discounts.
“It’s worth for platforms to offer discounts be up as high as possible as Singles Day is always a big headline event for them over massive GMV figures,” said Jacob Cooke, co-founder and CEO of e-commerce and technology consultancy WPIC.
Among some of the main developments for this year’s Singles Day:
While ByteDance’s Douyin is still dwarfed in terms of sales by e-commerce giant Alibaba, its fast growth has made it a notable rival. The platform only took three years to achieve a gross merchandise value of one trillion yuan, a figure which took Taobao 14 years to achieve, albeit in different economic circumstances.
Chinese consumers are increasingly shopping across platforms. In a Singles Day survey by consultancy Bain & Company, 69% of the 3,000 surveyed customers said they planned to shop across three or more platforms, up from 56% in 2021. Some 37% plan to use five or more platforms on this year’s event, the survey found.
Statistics from the e-commerce database Dianshubao showed two leading platforms — JD and Alibaba’s Tmall — accounted for 92.15% of the total GMV generated on Singles Day in 2021. But Cooke said Douyin could grab a significant market share this year. “The platform has proven over the last while that they have been gaining in certain big categories like fashion,” he added
This year, Douyin is targeting an annual GMV of RMB 1.7 trillion according to local media outlet 36Kr, an increase of RMB 1 trillion from 2021.
The TikTok sister app, which has nearly 700 million daily active users, initially drew “new traffic” to its e-commerce business mainly through merchandise from third-party platforms such as Taobao and JD. In October 2020, it stopped directing buyers to other platforms to complete their purchases and accelerated its e-commerce push through in-app features instead.
Douyin’s growing presence makes it more attractive for brands, and many are planning to invest more in their Douyin presence. Japanese clothing brand Uniqlo has turned to the platform to reach more consumers amid slowing demand in September, offering users a new, direct way to buy Uniqlo merchandise through the app.
Wenjing Liu, a managing partner at e-commerce marketing firm Genuine, said her clients have adjusted their sales strategies this year, hoping to use sales channels like Douyin to increase Singles Day revenue.
“This year, the split will be 70% to 75% on Tmall and 25% to 30% on Douyin, compared to last year when we had 5% to 10% on Douyin and 90% to 95% on Tmall,” she predicts.
Douyin also added shopping to ByteDance news aggregation app Jinri Toutiao ahead of this Singles Day, allowing users to shop within the widely popular news aggregator.
After disappearing for three months from June 3, livestream e-commerce superstar Li Jiaqi made a surprise return on Sept. 20. Li and another top livestreamer Viya together generated nearly RMB 20 billion in sales in 2021. This year has been challenging for top livestreamers — in addition to Li’s disappearance, Viya stopped livestreaming after being fined for tax evasion; another top e-commerce influencer, Cherie, also halted her popular livestreams in similar circumstances. They have yet to return.
An Alibaba employee told TechNode that Li Jiaqi’s return had helped bring back a sense of confidence to livestream e-commerce on its platforms and boosted the active stocking of beauty merchants. Li’s team has even created a new TV show to tell customers how they can bargain on prices with big brands.
In addition, more celebrities, influencers, and company executives are entering e-commerce livestream rooms and diversifying their appearances on multiple platforms.
Ahead of this Singles Day, Taobao poached former Douyin livestreamers including Luo Yonghao, Yu Minhong, and Hong Kong actress Cecilia Cheung. A source who is familiar with the matter previously told local media outlet China Star Market that Taobao had purposefully contacted MCN agencies of stars who have long had alliances with Douyin and Kuaishou ahead of this year’s Singles Day.
In response to why Douyin’s top livestreamers chose Taobao over Douyin, Chui Xue, president of Taobao and Tmall’s industry development and operation center, told Jiemian that it is the norm for merchants to run their businesses on multiple platforms.
Last year, online retailers reported a gross merchandise value of RMB 540 billion, with Alibaba reporting 8.45% yearly growth, its slowest in nine years.
618, a mid-year shopping festival started by JD, is seen as an essential indicator for sales predictions for Singles Day. This year, the cumulative amount of orders placed on the platform increased by 10.3% to RMB 379.3 billion, the slowest growth rate since the e-commerce giant first disclosed data from the 618 events in 2017.
Two years ago, Chinese consumer spending recovered quickly from the first outbreak of Covid-19. However, it has taken a greater hit this year as pandemic control measures continue and the larger economy slows. In addition to weak demand and sluggish growth, Chinese tech giants have been treading carefully after Chinese policymakers tightened regulations on the sector. Last year, e-commerce giants have tacitly chose to downplay their GMV figures, intentionally keeping a low profile.
Such trends are continuing this year. Taobao has obscured the number of viewers on its livestreams for the first time, with more than 10 million people showing up as simply “10 million +”. Some users who hadn’t updated to the latest version of the app said they could still see more than 460 million people watching Li Jiaqi’s livestream return on Oct. 24, but those with the newest update merely saw “10 million +”. Li’s management company subsequently sent lawyer’s letters to a media outlet it saw as spreading “unverified” data after it reported enormous GMV figures for the sales event.
From Wenjing Liu’s perspective, Singles Day will still hold a big piece of the yearly revenue, but “other events, channels, and sales strategies are developing fast, and that is where the real growth potential for brands lies”.
While Cooke said Singles Day is still going to be the largest shopping festival day in the world “for a very long time,” adding that he’s never even seen a sense of “going down”.
]]>Pinduoduo’s overseas e-commerce platform Temu has surpassed $1.5 million in average daily gross merchandise value (GMV) after its launching in September, Chinese media outlet 36Kr reported on Thursday. Although the figure fell slightly short of internal expectations, the company remains confident of catching up with or even overtaking rival Shein in the next five years, the report said.
Why it matters: Temu’s goal of reaching total sales of $30 billion in five years highlights its ambition to challenge Chinese overseas fashion retailer Shein. Shein took 14 years to achieve the sales number.
Details: Temu aims to reach $300-500 million in GMV by year-end, according to 36Kr, citing sources familiar with the matter. The company is also targeting total value of products sold in $3 billion in 2023.
Context: Pinduoduo’s Temu is regarded as a competitor to Shein, which created a successful business model by selling fast fashion clothing at ultra-low prices through a flexible supply chain.
Chinese video platform Bilibili has expanded its livestream shopping ahead of Singles Day after launching a shopping zone in the live streaming section on Oct.14, local media outlet Tech Planet reported on Monday.
Why it matters: As Bilibili aims to become profitable by 2024, expanding in livestream shopping aligns with the company’s overall strategy to pursue commercialization. The Shanghai-based company has tested several features associated with the business since last year. Timing the expansion ahead of Singles Day, reflects the company’s desire to use the annual shopping festival to bring a jolt of excitement to its live shopping business.
Details: Bilibili livestream rooms currently offer products from its self-operated stores, as well as from third-party platforms such as Alibaba’s Taobao and JD, a similar strategy that Douyin and Kuaishou applied to their e-commerce business in the early stages to save on supply chain expenses.
Context: Bilibili’s revenue is mainly composed of value-added services, advertising, games, and e-commerce. E-commerce revenue accounted for 12.2% of the total revenue in the second quarter of this year, up 4% from last year.
With less than two months to go until 2023, the wildly short video platform TikTok is reportedly setting a goal of reaching more than 1.05 billion daily active users (DAUs) worldwide by year-end. The platform will have to add more than 200 million DAU to achieve this goal.
A TikTok spokesperson told Chinese media outlet LatePost that the company hopes TikTok to be as dominant in the international market as its Chinese version Douyin in China. Douyin’s market penetration rate in its home market is 54%, while TikTok is less than 20% globally.
