This Week in Asia

<![CDATA[Chinese consumers spend US$10 billion in half an hour in Alibaba's Singles' Day shopping event]>

Chinese consumers collectively spent US$10 billion in just under 30 minutes at Alibaba's Singles' Day shopping extravaganza, scooping up everything from consumer electronics to luxury items and even cars. The figure is almost one-third of last year's final tally of US$30.8 billion.

Alibaba's Singles' Day shopping festival, which falls on November 11 every year, is the world's largest of its kind. The festival will be closely watched this year as a barometer for consumer sentiment 16 months into a US-China trade war and amid a slowdown in the Chinese economy.

While the company's e-commerce marketplaces Tmall and Taobao are traditionally the mainstays of the annual shopping extravaganza, this year's festival will also include business-to-business e-commerce platforms like AliExpress as well as Lazada, Alibaba's Southeast Asian e-commerce subsidiary, as the company taps international consumers.

Alibaba Group Holding is the parent company of the South China Morning Post.

Hong Kong, the US, the UK, Australia and Japan were among the top overseas buyers in early business. At the open, the top 5 regions in mainland China in terms of transactions were Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shanghai and Shandong.

Opening sales were brisk, with Alibaba beating 2014's gross merchandise volume (GMV) total of 57.1 billion yuan (US$8.16 billion) in just over 17 minutes this year.

GMV for the Double 11 Global Shopping Festival is the total value of orders settled through Alipay on Alibaba's consumer-facing core commerce platforms, as well as Lazada and AliExpress, within a 24-hour period on November 11. It is reported on a real-time basis and includes shipping charges paid, according to Alibaba.

Apart from Alibaba, rival sites such as JD.com and Pinduoduo have also launched their own Singles' Day campaigns, to entice buyers to spend on their platforms.

Singles' Day got its name from its date. Written numerically as 11/11, the date looks like "bare branches", a Chinese expression for the single and unattached. As a kind of antidote to the societal pressures of being in a relationship, many of China's singles began splurging on themselves on Singles' Day, which became seen as a type of anti-Valentine's Day.

Alibaba held its first Singles' Day shopping event in 2009 as a promotional campaign, but these days it has morphed into a show of China's collective consumer spending power. Last year, consumers spent 4,000 times more than they did during the first ever Singles' Day event.

Ahead of this year's shopping extravaganza, consumers seemed to be as eager as ever to snap up deals. Prior to the beginning of the festival on Monday, 64 brands, including Apple, Dyson, Lancome and L'Oreal, had already achieved 100 million yuan in pre-orders, Alibaba said.

Eager consumers also snapped up over 15,000 bottles of Kim Kardashian's KKW Fragrance perfume, after the reality TV superstar conducted a live-streaming session on Tmall last Thursday to promote the brand.

A recent survey by management consulting firm Oliver Wyman showed that over 50 per cent of consumers plan to spend more during this year's Singles' Day festival than last year, with an expected 10 per cent increase in spending.

"Singles' Day continues to maintain robust momentum among consumers, with over 60 per cent being more excited about this year's festival than they were last year," the company said in a press release. Some 60 per cent of respondents also indicated that they planned to buy imported products despite the ongoing trade war.

Cainiao, Alibaba's logistics affiliate, has an inventory of 500 million tons of goods, ready to be dispatched to consumers shopping on Singles' Day. On this day each year, Alibaba pushes its technology and services, such as its cloud computing systems, to the limit.

This year, consumers in China's less-developed areas and smaller cities are expected to help drive sales, according to PwC China consumer markets leader Jennifer Ye.

Consumers in China's lower-tier cities, such as Guilin, Luoyang and Sanya, demonstrate a higher "willingness to pay" when compared with those in more affluent cities like Xiamen and Zhuhai, as people in smaller Chinese cities increasingly seek an upgrade in their quality of life and experience, according to PwC's Global Consumer Insights Survey 2019 China Report.

For more insights into China tech, sign up for our tech newsletters, subscribe to our Inside China Tech podcast, and download the comprehensive 2019 China Internet Report. Also roam China Tech City, an award-winning interactive digital map at our sister site Abacus.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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