JD.com
JD.com, Inc., also known as Jingdong (Chinese: 京东; pinyin: Jīngdōng), formerly called 360buy,[3] is a Chinese e-commerce company headquartered in Beijing. It is one of the two massive B2C online retailers in China by transaction volume and revenue, a member of the Fortune Global 500 and a major competitor to Alibaba-run Tmall.[4] When classified as a tech company, it is the largest in China by revenue, and 7th in the world in 2021.[5]
Not to be confused with JD Sports.Company type
6 June 1998
Beijing, China
Brazil, Cambodia, Chile, China, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Indonesia, Laos, Norway, Peru, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands
CN¥951.592 billion (US$149.325 billion, 2021)[1]
CN¥4.141 billion (US$649,805 million, 2021)[1]
-CN¥4.467 billion (-US$701.015 million, 2021)[1]
CN¥496.507 billion (US$77.913 billion, 2021)[1]
CN¥245.572 billion (US$38.536 billion, 2021)[1]
310,000 (Dec 2020)[1]
The company was founded by Liu Qiangdong on 18 June 1998, and its retail platform went online in 2004. It started as an online magneto-optical store, but soon diversified, selling electronics, mobile phones, computers, and similar items. The company changed its domain name to 360buy.com in June 2007 and then to JD.com in 2013. The latter purchase is understood to have cost $5,000,000.[6] At the same time, JD.com announced its new logo and mascot. It is partly owned by Tencent, which has a 15% stake in the company.[7]
JD.com has invested in high tech and AI delivery through drones,[8] autonomous technology and robots, and possesses the largest drone delivery system, infrastructure and capability in the world. It has recently started testing robotic delivery services and building drone delivery airports, as well as operating driverless delivery by unveiling its first autonomous truck.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16]
History[edit]
The company was founded in 1998 as Jingdong[17] Century Trading Co., Ltd selling magneto-optical in Beijing, China.
In 2004, the company's B2C site went online as jdlaser.com, starting their internet operations and competing directly with others firms like Alibaba. The Shanghai subsidiary was established in 2006, while the Guangzhou subsidiary was established in 2007. The company began using the domain name 360buy.com, and the name was changed to Jingdong Mall in June 2007.
In 2010, 360buy.com started an online bookstore. CDs, DVDs, and ebooks were added in the following months. The following year, 360buy.com launched a platform named "POP" for brand owners. en.360buy.com was launched for the international market in October 2012.
In 2013, the company's domain name was changed to JD.com.
Tencent acquired a 15% stake in JD.com in 2014 by paying cash and handing over its e-commerce businesses Paipai & QQ Wanggou plus a stake in Yixun to JD.com, to build a stronger competitor to Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.[18] That same year, a subsidiary's lawsuit against JD.com was accepted by court.