After acquiring Musical.ly in the year of its launch in 2017, TikTok exploded in popularity and became the fastest-growing social app. But despite the rapid growth, TikTok hasn’t earned revenue that matches the size of its user base. ByteDance CEO Liang Rubo acknowledged and said last month that TikTok’s monetization has fallen short of expectations.
Unlike Douyin’s unmatched competitive edge in short video and retail in the Chinese market, TikTok faces heated competition from global giants like Google and Meta. In 2021, the platform raked in nearly $4 billion in revenue, mostly from advertising, while Meta’s Instagram, which has 500+ million daily users, made an estimated $47.6 billion in revenue in 2021.
Why it matters: TikTok has amassed over 1 billion monthly active users in just under five years – faster than Facebook, Instagram, and Youtube to achieve this milestone. But from a monetization perspective, TikTok still pales in comparison to these tech giants.
TikTok almost relied on Douyin to provide technical support at the beginning of its attempt at monetization in 2020, hoping to replicate Douyin’s model in its home market for the international market. However, such reliance has slowed TikTok’s monetization since its product requests often get prioritized after Douyin’s.
Similar to social media competitors like Meta, advertising is a key revenue driver for TikTok.
The company officially launched advertising on TikTok in 2020, but due to an initial lack of independent tech support, coupled with strong global competitors, monetizing progressed slower than expected.
According to LatePost, TikTok’s reliance on Douyin’s tech support caused many of its product demands prioritized after Douyin. It wasn’t until 2021 that TikTok started to build its own advertising and support system.
A TikTok monetization staffer told LatePost that the platform has reached users on a scale comparable to Google and Facebook in major markets, but is unable to provide the same level of precision in customer acquisition. This is partly due to Google apps’ and Android phones’ wide reach, which allows Google to better portray its users, thus helping advertisers target their audience more precisely.
Facing TikTok’s sudden rise, Meta has been betting on its TikTok clone Reels since its launch in 2021. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg noted that ad monetization for Reels is progressing faster than expected, crossing the $1 billion annual revenue run rate in the April-June period.
TikTok’s e-commerce business recently planned to move up its timeline of entering the Brazil market, shifting from the second half of 2023 to the first half, LatePost reported.
The report added that Huang Yuanjian, former head of internationalization products at ride-hailing giant Didi Global, will be in charge of marketing operations for TikTok e-commerce in Brazil.
The platform will also face competition in Brazil. Bloomberg data refers to MercadoLibre and Lojas Americans holding 48% of Brazil’s e-commerce market share as of 2021, with other e-commerce platforms having a smaller share. Alibaba, for example, has only a 3.2% market share in the country. In addition, TikTok rival Kuaishou also said last month that it has identified Brazil as a priority region for monetization.
]]>On Oct. 16, top leaders of the Chinese Communist Party gathered in Beijing to meet for the 20th Party Congress. The week-long meeting, held every five years, attracts 2,340 delegates from the party to discuss high-level changes and topics, including the nation’s tech developments and strategy.
Chinese President Xi Jinping’s two-hour-long report formed the most significant part of the meeting. He reminded delegates that the next five years will be crucial for China to make breakthroughs in “high-quality economic development, achieve greater self-reliance and strength in science and technology, and make major progress in creating a new pattern of development.”
China has set out a long-term development goal of realizing socialist modernization before 2035. To get there, the party believes that the country needs to develop its tech sector further and bring tech innovation into traditional sectors.
In his speech, Xi said China needs to build a modernized industrial system that serves the “real” economy, set up a national strategy that helps drive innovation, and ensure new developments are eco-friendly and sustainable.
Xi emphasized that a modernized industrial system would be key for the country to achieve “high-quality development” and increasing domestic demands.
He stated that China needs to advance new industrialization and become stronger in manufacturing, aerospace, transportation, cyberspace, and digital development. His speech also emphasized that China should develop integrated clusters of new growth tech areas, such as next-generation information technology, artificial intelligence, biotech, new energy, new materials, high-end equipment, and green industry. The country also needs to improve its ability to secure the supply of strategic resources, Xi said.
China needs to find ways to make such developments serve the real economy, like integrating modern services with advanced manufacturing and modern agriculture and integrating the digital economy with the real economy, according to Xi. “We must continue to focus on economic development of the real economy when pursuing economic growth and promoting a new type of industrialization,” he said.
Xi acknowledged that China has recorded major achievements in several core tech sectors and growth in cutting-edge areas such as human spaceflight, supercomputers, deep sea exploration, satellite navigation, quantum information, nuclear power technology, large aircraft manufacturing, and biomedicine. Yet China’s tech industry still lacks technological innovation, he said.
He emphasized that China needs to improve its technology innovation system, creating an open innovation system with global competitiveness. He also declared the establishment of a new innovation-driven development strategy, including conducting original, industry-leading scientific research and making China an attractive country for technological innovation as well as a talent center.
The country plans to implement a number of national major scientific and technological projects to enhance the capacity for independent innovation, with hopes of becoming a global innovation leader by 2035. It will also create a “positive environment” conducive to the growth of tech-based small and medium-sized enterprises, Xi said.
According to Xi, innovation is at the “core” of China’s modernization.
Xi said the country needs to find a development model that also protects the environment, pursuing economic growth while cutting carbon emissions, reducing pollution, expanding green development, protecting ecology, and conserving resources.
Other major efforts under Beijing’s climate initiative include carefully promoting hydropower facilities given their large environmental impact, actively developing nuclear power safely and orderly, improving the official CO2 emissions calculation tool, and establishing a national carbon trading scheme. In addition, China continues to head toward carbon neutrality by shifting toward green energy vehicles. Xi vowed to promote a low-carbon lifestyle and step up the green revolution in the transportation sector.
In 2021, China’s ambition to become a leader in global climate actions faced major setbacks as operations of heavy industries such as steelmaking experienced a widespread power crunch. At this year’s congress, the central government addressed concerns around economic stability and strength, with Xi saying that China will steadily reach peak carbon and carbon neutrality, implementing control measures “in a planned and step-by-step manner.”
Xi said that the country would continue to speed up the establishment of a clean energy revolution while enhancing the “clean and efficient use of coal,” given its natural resource restraints. The strategy is meant to see a gradual reduction of total emissions as well as carbon intensity, which refers to the amount of energy consumed per unit of economic growth.
The commitment comes months after the central authorities in February extended the deadline for domestic steelmakers to reach peak carbon emissions by five years to 2030 and pledged to correct any “campaign-style” carbon reduction moves by local governments in August. Only a third of China’s provinces and municipalities met their carbon reduction goals during the first half of 2021, leaving as many as 18 regional governments enforcing power rationing and idling operations of energy-consuming industries later in the year.
]]>Major companies and brands are investing money and technology into the metaverse with visions of endless marketing and promotion potential – from NFTs and avatars to games and digital products. As the technology is still growing and evolving, how can we learn from those who are already diving into this virtual world? And what are the experiences of major brands inside the metaverse?
Jim Feng, VP of NBA China, joined moderator Hanson Wang, the Deloitte China Metaverse CoE leader, to discuss the business practices of big brands in the metaverse and share their views and methodology when analyzing the metaverse market. The discussion took place at the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online at BEYOND Metaverse.
The text below has been condensed and edited for clarity.
We believe the metaverse does have huge potential value for products especially to increase different experiences that we cannot experience in our real life. VR is a very good example. If you wear and watch VR, it will create another world for you, something that you can never imagine until you try it out.
Though there are still some technological boundaries of VR that might be too heavy to wear, and sometimes the resolution of goggle glasses is not that cool, but fundamentally it just creates a new experience to compare with our real life. There are so many things we already have in real life. It’s very hard if we want to create a new world or experience, but once you create it, you have a new industry like the cell phone or the Internet. Nobody knows what the future will look like at the beginning here, but people need to keep polishing and improving the experience, the quality value of the content, and the production value of the content. Once it passes the line, then it will become a new part of our life.
