Temu proprietor misses gross sales forecast as China financial system slows | EUROtoday

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PDD Holdings, the Chinese proprietor of on-line buying platforms Temu and Pinduoduo, reported disappointing gross sales and revenue, as Chinese customers continued to carry again amid an financial slowdown.

US-listed shares of the e-commerce big fell almost 11% on Thursday following the announcement.

It comes after PDD’s essential rivals in its dwelling market, Alibaba and JD.COM, additionally posted underwhelming ends in the September quarter.

Consumer confidence in China has taken a success from a disaster within the nation’s property sector and better ranges of youth unemployment.

In the quarter that led to September, PDD’s income reached 99.35bn yuan ($13.7bn, £10.9bn). That is beneath analyst forecasts of round 102.8bn yuan.

It is the second quarter in a row that PDD misses analyst estimates, after years of quick development.

“Our topline growth further moderated quarter-on-quarter amid intensified competition and ongoing external challenges,” mentioned Jun Liu, VP of Finance of PDD Holdings.

While PDD’s Chinese e-commerce platform, Pinduoduo, has change into common due to its give attention to low-cost and closely discounted merchandise, a rising variety of rivals have been adopting comparable methods, triggering a value conflict.

Meanwhile, its thriving world e-commerce platform, Temu, can be going through issues abroad.

“There’s uncertainty on potential tariff change and increasing pushback from more countries related to its ‘cheap’ prices,” mentioned Alicia Yap, an fairness analysis analyst at Citi, earlier than the outcomes had been introduced.

Last week, Vietnamese authorities mentioned Temu and Shein wanted to register with the federal government earlier than the top of the month or face a ban.

In October, Indonesia ordered Google and Apple to take away Temu from their app shops in a bid to guard the nation’s personal retailers.

The EU has additionally launched an investigation into whether or not the Chinese e-commerce platform facilitated the sale of unlawful merchandise that might result in steep fines.

And, within the US, President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to boost tariffs on imports of Chinese items, probably eradicating Temu’s aggressive benefit by driving the costs of its super-cheap merchandise.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5yxzqdq2qqo