NetEase to spend $11 billion on goods for e-commerce unit Kaola

epa03945500 Chinese workers sort the packages at a hub of China Post's express delivery service in downtown Wuhan city, central China's Hubei province, 11 November 2013. China's e-commerce giants hold the online sales promotions kicking off on 11 November 2013 which is called the 'Singles Day'. China's biggest online shopping site, Taobao.com, which operates Tmall.com, had raked in revenues of more than 26 billion yuan (Euro 3.18 billion) from 18 hours of sale, according to media reports.  EPA/STR

Bloomberg

NetEase Inc., China’s second-largest video game publisher, is deepening a push into e-commerce with plans to increase spending on products from
the US, Europe and Japan to sell to
local consumers.
The company’s Kaola e-commerce business will buy about $11 billion of inventory over the next three years from the US, Europe and Japan to woo customers with everything from Dutch baby formula to Japanese cosmetics, Kaola Chief Executive Officer Zhang Lei said. The number will probably be higher after factoring in purchases from Australia and South Korea.
Best known for games, including bringing global title Overwatch to the Chinese market, NetEase is bolstering growth by tapping into local demand for established international brands. Overseas health supplements and cosmetics have gained favour in recent years. While Alibaba Group Holding dominates e-commerce in the country by acting as a digital landlord to sellers, Kaola buys almost all its inventory directly from companies overseas, bypassing local distributors and middlemen to lower costs.
“This industry could be worth 500 billion yuan ($75 billion) by about 2021,” Kaola Chief Executive Officer Zhang Lei said. “This is a new race course—Kaola wants to be a major leader here and capture much of the market share from the existing leaders.”
Kaola is the biggest player in China’s cross-border e-commerce sector with about 24 percent of the market in the first half of 2017, according to data from iiMedia Research. That’s ahead of Alibaba’s Tmall Global with 20 percent and Vipshop Holdings Ltd.’s 16 percent.
In the next three years, Kaola will buy $3 billion of products from US companies, Lei said. She singled out health supplement chain GNC Holdings Inc. among its favoured suppliers. This comes on top of recent announcements and in April that the company would spend $4.4 billion in Japan and $3.5 billion across Europe respectively over the same period. Further funds would be spent buying stock from Australia and South Korea, she added.
Bhavtosh Vajpayee, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, is currently projecting NetEase to generate $9 billion in e-commerce sales across its platform over the next three years. Cross-border e-commerce may triple to 15 percent of the total e-commerce market within five years if it’s not curbed by new regulations, according to McKinsey & Co.
E-commerce has rapidly transformed from a side business into a core part of NetEase’s future. The division that houses Kaola now accounts for 21 percent of revenue. The company doesn’t disclose specific sales for the business.

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