The NBA is already trying different things in China, and my suggestion for those big brands wishing to start or to continue their pilot of the metaverse in the Chinese market is that they have to comply with the law in China. And regulations can be different from territory to territory, so don’t just assume that what works in other regions will work here in China. Companies have to be very conservative and explore what the regulations allow, and the type of restrictions.
Companies or brands also need some good partners and some reliable big companies. Lastly, they should be conservative, patient, and accumulate in small ways.
]]>ByteDance-owned Douyin e-commerce is testing a new budget retail offering, selling selected products under RMB 9.9 ($1.38) to attract buyers, Chinese media outlet TechPlanet reported on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The new budget section signals Douyin’s ambition in getting a larger share of lower-tier markets. A heated area that is also being pursued by other major e-commerce giants like Alibaba’s Taobao and JD, while Pinduoduo, known for its extremely low pricing, is currently the leader of this segment.
Details: The new budget section is accessible via a button on the home page of the mall channel in Douyin’s lite version app (our translation) to some users. The report said that the firm’s e-commerce platform has invested heavily in the project.
Context: As the market in first- and second-tier cities gets increasingly saturated, lower-tier markets have become a growth area for e-commerce platforms to tap into potential consumer power, but making the transition is not easy.
The total amount of money invested in Web3, which is widely regarded as the next generation of the internet, reached more than $23 billion in 2022, according to Crunchbase data. Though venture capital seems to be slowing down their Web3 funding rush, Web3 is still among the most interesting areas for VCs.
Three guests from Web3 and investment companies spoke with moderator ShinWei Teh, an Investment Banker at Credit Suisse, about whether Web3 investment is all hype or based on science, as well as how to evaluate the performance of Web3 companies and other Web3-relate questions at the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online in BEYOND Metaverse.
The text below has been condensed and edited for clarity.
One word to describe my latest thoughts on the recent development in the Web3 space is macro.
We’ve seen this entirely different macro environment coming and beating down on all risk assets since last November. Crypto, of course, is the quintessential risk asset, so it’s been at the center of the macro fire stream that’s been hitting almost every asset class. At this point, we obviously just saw the Fed raise rates, markets once again are trying to digest what exactly is going on and crypto is no different. What Nasdaq did, you probably know what crypto did that day.
I think there’s going to be some time until we get out of this macro environment and there’s some return to normalcy, and I think crypto can get some room to breathe again, but I think until we get past this macro instability, this is going to be what crypto looks like for the probably the next six to twelve months.
In my opinion, there hasn’t been too much money invested in Web3 if you look into the return for folks investing in January. Anybody who invested money in January has lost money because the entire industry has gone down as with almost every asset class.
If you are investing in tech generally in January, the money is also down quite a lot. Now, you could argue that’s a sign people were putting too much money into these assets, but the right way to think about it is there’s an adjustment of the price of risk because of interest rates and the macro environment.
The reality about what makes crypto and Web3 so powerful is that Web3 is pure software innovation, which means that your cost structure is extremely slim. It doesn’t require a lot of capital, you don’t need to build plants, manufacture anything, and invest a ton into hardware for the most part, so that makes the space very capital efficient.
As the valuations have come down over the last six months, what we’ve seen is a lot of late-stage capital that was really crowding the market late last year, and I felt there was way too much money in the space and teams that really didn’t need to raise as much capital as they did end up becoming overfunded.
A lot of growth capital is pulled back, if you look at the big groups that were throwing money at the top like SoftBank, Tiger, and a lot of these players, they’ve pulled back. What you have left is that most of the capital that’s still investing into crypto are the crypto native investors, who spend all their time in this industry, who understand very deeply the technology and have a better ability to discriminate where exactly the R&D money being well spent and where is it being malinvested.
So I think in the long run there’s a ton of applications that need to get built, but they have to get built at the right time with the right level of resources. Giving people a bunch of money right now when the infrastructure is not fully in place yet is mostly going to result in the money sitting around not really doing anything useful. So the pipelining of investments is very important, it’s too easy to make bad investments in Web3, which is part of why it’s so difficult to invest in this industry.
I’ll use education to describe my thoughts on Web3. What I’ve seen over the last six months is a hunger and an appetite of people in all classes and all lifestyles – consumers, business people, and executives who want to know more about the Web3 space, and they’re really driven to understand how this could transform their business.
I remember an article that I read saying 82% of CEOs felt that Web3, cryptocurrencies, and the metaverse are something they need to invest in now and over the next three years. So there is a voracious appetite to learn more about how they can do so during this time when we have advancements in speed if you think about the internet speeds that we have now. If you think about the cell phone speeds equipped with 5G, they enable a form of AI, Web3, and AR that we could never have had before, like the phone that you have in your pocket, something like this that could provide so much value and immersive experience, not only to do business but to express yourself and to share, is changing the way we communicate and it’s changing the way we do business. And that appetite is just every single person I talk to asks me what should I think about when it comes to Web3, crypto, metaverse, and how could this influence my business, so it’s education.
In terms of how to evaluate the performances of Web3 companies, user sentiment is an important part. You can’t underestimate the power of marketing of communication and value. I have two more things really well with more traditional businesses and that is the roadmap, which isn’t meaning roadmap short-term here, but we’re talking long-term, so the problem that you solve today, a need, or uncover an unsatisfied want tomorrow, so having a long road plan that gets communicated, that drives adoption, that drives user sentiments, which is going to create a really solid foundation when it comes to any type of company that is focused on Web3.
And then the last thing is going to be brass facts, kind of traditional things. If you have a utility roadmap, obviously, it’s like what’s the revenue model look like? What’s the profitability of the solution at times to invest in an organization or in a solution that may not have the highest margins? But if I’ll have user sentiment so solid in a solid roadmap, it goes down to term, instead of being a short-term win, it becomes a longer win. And there are so many examples in the market today where if you have those kinds of ingredients that really deliver a very sound solution that will frankly survive any market condition, because these cycles that we see have existed for years and the companies that survive are those that really focus on those things.
The word to describe my thoughts on Web3 is “application.” Before 2022, investments in Web3 were more focused on infrastructure. And since Ethereum2.0 promises to process 100,000 transactions per second, meaning that all the technical foundations are in place for a major explosion of applications, I think as the Web3 infrastructure matures and create real values, VCs will shift their focus on a wide variety of other applications.
For now, the real investors in the Web3 space are still some pioneers, and there’s a large number of institutional investors have not entered the space yet. But in my opinion, Web3 application-level funding in the future will reach tens of billions of dollars to support its growth.
I am optimistic about the future development of Web3, no matter in the short, medium, or long term. And I believe it’s a combination of technological innovations that can bring disruptive paradigm change, which is not simply a marginal improvement to traditional things.
Besides, since international geopolitical turbulence and structural inflation may last for the next two years, Bitcoin’s natural ability to fight inflation and protect against geopolitical turmoil could be more fully recognized by the market.
]]>Beijing-based private equity firm Hillhouse announced the launch of a new seed project named Aseed+ on Wednesday, planning to invest 100 early-stage startups in the next three years, in industries ranging from manufacturing, new energy, and new materials to biotechnology and carbon neutrality.
Why it matters: Hillhouse established its venture capital brand GL Ventures in 2020 to expand early-stage investments. This newly launched project is the private equity firm’s separate seed investment business. Amid a macro environment filled with increasing uncertainty, Hillhouse is entering into seed investment.
Details: Aseed+ aims to provide targeted support for early-stage entrepreneurs, covering integrated services including business incubation, market validation, business acceleration, and subsequent rounds of financing, according to the Wednesday statement released by Hillhouse.
Context: There has been a valuation bubble in the primary market for emerging industries in recent years, so making early-stage investments can be a better choice for investment institutions in the current climate.
