Amazon shifts focus to China with store on Alibaba platform

US online retailer lists food, shoes, toys and kitchenware on Alibaba’s Tmall.com

Chinese online retail giant Alibaba’s founder Jack Ma as he smiles waiting for the trading to open on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York.
Chinese online retail giant Alibaba’s founder Jack Ma as he smiles waiting for the trading to open on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York.

Amazon has opened a store on Alibaba's Tmall. com, seeking to reach Chinese shoppers as the web retailer tries to expand in the world's second-biggest economy.

"We welcome Amazon to the Alibaba ecosystem, and their presence will further broaden the selection of international products and elevate the shopping experience for Chinese consumers on Tmall," said Candice Huang, a spokeswoman for Hangzhou, China-based Alibaba.

Imported food, shoes, toys and kitchenware are listed on Amazon’s store, one of many on Tmall that sell brand-name goods to Chinese shoppers via the Web.

Amazon has struggled to replicate its success with American consumers overseas.

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International sales made up 38 per cent of the Web retailer's revenue in 2014, compared with 48 per cent in 2009. While Alibaba mainly caters to businesses seeking to buy wholesale goods, Tmall is a portal for sellers seeking to market goods directly to Web shoppers in China.

Ecommerce in China is projected to reach $1.01 trillion in 2018, more than doubling from $426.3 billion in 2014, according to Emarketer Craig Berman, a spokesman for Seattle-based Amazon, referred inquiries to company representatives in China who weren't immediately available for comment.

"Everyone knows that Chinese e-commerce is dominated by Alibaba and at some point you go fish where the fish are," said Sucharita Mulpuru, an analyst at Forrester Research.

Amazon's international business is concentrated in the UK, Germany and Japan, and the company has struggled to increase sales in China, where it has invested in building warehouses to ship merchandise.

Bloomberg