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Alibaba: The Giant of e-Commerce

There could be some restriction, but Amazon is a B2C and Amazon is the market leader in eCommerce space in India. They rules are not strict and can be circumvented. They even recently announced to invest $2b to beef up its logistics.

True, i never said Amazon doesnt operate in India bro. They do operate but as on a B2B e-commerce sector, not B2C.
Reason they have been complaining about such a restrictions in India fora while now, since it limits their business there.

Amazon urges government to allow 49% FDI in e-tailers selling directly to consumers - Economic Times

Amazon talks with Indian government on FDI restrictions | Forex Magnates


However, i dont see this as a bad thing though, its good India's government enacted such a law to restrict foreign e-commerce companies from operating in the B2C sector, since allowing such behemoths like Walmart, Amazon, Alibaba, Ebay etc to operate in this field will all but decimate India's own domestic companies. Since India ecommerce companies are still very small/insignificant when compared to these foriegn behemoths hence they will stand little to no chance from competing with them in the Indian market due to their small size/insignificant capital etc.

Indian e-commerce companies need time and protection to grow to a significant/reasonable level, where they can start challenging/having a chance to compete with these companies on a level playing field. so in this regard, i will say India shouldn't lift up this ban of foreign ecommerce company in B2C sector, not until India companies have grown up to a reasonable level/size.:enjoy:

Moreover Flipkart is India's largest ecommerce company followed by Amazon. Amazon is not the first. So this is a good start for India.:cheers:
 
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Yes Amazon does operate in India, I never said otherwise, but they donasdo a


True, i never said Amazon doesnt operate in India bro. They do operate but as on a B2B ecommerce sector, not B2C.
Reason they have been complaining about such a restrictions in India fora while now, since it limits their business there.

Amazon urges government to allow 49% FDI in e-tailers selling directly to consumers - Economic Times

Amazon talks with Indian government on FDI restrictions | Forex Magnates


However, i dont see this as a bad thing though, its good India's government enacted such a law to restrict foreign ecpommerce firm from operating in the B2C sector, since allowing such behemoths like Walmart, Amazon, Alibaba, Ebay etc to operate in this field will all but decimate India's own domestic companies. Since India ecommerce companies are still very small/insignificant when compared to these foriegn behemoths. Indian companies need time and protection to grow to a significant/reasonable level, where they can start challenging/having a chance to compete with these companies on an even playing field. so in thisn regard, i will say India shouldn't lift up this ban of foreign ecommerce company, not until India companies have grown up to a reasonable level.:enjoy:

Moreover Flipkart is India's largest ecommerce company followed by Amazon. Amazon is not the first. So this is a good start for India.:cheers:

Amazon, Ebay have significant presence in India. Amazon particularly is growing wild...don't be surprised if Amazon buys Flipkart sometime down the lane. This happened in UK...Amazon brought Book depository there to become the market leader in UK. The Indian government move is not to protect Indian eCommerce players, but to protect small retailers and farmers. Hence Indian government didn't allowed Walmart and Tescos but allowed Amazon and Ebays of the world.
 
Alibaba's Jack Ma Is Named Businessman Of The Year By Forbes China

The entrepreneur who for much of the world personifies China’s Internet boom has been named “Businessman of the Year” for 2014 by the Chinese-language edition of Forbes.

Alibaba Group’s record listing at the New York Stock Exchange last year was among the factors behind the selection of company chairman Jack Ma for the annual honor, the magazine said in its latest issue.

Albaba’s e-commerce-fueled advance has turned out well for Ma financially, too. The former English teacher is China’s richest man, estimated by Forbes to be worth $23 billion. That is third in Asia behind Hong Kong’s Li Ka-shingwith an estimated $31 billion and Lee Shau Kee at $25 billion.

Click here for a link to a package of “Businessman of the Year” reports by Forbes China.

Forbes China is published under a license from Forbes Media.

QQ%E5%9B%BE%E7%89%8720150104132813.jpg
 
Why has Alibaba not yet entered Indian markets? India is one fastest growing eCommerce markets in the world.
I had read somewhere that Alibaba is negotiation with one E-commerce of India called snapdeal. But so far haven't heard from them again.
 
I had read somewhere that Alibaba is negotiation with one E-commerce of India called snapdeal. But so far haven't heard from them again.

I guess it plans to invest in Snapdeal through Softbank of Japan. But you recognize that investing in another's business is not the same as starting your own business.
 