Founded in 2014, crypto gaming developer and investor Animoca Brands has become one of the leading companies in the metaverse in the last two years, with the company’s portfolio growing to almost 400 investments in Web3-related projects, including Dapper Labs, Decentraland, and Axie Infinity.
Meanwhile, Animoca Brands’s valuation has soared from $10-20 million when it was delisted from the Australian Stock Exchange in 2020 to $6 billion today. Yat Siu, Animoca’s co-founder and chairman, talked about why they are bullish on Web3 gaming and whether the play-to-earn gaming model is sustainable at the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online at BEYOND Metaverse.
The text below has been condensed and edited for clarity.
Jon Russell: How do you see “play-to-earn games” at the moment? Is that completely gone, or can it come back in the next ten years?
Yat Siu: The main point of “play-to-earn games” is that there’s financial value in the transactions that you do inside games that’s visible to the end user if they so choose. One important thing to understand is that the gaming industry today is almost a 200 billion dollar business, of which roughly a hundred and ten billion dollars is being spent on growing and advertising, basically growing these games usually through app installs and so on.
The other thing is that most of the revenue comes from the conversion of less than 3%, I think it’s about 1.9% to 2.7% as the industry average at this point, that means all of you here were probably playing games on a regular basis, but the vast majority never paid for these games. So how is it possible that a game company that never charges can make money? Well, that’s the model, 97% never pay anything for the 3% that do.
And that’s one of the magic elements that rewards the 97% of players who play for free because they contribute to the network effect. Imagine you’re going to Call of Duty and you’re the only player on the field, you’re not going to pay right? You need people to shoot right? So who are the people who shoot the ones who play for free who are having fun and enjoyment, but actually, they’re working inside the game providing entertainment for the other people. And so the question then becomes how much is that worth?
In 2021 when the value increased the way that it did, people got very excited and started to run ahead of themselves in terms of market value, which by the way in all capitalist market economies happens to be the same, whether it’s real estate market overheating or when those commodity prices are overheating. Historically, you do get that element coming through when there is an open market that doesn’t mean that just because real estate prices are overheating in certain national economies that real estate as a whole is a fad, it’s a fundamental business. But people at one point were actually making almost multi-years of their annual salaries in the Philippines, but they weren’t working, so yes that’s wonderful but is that sustainable? Probably not, I mean now they’re back to something maybe more realistic, relative to the economic size that economy provides, which doesn’t mean they’re not making anything, and also more importantly, it’s a useful choice, but I can still play something, have fun and if I wish to cash out I can do so as well.
And then I go back to the example of the 110 plus billion dollars spending app installs and that’s what’s so superior about Web3 games and why we’re so bullish about the long-term future, is that money is being spent right now entirely on Facebook, Apple, Google. All these platforms that basically extract from the network. How much are they putting back into the very industry – in this case gaming – that they take profit from? Almost nothing.
Now here, the model in Web3 gaming is you’re not paying Google that money, you’re paying your players the money to stay and play the game. And maybe you cash out, but the chances of you re-contributing back into the gaming ecosystem are far, far higher. The major conglomerate whose sole purpose is to extract value from you, then the macro is that there are only millions of players in Web3 gaming today, and the trend of player growth is definitely going to continue, that’s one of the reasons why we are so bullish because from our perspective we haven’t even scratched the surface yet.
Jon Russell: Is it realistic to believe that companies in the Web3 space can overturn the kind of dominance that Facebook and Apple have? How’s this going to happen?
Yat Siu: We think that’s going to happen because it’s the better outcome for the end user.
When you think about Web2, everything was centered around user experience because the paradigm was zero value, so in a world where you’re competing with a zero cost of playing a game, zero cost of entry social network, zero cost of whatever, the only battle to be fought is based on user experience: how can we get smoother, faster, easier to enter.
And in Web3 that paradigm has somewhat come in as well, where people are like it has to be a much better user experience than Web2. How do we do that? I think the short answer is you don’t, of course, you have to make it a good experience, but the paradigm is user value. In other words, if I’m making more value from this one it doesn’t have to just be monetary value, but this value is an experience, then I will go to that option instead.
Look at a place like the Philippines for instance, where you have millions of people who have been on board, they don’t have a bank account or a credit card, they are financially excluded, and here they are using a crypto wallet that completely defeats the argument that this is so complicated.
Despite all these complications I haven’t found anyone who’s gone in and then comes out saying, “oh my goodness, this is rubbish I should never go back in there again.” Maybe there’s a few, but the vast majority of people I know are going into that rabbit hole never to come out for that very same reason: it is just a better experience and more of a value generator.
Jon Russell: I guess based on the investments that you’ve made, gaming is going to be the big bridge for Web3.
Yat Siu: I think gaming has already been a big bridge and will continue to be so. We’re also really bullish on education, but with gaming in particular there are billions of people who already have an assumption that they should own their virtual goods and that’s why it seems to be such an easy one.
And Asia as a whole is going to lead that charge, much like Asia led free-to-play because many people in Asia and the gaming world are very welcoming to it. For instance, in the West, there are quite a few gaming companies who wish to enter that space but there’s been resistance from the players.
And I think the resistance from the players comes from a different lens, which is what we’re witnessing in places like the US: a rising tide of broadly anti-capitalist sentiment. So NFTs and crypto has been viewed as sort of this capitalist rich-get-richer type of tool which is not a fair statement, but it is the belief at the moment. Whereas in Asia, it is viewed as an opportunity—it’s another avenue of capitalism, it’s another avenue of growth. I’m excited about that prospect and I think that this region could very well lead in this space in the mid-term.
]]>As the world faces an array of challenges and consumers and citizens become ever more conscious of the social and environmental impact of the companies that dominate their lives, having a robust economic, social, and governance (ESG) policy in place has become an essential component for any company looking to IPO.
At the BEYOND Expo 2022 tech conference, held online in the BEYOND Metaverse, Joe Lai, co-head of APAC IBCM and Credit Suisse; Allen Lau, Capital Market Services Group – National Leader at Deloitte; and Winnie Han, Senior Vice President of HKEX, discussed whether it’s a good time to go public in the current climate and why ESG has become mainstream.
The text below has been condensed and edited for clarity.
I think ESG is one of the hot topics in the market. It’s not just a local, but a global agenda and ESG has become an increasingly important investment area for the global investment community.
The Chinese government has a 2060 target for decarbonization, which also drives the importance of ESG in the market as well. That’s why we expect more ESG companies are coming up and drive more potential listing of ESG companies in the future.
Regarding how ESG creates challenges or perhaps helps companies when it comes to going public, ESG is at the beginning of its popularity in the global capital markets, but the professional investment community is now more familiar with the business models of these companies’ investment products and portfolios, and also impact the value of ESG on the company’s valuation, so these should be the factors that we consider during the IPO process.
However, ESG is relatively new to a number of retail investors, and in markets like Hong Kong and the mainland, which are still quite dominated by retail investors, it might take more time for them to understand and get familiar with the business models of these companies and the impact and the related investment risk.
Besides, the market doesn’t have many of these ESG companies with their shares yet, so being able to identify comparable stocks in the secondary market to conduct evaluation exercises for those potential issues will also be challenging, which also means that there still remains some uncertainty about how these companies or ESG elements will be valued when they go public.
But on the other hand, there’s actually another opportunity for these ESG companies to take advantage, being the first batch of ESG companies listed.
With the new ESG rules on all these new disclosure requirements, I don’t think it will impact the type of company that would be qualified to list in Hong Kong or people’s willingness to list in Hong Kong, because the Hong Kong market is very internationalized with ample quality, so I wouldn’t think any kind of incremental ESG requirement would actually impact the issuer’s willingness to come to Hong Kong. Therefore in terms of the types of companies, ESG disclosure rules won’t create any change to the kind of industry or the geographical origin of the listing applicants that we see here in Hong Kong.
