Previously, U.S.-based businesses were only able to buy items on
Alibaba.com.
Roughly one-third of buyers on Alibaba.com are U.S.-based. More
than 95% of sellers come from China. This plan will open up
markets to U.S. merchants in countries including India, Brazil
and Canada. U.S. merchants will also be able to sell to other
U.S.-based businesses.
Alibaba's pitch to U.S. small businesses comes as the company
faces lean e-commerce revenue growth, which has been further
threatened by the U.S.-China trade spat and increased
competition from rivals such as recently listed Pinduoduo Inc <PDD.O>.
Alibaba, which does not sell inventory of its own, hopes to win
over local U.S. businesses as their marketplace platform of
choice by offering small- and medium-sized businesses global
selling power. Alibaba highlighted its interest in winning over
manufacturers, wholesalers and distributors.
Last month, the company launched an English-language website for
its Tmall Global marketplace aimed at merchants, in an attempt
to double the number of international brands on the platform to
40,000 in the next three years.
Rival Amazon, in addition to selling its own inventory, allows
third-party vendors to list products for sale on its website.
Those vendors may store their products in Amazon's warehouses or
ship directly to customers.
The business-to-business e-commerce market (B2B) is valued at
$23.9 trillion, according to the U.S. International Trade
Commission. The business-to-consumer e-commerce market is valued
at $3.8 trillion.
Alibaba said U.S. sellers will have to pay a membership fee of
roughly $2,000 to get their online stores on Alibaba.com up and
running, in addition to any marketing and advertising costs.
Amazon charges third-party sellers by the month or per item.
"You get to compete and act like a multinational company in a
way you've never had the tools or technology to be able to do
so," John Caplan, head of North America B2B at Alibaba Group,
told Reuters.
The United States is the first market where the company is
focusing on globalizing supply, Caplan said, but Alibaba has a
"very clear approach to other markets."
(Reporting by Melissa Fares in New York; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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