Baidu and Tencent’s ecommerce joint venture with Wanda nabs $161M funding


Josh Horwitz


2 hours ago

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Today Wanda Group, the Chinese commercial real estate firm best known for its movie theater chains, announced that its joint ecommerce venture with Tencent and Baidu closed a RMB 1 billion (US$161 million) funding round. The two investment funds, Xude Rendao and Centec Networks, will take 2 percent and 3 percent equity in the company, respectively. Wanda Group states that Tencent and Baidu now each hold a 15 percent stake in the venture, which is now valued at RMB 20 billion (about US$3.2 billion).

The Wanda-Tencent-Baidu ecommerce venture (which Wanda refers to as Wand E-commerce in its release) was publicly announced back in August. Wanda maintained a 70 percent stake in the US$814 million venture, with Tencent and Baidu splitting the remainder evenly. While the companies gave few specific details regarding the venture’s execution, their public statements repeatedly mentioned the importance of online-to-offline commerce. When one factor’s in Baidus commitment to maps and beacon technology, WeChat’s commitment to payments and social, and Wanda’s entertainment properties, it’s easy to speculate – but hard to know specifically – how the venture might play out.

Following the news of the venture’s formation, Wanda has kept quiet regarding its development. But in December it purchased a stake in 99Bill, an Alipay competitor. That would appear to confirm Wanda’s interest in integrating online payments into its offline services, and challenge previous assumptions that Wanda would be hopping aboard the WeChat Payments train.

Despite how little is known about the joint venture, Wanda looks set to own a bevy of virtual real estate in addition to its physical real estate. “O2O places a greater importance on the link between people and services than traditional commercial methods, with the size of the market considerably greater than just physical transactions,” its statement reads. “Wanda possesses the world’s largest offline consumer network, with 1.5 million customers in 2014 and an estimated 6 billion customers by 2020. If Wanda E-commerce can combine its offline and online resources effectively, it has the potential to become a new Internet giant with incredible potential.” In other words, Wanda is thinking big.

Wanda adds that it will announce an additional funding round in late 2015.
 
Alibaba's Jack Ma Is Named Businessman Of The Year By Forbes China

The entrepreneur who for much of the world personifies China’s Internet boom has been named “Businessman of the Year” for 2014 by the Chinese-language edition of Forbes.

Alibaba Group’s record listing at the New York Stock Exchange last year was among the factors behind the selection of company chairman Jack Ma for the annual honor, the magazine said in its latest issue.

Albaba’s e-commerce-fueled advance has turned out well for Ma financially, too. The former English teacher is China’s richest man, estimated by Forbes to be worth $23 billion. That is third in Asia behind Hong Kong’s Li Ka-shingwith an estimated $31 billion and Lee Shau Kee at $25 billion.

Click here for a link to a package of “Businessman of the Year” reports by Forbes China.

Forbes China is published under a license from Forbes Media.

QQ%E5%9B%BE%E7%89%8720150104132813.jpg

Jack Ma - the world's richest extraterrestrial. :rofl: I kid. I kid. Cheers to Mr. Ma. :cheers:
 
Why has Alibaba not yet entered Indian markets? India is one fastest growing eCommerce markets in the world.
Ali baba is used mostly by whole salers so end consumers do not normally know about it
 
Alibaba has platform of Taobao and Tmall for end consumers
Taobao is for small seller to sell while Tmall is for band owner to run their online shop..

Ali baba is used mostly by whole salers so end consumers do not normally know about it
 
It seems like Ebay or Taobao where business guys could use this platform to sell their own goods.
Amazon used to sell things of their own..

Amazon sell things even now, but not in India. In India Amazon operating on the same business model as Ebay

Ali baba is used mostly by whole salers so end consumers do not normally know about it

Alibaba is B2C, B2B and C2C.
 
I see..
Alibaba is a group name.
It also has a well konwn platform Alibaba as B2B, where Alibaba group start up.
Then it has Taobao as C2C and Tmall as B2C...
So Alibaba is a big group with many business model.
Some may mix the Alibaba group with Alibaba B2B platform .

Amazon sell things even now, but not in India. In India Amazon operating on the same business model as Ebay

Alibaba is B2C, B2B and C2C.
 
Alibaba establishes $129 million fund in HK for startups
2015-02-03

E-commerce magnate Jack Ma has not only set an example to aspiring Hong Kong entrepreneurs but also offered to help them with funding and, more importantly, a ready platform to tap the vast mainland marketplace.

In an earlier statement, New York-listed and Hangzhou-based Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, of which Ma is founder and chairman, said that it has established a HK$1 billion ($129 million) fund to help Hong Kong entrepreneurs set up startups on the mainland company's e-commerce platform.

The fund was set up with the help and advice from Hong Kong's former chief executive Tung Chee-hwa. In an earlier interview, Tung said that Ma was "deeply concerned about the situation in the special administrative region and was willing to help out".