But one thing is important: all the listing applicants will probably need to have a very strong ESG mindset because, at the end of the day, a lot of these disclosures are basically disclosing what you have done to promote the ESG concept, but what’s fundamental is actually what kind of governance the company has in place to ensure the company is compliant and can fulfill the international ESG standard.
Overall, people who wanted to come to the Hong Kong market are already aware of the importance of fulfilling certain ESG requirements, so I think we’re making a lot of progress. At least from my end as an underwriter, we don’t feel it creates any difficulty for us to pitch our client to list in Hong Kong versus other markets.
As a regulator, we have been promoting ESG among our more than 2,500 listed companies. We also introduced the ESG reporting guide back in 2013, then revised the guide in 2020 to require ESG commitment and disclosures for all environments and social PPI on a comply or explain basis.
We also provide a detailed online director training program, guidance materials, and webinars about ESG to help our listed companies build a more sustainable business sense and put their ESG principles into practice.
So the above measures continue to upgrade our market quality and show our focus on building a sustainable business and investing long-term. We have already welcomed some leading EV brands to list here in Hong Kong, for example, Xpeng and Nio. We are seeing more from the sector and the industrial value chain, including upstream players, and we think you will see more ESG-related issuers listing in Hong Kong as soon as later this year.
]]>Charles Li, former Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Exchanges and founder of Micro Connect, spoke at the BEYOND Expo 2022 about how he sees a wave of disruption on the horizon for traditional financial services in the Internet era. He also explained how Micro Connect is set to ride that wave, helping global capital access China’s small business sector in the hopes of gaining sustained growth, opportunity, and quality.
The BEYOND Expo 2022 opened online in the BEYOND Metaverse on Wednesday. As Asia’s largest and most influential tech event, the Expo will have more than 40 talks and panel discussions where leaders and experts across sectors dive deep into the topics of consumer tech, health tech, global investments, sustainability, and Web3.
Please find below the transcript of the opening day speech from Charles Li, Chairman and founder of Micro Connect. The following transcript has been edited for clarity:
Hello, everybody, my name is Charles Li. I’m Chairman and Founder of Micro Connect. I’m really very pleased to be able to speak at the BEYOND International Technology Innovation Expo in Macau, and on the subject of what’s next, I’ll be very happy to share some of the experiences and insight that we have developed over the last couple of years since I left the Hong Kong exchanges.
I have been in finance for more than 25 years now, including 11 years running the Hong Kong stock exchange. And I think that experience gave me tremendous insight as to how the financial system works in our economy and in our society.
I think that the modern Wall Street model, which has worked wonderfully for over 100 years now, is probably one of the most important human innovations in our society because we try to organize capital into big corporations and then divide them up into stocks and shares so that they can be held by the public.
On the one hand, you concentrate finances so that centralized markets are able to allocate them to important, large corporations to develop the economy. On the other hand, the shareholding system allows that capital to be distributed and held by the general public. That model works for the industrial age, because the economy at the grassroots level is unclear, and very difficult to gather information from, so you need a centralized, institutionalized, professionally staffed Wall Street to organize everything together so that information can be discovered, price can be discovered, and execution can be delivered in the traditional financial market sort of systems.
But I think what’s next is the most interesting question: whether or not what we have seen happening in e-commerce, in social media, whether the revolutionary changes and disruptions that we have witnessed over the last two decades could potentially similarly disrupt the traditional Wall Street model.
I think we all know that in the Industrial Age, we all needed to go to a department store, because the department store aggregated all the goods and merchandise together, so that we all went to the central market to buy what we needed. But in the Digital Age, the Internet Age allows that distribution and commerce to be conducted online via digital technologies, and then allows logistics to be developed so that we are able to actually shop at home and have our goods delivered, and have marketplaces, online marketplaces, to allow money and goods to be exchanged. That’s a fundamental disruption of traditional finance and traditional commerce.
And I believe that we are now coming to the age where similar disruption is going to happen to financial services as well. Because at least in China today, the entire economy has largely become cashless. What that means is that most of the financial activities in China, even at the smallest business level, are completely digital, which means that they’re completely transparent. With the digitalization of the businesses at the grassroots level transparent and digital, the question becomes do we still need to force the little guys to organize into big corporations?
And many of them never will. Millions of them never will.
China has 17 million small businesses, and I think it is time now for us to actually have the opportunity to completely change the face and change the structure of financial services, to allow finance for the first time to be actually connected as sustainable capital to provide growth, and a firm growth and CapEx and development at a small businesses level.
And more importantly, that allows the global investment community to be able to finally access the longest sustained growth opportunity and quality returns from a blue ocean of small businesses that have not yet currently been available because of the concentrated nature of our financial services. So at Micro Connect, we’re trying to innovate a complete new way of delivering financial services.
Instead of using the traditional product, the traditional discovery processes, and the traditional delivery processes, we actually adopted a completely new way of doing it. It’s what we call a new operating system, a micro star, and has five key elements. It’s a new product. There are two arms, and there are two maps. That really is the new micro star operating system to do finance differently.
First of all, why did we want to focus on small businesses? It is very clear, small businesses largely reside in the consumer sector. And that entire sector and the small businesses contribute to close to 60% of China’s GDP, 70% of government revenues, and close to 80% of employment. So it is clearly the sector where the most vibrant part of China’s economy currently exists and grows, and capital needs to find a way to access that tremendously important sector.
And we set up our mission to achieve that. The way to do so is, as I said, a new system that we call micro star, which consists of five key elements: one product, two arms, and two maps. The one product is called a daily revenue contract, DRC. This is not debt, because as investors we have to share the downside.
And it’s not equity, because equity is not economically feasible for us to execute the small levels on a large scale. But it is a daily direct contractual arrangement to pay back your revenue, in exchange for an upfront CapEx investment. So it’s called a daily revenue contract, DRC.
It’s a completely new asset class that is fit for purpose, and very helpful to small businesses. Meanwhile, the daily recovery of returns allows the investors to take transparent, distributed, reliable, risk-managed and diversified high-quality returns.
So it’s really a win-win for all, kind of a new product.
But that product’s unique nature requires two very different systems of ensuring delivery, and on that distributed level we have to be able to collect on the investment.
So there are two arms, one arm is in charge of collecting money digitally, directly from the revenue from the little businesses. And that sort of a digital account split system in the various consolidated payment systems in China is highly advanced and highly feasible and is actually being practiced by many industries, so we just intend to utilize the existing technology and systems to allow our investors to be able to secure the daily digital connection of returns.
On the other hand, when the money is collected, we want to make sure that we have a modern new kind of exchange, where the underlying infrastructure is a blockchain, allowing us to authenticate that every single dollar that is collected every day into the system is irrevocably recorded in the blockchain, and belongs to the investors who choose to invest in any particular segment, in any particular store, for any particular period.
So that ultimate penetrated regulatory oversight, through technology, is the way that we are able to do this on scale, with efficiency, with very minimal human and costly management and delivery, monitoring, and enforcement systems, which would not be feasible economically for the small businesses.
The newest micro star system also has two what we call maps, basically navigation. And those two maps are specialized terms, essentially describing an engine that allows us to deploy such huge numbers of a small investment individual size on a large scale with efficiency; the other map is allowing us to find ways to make sure that we are able to accurately project economic and financial performances of particular kinds of businesses and particular locations so that investments can be rolled out not only with scale and efficiency, but with accuracy and quality, so that the investment can continue on a sustainable basis.
This new way of doing things has never been tried before but because of the digitalization of China, it is highly feasible.