In 2015, JD.com launched its Russian site aimed to expand its business globally. Walmart sold its Chinese e-Commerce business Yihaodian to JD.com in 2016 in exchange for a 5.9% equity stake valued at $1.5 billion.[19] In October, Walmart filed 13G, revealing it nearly doubled its stake in JD.com to 10.9%[20]
In February 2017, Walmart increased investment in JD.com to 289.1 million shares, or 12.1%.[21] In April, JD.com participated in the Salone del Mobile, featuring the installation Matrix, at the Università Statale of Milan.[22] JD.com invested $397 million into Farfetch, a marketplace for luxury brands, in June as part of a new strategic partnership.[23] JD.com and Walmart launch the first annual JD-Walmart 8 August shopping festival in July.[24] JD.com also committed to further develop China's parcel delivery efficiency, investing US$101 million to subsidize merchants on JD.com for warehousing and distribution costs, for the upcoming 2017 Singles' Day.[25] In November, JD.com achieved a sales record of US$19.1 billion.[26]
In 2017, JD.com established an anti-corruption coalition with other Chinese internet companies which aims to blacklist individuals engaged in illicit behavior from seeking employment elsewhere in the internet sector.[27]
JD.com opened its first chain of high-tech supermarkets 7Fresh[28]in January 2018.[29] That same month, JD.com invested in Vietnam's online retail service tiki.vn for $50 million.[30] In February, JD.com invested in France & the Uk,[31] and also released its spin-off JD Finance, raising $2.1 billion in a capital raise.[32] Metcash partnered with JD.Com in May to sell groceries in China.[33]
JD.com acquired Jade Palace Hotel in Beijing for US$400M in 2019.[34] The company also partnered with Jiangsu Xinning Modern Logistics to automate its logistic services.[35] In November, JD.com removed all items related to Houston Rockets in response to the organization's general manager posting a tweet about Hong Kong.[36]
In April 2020, the company confidentially files for a second listing in Hong Kong.[37] In August,
the company reported net profits of $2.3 billion for the Q2 of 2020, and it reached a customer base of 417 million users.[38] JD.com also announced that would be investing $830 million in its JD Health unit provided by private equity firm Hillhouse Capital.[38] In October, Ping An Bank partnered with JDD to launch a joint credit card.[39]
In January 2022, JD.com partnered with Shopify to begin selling Shopify's brands via its cross-border e-commerce site in China.[40]
Price war with Dangdang[edit]
Price war in physical books[edit]
On 10 December 2010, JD's founder Liu Qiangdong announced through his Weibo account that every book sold on JD.com would be priced at 20 percent cheaper than its competitors. Although Liu did not give a specific name of his opponent, journalists thought Dangdang was JD.com's obvious rival in the field of online book sale.[48] Dangdang is an electronic business platform well known for its core business, selling books, and ranked first among all online B2C booksellers of 2010 in China.[49]
The price war between JD.com and Dangdang started on 14 December; users of JD.com found out that the books were cheaper than Dangdang. In response, Dangdang also began to offer discounts to customers such as 30 yuan off when they spent 199 yuan or more. On the morning of 16 December, Dangdang stated that the company would invest 40 million Chinese yuan to give discounts to customers. As a result, JD.com launched the second promotion to sell books at a lower price than Dangdang that afternoon.[50] On the same day, Liu Qiangdong posted through his Weibo account that JD.com would give coupons instead of reducing prices to protect the benefits of publishers, which marked a phase of the price war.[51]
Liu said that JD.com could not get supplies from some book publishers due to contracts between Dangdang and the publishers. From Liu's perspective, Dangdang were not allowing publishers to supply books to JD.com. However, the publishers denied the allegation.[52] Su Huiyan, a business consultant of iResearch pointed out that JD.com wanted to attract more customers by the price war.[53]
In November 2011, the second stage of the competition was triggered by Suning.com, a B2C shopping platform, announcing they would expand their business to include bookselling. JD.com and Dangdang competed with each other on lowering the prices of books again. JD.com provided its customers with a 10 percent discount on books while Dangdang sent promotional messages to its users stating that they would be offered 200 yuan if they purchased books for more than 100 yuan total. Dangdang used the slogan "争当败家子" meaning 'striving to be a spendthrift' aiming to increase their website traffic.[54]
The sudden increase of orders not only caused network errors but also postponed transits of books, which fueled customers’ complaints.[55]
Price war in electronic books[edit]
On 21 December 2011, Dangdang launched its electronic book service online. More than 50,000 e-books were available on dangdang.com with over 90 percent of the e-books sold at 30 percent of the price of the physical books.[56] JD.com started the e-book selling business online on 20 February 2012, and provided customers with more than 80,000 electronic books. JD.com also offered discounts to the buyers, this situation was the unfoldment of a new round of price war.[57]
On 17 April 2013, most of the e-books on Dangdang's website were free for users to download. Consequently, JD.com priced 50,000 electronic books at 0 yuan to match. Liu Zhenyou, an author, criticized that both of them had raised their brand awareness, but their actions caused damage to book publishers.[58]