Alibaba strengthens its local services to combat Meituan. Troubled retailer Suning gets a $1.36 billion bailout from Alibaba and a provincial government. Chinese regulators to increase penalties for misleading price practices. Nayuki Tea goes public in Hong Kong. Logistics firm Yunquna raises funds to expand overseas network. 

Alibaba gets competitive with Meituan

Retail
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China’s e-commerce and retail market offers a fire hose of products, choices, business models, rapidly changing content, and more. Here’s what you need to know about China’s online retail market for the week of July 1 to July 7.

E-commerce giant Alibaba has reconstructed operations to establish a new life services division. The new division includes mapping platform AutoNavi, online travel agency Fliggy, food delivery app Ele.me, and local services connector Koubei. The move will help Alibaba to compete with Meituan, a local service giant in China. (SCMP)

Suning bailed out

Troubled retailer Suning will receive an RMB 8.8 billion ($1.36 billion) lifeline from an investment group that includes Alibaba, rivals Midea and Haier, and the Jiangsu provincial government. The coalition will hold 16.96% of equity and Suning’s founder Zhang Jindong will lose majority control of the company. (Bloomberg)

No more price manipulation

China’s top market regulator further restricted e-commerce platforms from manipulating prices on their platforms price manipulation . In a July 2 directive, the State Administration for Market Regulation specified that it will increase penalties for price dumping, price hikes, and disregarding government price controls. (Government statement, in Chinese)

Nayuki Tea IPOs

Nayuki Tea, a chain that offers modern tea-based drinks, raised HK$4.84 billion ($623 million) in a Hong Kong IPO on June 30. The tea store, which now also sells coffee-based drinks, competes with rivals like fruity beverage chain HeyTea and coffee chain Luckin. The company’s shares fell more than 10% on the morning of its first trading day. (Yicai, in Chinese)

Yunquna to expand overseas network

Chinese logistics firm Yunquna announced on June 29 that it had raised $150 million in its Series D. Citic Capital led the investment and China Renaissance served as the financial advisor. The company said it will use the funds to expand its overseas destination ports and improve shipping and delivery speed. (Caixin Global)

Luckin discloses fraud details

Chinese chain store Luckin Coffee released an amended 2019 financial statement on June 30, the first filing since it admitted fraud in 2020. The company booked a loss of $454 million in 2019 and inflated revenue by nearly RMB 2.12 billion. (TechNode)

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