We have started the journey, we have invested in over 1,000 stores in China across over 100 different sectors, largely focused on the four large industries: retail, consumer, services, and cultural activities. Those are the sectors where it’s the basic needs of everyday life of the Chinese consumers, despite all the challenges and despite all the perceptions that small businesses in China are risky individually and may not necessarily be investable.
As a whole, if we’re able to build a portfolio large enough, diversified enough, distributed enough, we will truly be able to find a new way of investing, a new paradigm of financial services, that is transparent, distributed, diversified, and sustainable. Most importantly, because the fact that we are able to do so in such a distributed manner – impacting potentially hundreds of thousands, and potentially millions of small businesses – our aspiration is that in the next 10 years, we are able to create and fund a million small businesses with a million annual revenues, which in turn will be able to create and maintain at least 10 million jobs.
This sort of an investment, new investment paradigm, will likely allow us to promote impact investing, ESG mapping, so that through investing, we’re not only doing good, we can also do well.
And that is really, is our dream and that is something that we’re now on the journey to achieve, and I think that is only possible because of the deep and widespread digitalization and technology evolution in China particularly in the payment industry. I think with that, we can see that China’s consumer sector, which may be the furthest away from Wall Street in the traditional financial services methodologies, thanks to technology, probably will become the closest and most likely going to become the most successful, because they are able to give us a way to invest simply, more efficiently, more equitably, and more inclusively.
And I hope that we will be back again to update you on our progress, and I hope that we will be able to travel on that journey together with many of you who have similar dreams and aspirations.
Thank you very much, we really appreciate the opportunity to speak at this great expo.
]]>As more and more people pay attention to long-term investment, investing in ESG has become an important trend in the era of sustainable development, Hillhouse Capital founder Zhang Lei said on Wednesday during the BEYOND Virtual event. Zhang added that sustainable investment not only requires investment institutions to consider ESG in their investment targets but also requires long-term capital to support outstanding companies.
On Wednesday, the BEYOND Expo 2022 opened online at BEYOND Metaverse. As Asia’s largest and most influential tech event, the Expo will have more than 40 talks and panel discussions where leaders and experts across sectors dive deep into the topics of consumer tech, health tech, global investments, sustainability, and Web3.
Please find below the transcript of the opening day speech from Zhang Lei, founder and CEO of Hillhouse Capital. The following transcript has been edited for clarity:
Good morning! It’s my great honor to meet all of you at BEYOND Expo, 2022. The theme of the expo is “What’s Next”. I’m invited to share my opinions about the future. In the face of current changes and uncertainty, everyone hopes to find the “gold key” to solve the problems.
We actually see more and more people pay closer attention to long-term development, climate change, and social responsibility. ESG has become a certain future. According to the data statistics, the global ESG investment scale in 2020 reached around $100 trillion, a 14-fold increase compared with that of the year 2006.
Hillhouse Group, as an innovative industrial investment institution, is always insisting on the philosophy —“to invest for a better world.” On the one hand, by exploring optimized resource allocation, we pursue environment, justice, society, and other long-term values. On the other hand, we choose fellow travelers with great insight to achieve a win-win result of social value and economic value through sustainable innovation.
I believe the most sustainable ESG investment will surely become a more important trend and create great value. So, in this era of sustainable development, what can we institutional investors do? I’d like to share my ideas with you.
First, the foundation should be strengthened. Just like the basic support of new infrastructure, the entire internet networking and data center, for example, to the digitization of industrial manufacturing industry and intelligent industry, the ESG also needs the support of infrastructure, including the establishment of data quantification, information disclosure, and valuation systems.
Institutional investors can, during the management of investment process and the selection of investment targets, take the ESG into consideration, and through self-build capacity and investment cooperation, especially the digital capacity, to build the ESG infrastructure in your investment ecosystem and the sustainable database.
We can introduce a digitized ESG performance system for many corporate investees, which will help relevant corporate investees to collect their ESG data and do industrial benchmarking. Thus, an information disclosure system that meets international standards will be established to help investees lay a foundation for sustainable development by leading investees to collect and accumulate data.
Meanwhile, as an Asian framework to strive for evaluating carbon emission reduction performance, we at Hillhouse also adopt the quantification method. As for reducing carbon emissions, based on the carbon criterion of product and technology, taking the growth prospects and our carbon emission anticipation, the whole carbon emission reduction pattern is formed. By estimation, our understanding about each carbon emission reduction path and efficiency helps the group discover the industrial value and promote new perspectives.
And under the background of carbon peaking and carbon neutrality, only by making the carbon emissions clear can we shoot the arrow right at the target of its reduction.
Hillhouse invested in the first provider in China who focuses on the solutions to carbon emission management software and consulting, deploying infrastructure service of carbon neutrality to help more enterprises make carbon emission reduction plans with a high input-output ratio, to realize efficient tracing and disclosure of carbon emission reduction results.
Second, innovation should be insisted on. We always believe that technology is an ultimate solution to sustainable development. During this process, what institutional investors should do is to support technology innovation and green technology with long-term funds in terms of key domains and key phases of sustainable development, to encourage and attract more institutions to play a role in and support technology development. Thus, an assembly effect of innovation will be formed to finally solve social and environmental problems during the development process.
In terms of carbon neutrality, for example, by comprehensive research and profound insight and selection of industries with key influence on and significance to the promotion of carbon neutrality, we discovered those excellent companies that can solve their key problems by technology and business model innovation. We invest in them, empower them, and continuously help them to grow.
We recently invested in a company developing perovskite and gold laminated photovoltaic cells. We help the group overcome the “Death Valley” of primitive technology innovation from 0 to 1.
And based on our DVC, Deep Value Creation, a low-corruption after-investment service system, we support their R&D engineering talent expansion and help their connection of industrial resources so that they will indulge in the industrialization of photovoltaic industry.
Finally, talents should be focused. Talents are always precious resources. The booming ESG market will surely trigger heavy demands for ESG talents. To my knowledge, the total number of American companies that hired Chief Sustainability Officers in 2020 exceeded that of the previous three years.
As for industries, we published a research report to list investment opportunities in 8 key industries realizing carbon neutrality, including electricity, transportation, industry, new material, architecture, agriculture, negative carbon emission, information communication, and digitization.
Numerous professionals are needed. According to International Energy Agency, up to 2030, clean energy investment driven by carbon neutrality will create 14 million working posts. As the data show, in the past 5 years, recruiting numbers for green skills globally increased by 8%, several times that of the GDP growth rate, while obvious vacancies show in terms of talent supply.
In the future, like finance and HR departments, the carbon management department will become a basic functional department. We need to pay special attention to the topic of sustainable development and put forward new requirements to the talents.
The ESG involves climate, society, governance, technology, and even finance, so it’s not enough to master the knowledge of only one industry. Talents shall have international insight. Those compound innovative Carbon Talents with multi-subject knowledge and insight will definitely become the real core in the process of sustainable development.
Last year, Hillhouse, together with more than 10 investees, including CATL, LONGi, BYD, and Carbonstop, which are also representatives in the field of carbon neutrality, held special carbon neutrality job fairs in several universities across the country.
This year, we will join hands with 42 manufacturing companies to hold joint on-campus job fairs. We hope that with our talent empowering service, we can help investees find better Carbon Talents to provide core impetus to the sustainable innovation of enterprises.
Sustainable development is related to the future of every one of us. Hillhouse is willing to play a key role in the promotion of prosperous sustainable development and be a partner in the practice of ESG.
Thank you!
]]>Chinese short video platform Kuaishou has undertaken an organizational restructuring in recent weeks after setting up a new management committee in early August.
Why it matters: Kuaishou’s latest reshuffle, one of a number of organizational adjustments the company has made over the past year, reflects the firm’s emphasis on e-commerce and local life services as major avenues for new growth.
