L'Oreal, Nestle score big at Alibaba's Singles' Day
shopping fest
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[November 12, 2019] By
Brenda Goh and Josh Horwitz
SHANGHAI/
HANGZHOU, China (Reuters) -
Chinese shoppers snapped up food supplements, facial masks and baby milk
powder at the world's largest shopping festival, with brands such as
L'Oreal <OREP.PA> and Nestle <NESN.N> among the biggest winners, Alibaba
<BABA.N> data showed.
The Chinese e-commerce giant's annual Singles' Day shopping blitz on
Monday brought in a record 268.4 billion yuan ($38.38 billion) in sales,
more than six times the amount of online sales made in the United States
on Black Friday last year.
It kicked off this year's 24-hour shopping bonanza with a live
performance by U.S. pop star Taylor Swift followed by the live-streamed
marketing of over 1,000 brands.
Alibaba said on Tuesday that 299 brands surpassed 100 million yuan in
gross merchandise value, including LVMH's <LVMH.PA> Givenchy, home
appliance manufacturers Dyson and Philips <PHG.AS> and sportswear maker
Under Armour <UAA.N>.
Fifteen brands made over 1 billion yuan in sales, it said. These
included Huawei Technologies, Apple <AAPL.O>, Nike <NKE.N>, Xiaomi Corp
<1810.HK> and Fast Retailing's <9983.T> Uniqlo.
Food supplements were the most popular import product, while sales of
makeup, diapers and face wash were also strong.
Sales growth for the annual shopping festival this year eased to 26%,
the weakest since the event started in 2009, in a reflection of how
e-commerce sales in China have been slowing.
Analysts, however, said the growth rate had slightly beaten their
expectations, saying that more aggressive promotions, a focus on
attracting more customers from rural cities, and even the overall
slowing economy might have helped as people sought to buy goods at
discounted prices.
Citic Securities had predicted a 20-25% expansion, while Daiwa Capital
Markets had an estimate of 23%.
"What's happened is that you've had a lot of consumers this year being a
little bit more careful about their purchasing because the economy's
slowing down," said Ben Cavender, managing director of consultancy China
Market Research Group.
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Staff members are seen
at the booth of Nestle promoting its baby food and NAN infant
formula products at a maternity and baby industry fair in Beijing,
China July 25, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
"I think this year especially, people were kind of waiting for Singles' Day and
kind of waiting to make some of those medium-sized purchases that they didn't
want to pay full price for."
The event has been replicated at home and abroad, with Singles' Day promotions
found at rivals such as China's JD.com <JD.O> and Pinduoduo <PDD.O> as well as
South Korea's 11thStreet and Singapore's Qoo10.
JD.com, which started its sales campaign on Nov. 1, said transaction volume
exceeded 204.4 billion yuan over the eleven days.
Uniqlo owner Fast Retailing said the online event also boosted visits to its
physical stores, of which it has 700 across China, adding that its Heattech
thermal underwear and Ultra Light Down jackets were among its most popular
items.
(GRAPHIC: A look at Alibaba's Singles' Day shopping event - https://graphics.reuters.com/SINGLES-DAY-ALIBABA/0100B30E24T/index.html)
(GRAPHIC: Alibaba's Singles' Day sales -
https://graphics.reuters.com/SINGLES-DAY-ALIBABA/0100B30E25B/SINGLES-DAY.jpg)
(Reporting by Brenda Goh in Shanghai and Josh Horwitz in Hangzhou; Additional
reporting by Sophie Yu in Beijing and Ritsuko Ando in Tokyo; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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