What is more, Alibaba said it will provide internship opportunities for 200 graduates in Hong Kong each year to work in the company's e-commerce ecosystem.

Ma said that the newly launched fund aims at motivating young people to develop their creativity and entrepreneurship so that they can benefit from the many opportunities brought about by modern technology.

The core purpose of the fund is to help Hong Kong entrepreneurs build their startups on Alibaba's e-commerce platforms, including Taobao, through which they can sell their products and services to mainland consumers.

The fund, expected to be launched later this year, will invest in companies started by young people after selection by a panel of investment managers and advisers who run the program. The entrepreneurs would have access to capital and technical assistance as they develop their businesses.

While in Hong Kong, Ma seemed unperturbed by the controversies at home and in the United States that have been troubling his company and sent its share prices tumbling on the New York bourse.

"Alibaba is still a young company. We are only 15 years old. And we have been making mistakes," he said during the speech to Hong Kong youngsters.

At home, Alibaba is entangled in a dispute with the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, which has questioned the quality of the products sold on the company's platforms. In the US, Alibaba is facing the possibility of a class-action lawsuit filed by disgruntled investors alleging discrepancies in the company's IPO prospectus.

According to Alibaba's prospectus, the company generates more than 80 percent of its total revenue from online advertising, transaction commissions and online shop rentals.

The business model has made it rather difficult for Alibaba to control the source and quality of the products sold by registered merchants on its many platforms, industry experts said.

What is more, the experts noted that further growth for the e-commerce market from its present size is becoming increasingly difficult. Ma is widely seen to be shifting the focus of Alibaba's business to financial services by leveraging on its large customer base.

Yi Huanhuan, head of the research department of Hongyuan Securities Co Ltd based in Beijing, said: "Ma is making long-term arrangements for the development of the group. After all, I think the explosive growth period of Alibaba's e-commerce business sector is over, while there is huge potential in Ma's online finance business."

Several law firms in the United States have accused Alibaba of making misleading statements and concealed the news about regulatory scrutiny before its IPO in September, as the SAIC noted a closed-door conference in July with Taobao's top executive, criticizing the latter's efforts to combat fake products.

Ma regains rich list top spot

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd Chairman Jack Ma regained his spot as Asia's richest person on the back of a higher valuation for the company's finance affiliate ahead of a stock sale that will also create a dozen new billionaires.

Zhejiang Ant Small & Micro Financial Services Group Co, which owns payments processor Alipay, is valued at about $50 billion, according to sources close to the operation.

Ant Financial is weighing a private placement before going public in 2016, and details are yet to be finalized.

The latest valuation for Ant Financial boosted Ma's fortune by about $10 billion to $36.4 billion as of Friday in New York, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The new billionaires from the bigger valuation include the e-commerce giant's Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Lu and Chief People Officer Lucy Peng.

Lu and Peng, both co-founders of Alibaba, each has a fortune valued at about $1.8 billion.
 
I can appreciate the good intention by Ma. Unfortunately it's more and more clear that kindness from mainlanders is being perceived as weakness in Hong Kong. Not only will they not accept your help, they will turn around and bite your hands. Think about the Jihadists. Will they stop killing you just because you are nice to them and you want peace? Of course not! Lunatics are the same everywhere regardless of what they believe. Once brainwashed, they will not stop until you think/behave the same way they do.
 
Alibaba pushes its mobile OS with $590M investment in phone maker Meizu

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China’s ecommerce titan Alibaba started the week by announcing a US$590 million investment in phone maker Meizu. It gives Alibaba a “minority” but undisclosed stake in the smartphone company.

Alibaba says it and Meizu will “collaborate at both strategic and business levels” in areas such as “ecommerce, mobile internet, mobile operating system, and data analysis.” In addition, Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao estores, which collectively have 334 million active shoppers, will play host to Meizu’s online stores.

That mention of a mobile operating system refers to Alibaba’s YunOS, which first launched in 2011 on a variety of phones from third-party brands. However, Alibaba’s OS has struggled to take off as a popular alternative to Android. In October 2014, Alibaba and Meizu tied up for the first time to make a special edition of the Meizu MX4 than runs Alibaba’s OS rather than Android. That phone sells for RMB 1,799 (US$295) in China.

Going mobile
Alibaba’s Meizu investment comes after other major Chinese web companies have aligned themselves with phone companies, such as Qihoo’s US$400 million investment in Coolpad, and Tencent’s ongoing partnership with Xiaomi.

Meizu was the first Chinese startup phone maker to make international headlines in the early days of smartphones, but its star soon faded as arch-rival Xiaomi grew quickly to become a new Chinese tech giant. Meizu is now battling for attention amidst an array of upstart phone brands in China, such as Oppo and OnePlus.
 
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