Details: CEO Cheng Yixiao will lead Kuaishou’s e-commerce unit from mid-September, in a sign of this sector’s growing importance within the company. The Douyin rival has also upgraded its local life services unit, carving it out as an independent business department and placing it under the leadership of Xiao Gu, Kuaishou’s senior vice president and former head of the e-commerce sector.
Context: Advertising revenue generated by its e-commerce business has allowed Kuaishou to grow its income despite a sluggish macro environment in which most Chinese internet companies have seen a sharp decline in advertising.
As Chinese fast-fashion platform Shein continues to see rising sales in the US, the company plans to build three large distribution centers in the country, which could reduce shipping times to its customers by three or four days, The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.
Why it matters: The plan to build more large-scale distribution centers in America highlights the importance of the US market to Shein, as well as the firm’s phenomenal growth in the region. A flexible supply chain has been a key factor in Shein’s success to date, and the brand needs shipping services to keep pace with its soaring sales. The expansion will also allow Shein to retain and build up its competitive advantage as it faces more competition.
Details: Shein is planning to open a new 1.8 million square foot distribution center in southern California by the spring of 2023, along with a third distribution center being planned in the Northeast, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal.
Context: Known for its ultra-low prices and fashionable clothing and accessories, Shein’s focus on the overseas e-commerce market has seen it become one of the hottest retail companies in the world, but it is also now facing unprecedented competition.
Correction: an earlier version of this article misspelled George Chiao.
]]>Alibaba’s budget shopping app Taobao Deals has adjusted its key business metric twice in less than six months, Chinese media outlet LatePost reported on Tuesday. In April, the app elevated gross merchandise value (GMV) as its most important metric and pivoted away from focusing on user growth after reaching 300 million annual buyers. Two months later, it changed again to focus more on the monthly active users (MAU) instead.
Why it matters: Taobao Deals is facing a challenging situation as it competes for growth. The platform reached over 300 million users this year. But with Alibaba Group unlikely to commit the same scale of resources to the growth of the platform as it has in the past, the standalone app will need to find new ways to expand its market share and achieve profitability amid pressure from strong competitors, such as Pinduoduo.
Details: The significant shift in the key metric means Taobao Deals focuses more on increasing user retention and activity than user growth. LatePost reported that the department responsible for user growth has also been reduced.
Context: In less than two years, Taobao Deals has achieved annual growth of more than 200 million active buyers — an impressive result for a mature company like Alibaba. All of the other Alibaba’s e-commerce sites have been seeing annual active consumer (AAC) growth of less than 20 million every quarter since the first quarter of 2019.
Chinese tech majors Tencent and ByteDance were the top-grossing publishers in global mobile app stores for the first half of 2022, according to a report by business insight firm Sensor Tower.
The global mobile app market is highly centralized, with 91% of revenue coming from the top 1% of publishers. Over the years, such centralization has been shrinking; the market share of the top 1% has hit its lowest point since 2019.
Why it matters: Tencent and ByteDance have dominated the global mobile markets for years with their trending game titles and the internationally phenomenal video app TikTok. The two majors have invested heavily outside of China, launching new services and acquiring studios in recent years.
Details: By analyzing 900,000 publishers on the Apple App Store and Google Play, Sensor Tower found that the top 1% of publishers accounted for 79% of all downloads and 91% of revenue on the two platforms in the first half of 2022. The remaining 99% shared 21% of the market.
Context: Revenue from mobile apps saw a 2.2% decrease semi-annually (in Chinese) in the first half of 2021, a total of $65 billion less than in the second half of 2021. It is the first fall in revenue since 2019, according to Sensor Tower.
Nearly a quarter of China-founded VCs make the Hurun Global VCs list.
Some 25 China-founded venture capital funds made it to the Hurun Global Venture Capitalists 2022 Half-Year Report released on Tuesday, which selected 121 VCs that have captured the largest number of unicorns and gazelles in their portfolios. (A gazelle company is a fast-growing enterprise with at least $100,000 in base revenue and four years of sustained revenue growth.)
US investment firms accounted for 71% of the list, while Chinese firms took 21%, and Singapore firms took 3%. Two Chinese VCs made it into the top 10. Tencent ranked fourth, behind Sequoia Capital, Softbank, and Tiger Global, investing in 122 unicorn and gazelle companies. CICC ranked fifth on the list with 115 investments.
The listed Chinese VCs invest in diverse industries, with biotechnology, smart manufacturing, and e-commerce as key industries that many pay attention to. The top 10 Chinese VCs on the list are Tencent, CICC Capital, Hillhouse Capital, Qiming Venture, CITIC Capital, Alibaba, Shunwei Capital, Yunfeng Financial, Dinghui Investment, and 5Y Capital.
Here’s what you need to know about the five top-ranking Chinese VCs from the list: Tencent, CICC Capital, Hillhouse Capital, Qiming Venture, and CITIC Capital.
Ranking: #4
Tencent Investment is a corporate venture capital arm of the Chinese tech giant Tencent. The firm has helped fund more than 1,300 companies, with a preference for investment in social networks, online games, e-commerce, and healthcare sectors.
Key bets include Pinduoduo, DiDi, Keep, Xiaohongshu, Webank, HeyTea, XSKY, and Discord.
Facing regulatory pressure and a slowing economy, Tencent Investment has been divesting recently, selling its stakes in Chinese e-commerce giant JD, Southeast Asian tech firm Sea, and the A-shares listed Huayi Brothers. There have also been reports that Tencent may sell most of its shares in Meituan. However, Tencent has officially denied it, with representatives saying that Tencent hasn’t set any target amount for reducing holdings and the company is not under external pressure concerning its portfolios.
In addition, Tencent itself has also suffered a cut in holdings by its majority shareholder Naspers Group this year.
Ranking: #5
CICC Capital has invested in 115 unicorns and gazelles, as defined by Hurun, an increase of 55 compared to six months ago.
Beijing-based CICC Capital was a late participant in the venture capital party, forming in 2017, but has grown into one of the leading private investment managers in China. According to enterprise data site ITjuzi, CICC’s investments mainly focused on the healthcare and advanced manufacturing sectors. CICC has invested a total of 118 companies in these two sectors, with total investment hitting nearly RMB 12 billion ($1.72 billion).
CICC has invested in unicorn companies such as United Imaging and Horizon Robotics, as well as gazelle companies such as CH Biomedical and Dera.
Ranking: #12
Founded in 2005 by Chinese investor Zhang Lei, Hillhouse Capital’s investments included some leading technology companies worldwide, such as Uber, Airbnb, Tencent, JD, and Meituan. The firm also focuses on the health tech industry with investment in biotechnology companies such as BeiGene. Hillhouse Capital has participated in a total of eight fundraising rounds for BeiGene since 2014.
Hillhouse Capital’s top 10 stocks are Yatsen, Vipshop, iQiyi, Ke Holdings, Cytek Biosciences, JD, Gossamer Bio, IMAB, On Holding, and BeiGene. Seven of these are US-listed Chinese firms.
Since the first quarter of 2021, the firm has reduced its holdings of iQiyi, Pinduoduo, Uber, Uxin, Tuya, and Huazhu Hotels Group, while increasing its holdings in Yatsen, as well as Vipshop, Legend Biotech, and Alibaba during the past year.
As of the second quarter of this year, Hillhouse Capital held 64 stocks, with biotech, cloud computing, new energy, and other technology-based enterprises accounting for more than half of its total.
Ranking: #24
Founded in 2006, Qiming Venture now manages 11 US Dollar funds and seven RMB funds, with $9.4 billion in capital raised. Qiming Venture focuses on investing in healthcare, technology, and consumer industries, primarily involving itself in Series A and Series B funding.
According to Hurun, Qiming Venture has funded 59 unicorns and gazelles. Xiaomi, CanSinoBIO, Meituan, Bilibili, and Roborock have all received investments from Qiming Ventures.
Ranking: #25
Hong Kong-based CITIC Capital manages over $17 billion of capital. The firm has invested in 52 global unicorns and gazelles, as defined by Hurun, with medical technology, semiconductors, and intelligent manufacturing among its most promising investment directions.
The firm’s prominent portfolio hits include Express, Airdor, Quicktron, and XtalPi.
]]>On Thursday, the annual World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) officially opened in Shanghai. This year’s conference places a heavy focus on the trendy topic of the metaverse, aiming to demonstrate the integration of artificial intelligence with the metaverse and to look at what the future holds for these technologies.
Ken Hu, rotating chairman of Huawei, said at the opening ceremony that AI can only realize its greatest value when it is deeply integrated into operation scenarios across all industries. He also called for building a computing power network, connecting different data and computing centers across the nation. Meanwhile, he pointed out that because powerful machine learning models are costly to develop and time-consuming, industries and academic researchers should team up and collaborate to cut down “duplicated investment and development.”
Robin Li, co-founder and CEO of Baidu, discussed various AI implementations the search engine company adopts, such as autonomous driving and content generation. He said some of the video content on Baidu are generated by AI based on published articles. Those AIGC (AI-generated content) costs only a tenth of the cost of human-created content and a fraction of the speed.
“AI is critical in the metaverse due to the metaverse’s needs to adapt to changing environments and user preferences,” Qualcomm president and CEO Cristiano Amon said at the ceremony, adding that the processing of massive data in the metaverse will push the expansion of AI processing capability to edge computing, which will result in more large-scale deployment of AI applications.
One of the highlights of WAIC 2022 on the ground is the “Metaverse Core Exhibition,” which focuses on the AI+Metaverse industry ecosystem, and in particular, examines the two dimensions of virtual experience and reality display. Some of the key technology displayed include various chips for AI models and servers, large-scale machine learning models, autonomous vehicles, and surgical robots, among others. Here are some of the highlighted products from our visits to the event:
Artificial intelligence has entered the era of developing large-scale machine learning models since 2018, integrating smaller and dispersed models into a powerful one.
In 2020, OpenAI’s NLP model GPT-3 kickstarted the AI large-scale model arms race. Google, Microsoft, Meta (formerly Facebook), Huawei, Alibaba, Huawei, and other tech giants have all become involved in it.
Baidu’s large-scale model “PCL-BAIDU Wenxin” is a generalized model developed by Baidu for various general scenarios and combined with the capabilities of the Baidu Knowledge Graph. It is widely used in the energy, finance, and aerospace sectors. Baidu also uses the model to offer AI painting to consumers.
Taking the creative service platform “Yige” as an example, it can generate paintings based on the user’s text inputs. Two minutes after TechNode’s reporter entered “Godzilla in the Moonlight,” the system created seven different styles of paintings and labeled corresponding use cases.
This application is currently at the internal testing stage and is expected to be open to users for payment in the future, according to the official introduction. Compared with foreign AI painting products such as Google’s Imagen, Baidu’s “Yige” has a strong ability to generate images for different styles, and it also understands Chinese semantics better.
As data become a key resource in society, many industries are facing new challenges in ensuring cybersecurity and data security. Against this backdrop, privacy-preserving computing can be a key technology to balance data security and data circulation, involving numerous professional technology stacks.
In July, Chinese fintech giant Ant Group officially made its privacy-preserving computation framework “SecretFlow” open source for global developers.
According to Ant Group’s on-site staff at WAIC, SecretFlow is an integrated work of privacy-preserving computation technology and application that the Chinese tech giant has precipitated for six years, incorporating more than a thousand patents and covering all mainstream privacy computing technologies. SecretFlow has made a major breakthrough in Trusted-Environment-based Cryptographic Computing (TECC), which can achieve modeling and analysis of one billion dense samples per hour.
Shanghai-based Biren Technology, a domestic high-end GPU chip unicorn revealed its first general-purpose GPU chip series, the BR100 at this year’s WAIC.
The BR100 is based on the original chip architecture developed by Biren Technology, with a 7nm process that can accommodate 77 billion transistors, and this product is the first to adopt chiplet technology and PCIe 5.0 PCI Express, as well as supporting CXL protocols in China.
A representative from the firm told TechNode that the BR100 will be major a rival to the forthcoming Nvidia H100, which will be affected by a new US ban on exports of high-end GPU chips to China, though Biren is yet to confirm when its new chip will go into mass production.
This chip will be mainly deployed in data servers to provide computing power for large-scale AI training scenarios, smart cities, and the metaverse.
As a company that’s gone global from Shanghai, Westwell Technology uses artificial intelligence and driverless technology to explore developments in autonomous logistics.
The company’s Q-Truck, the world’s first intelligent battery-swap driverless commercial vehicle, can fully recharge in as little as 6 minutes without the need for a human to intervene in the process.
According to Westwell, the Q-Truck has a load capacity of 80 tons and a battery life of 200 kilometers. What’s more, the fleet system is able to manage multiple unmanned trucks at the same time, achieving mixed operation between driverless and manned vehicles due to the integration of digital systems.
As one of the leading industrial AR companies in China, HiScene presented its AR glasses HiAR H100, AR remote communication and collaboration platform HiLeia, and AR real-time spatial editor PinNotes at WAIC this year.
The majority of HiScene’s user cases are in factories and various manufacturing industries. Helping technicians to do more accurate remote inspections and other remote duties.
With PinNotes, users can directly add associated virtual content to reference objects in the physical world via AR glasses or cellphones, which will then be saved to the AR platform and can be read out for re-editing and viewing, bringing users an experience of spatial interconnection, virtual-real integration and intelligent interaction.
]]>Chinese e-commerce company Pinduoduo reported RMB 31.44 billion ($4.69 billion) in revenue in second-quarter earnings, a 36% growth from last year, and far exceeded the expected average of $4.1 billion, compiled by Yahoo Finance.
The Nasdaq-listed company also saw an impressive 268% growth in its quarterly net income, bringing in RMB 8.9 billion.
Why it matters: The company attributed its good performance to “consumption recovery” in recent months as China refrained from extended and widespread lockdowns. During the earnings call, Pinduoduo said revenue growth came from increases in online marketing services and transaction services and that the growth in profitability is due to a few “short-term” and “one-off” external factors that may not repeat in the future.
Details: Pinduoduo’s almost three-fold increase in net income in the second quarter is mainly due to the improvement of gross margin and some short-term factors. “So, for the past quarter alone, our profitability was mainly attributable to several external factors, mostly short-term or one-off in nature,” said Vice President Liu Jun.
Context: Compared to the two leading Chinese e-commerce giants, Pinduoduo handled the pandemic resurgence relatively well. Alibaba and JD recorded flat revenue and 5.4% growth year-on-year, respectively, in the second quarter, and both had their slowest growth rates in history.
Meituan is planning to merge its e-commerce business units and the group buying unit known as Meituan Select, Chinese media outlet Caijing reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: Facing fierce competition in its core business, Meituan is combining two relatively weaker and similar units to concentrate on new growth points. In April, Meituan Select suspended operations in four loss-making western Chinese provinces and Beijing as the community group-buy sector continues to consolidate.
Details: Meituan Select and Meituan’s e-commerce unit both started operations in 2020. The two units are fighting an uphill battle to compete with more established players — Select competes with Pinduoduo, while the e-commerce unit faces giants like Alibaba and JD. The two businesses share some supply chains, the report said, and the merger could result in better collaboration.
Context: Meituan faces heated competition in its core business of offering on-demand life services. Moreover, Meituan’s food delivery business –one of its main income sources, accounting for more than half of total revenue – has a low operating margin, less than one-sixth the size of its in-store, hotel and travel business.