Economic security
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CHINA ECLIPSES EUROPE ON
RUSSIAN E-COMMERCE MARKET
By Delphine d'Amora
The St. Petersburg
Times
Published: December
19, 2014 (Issue # 1842)
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China's yuan headed for its worst day in six years on Dec. 9, leading
losses among emerging Asian currencies.
Photo: Pixabay
Europe is rapidly
losing its share in the Russian e-commerce market to Chinese firms whose
steady growth in the region has been fueled by this year's headlong
devaluation of the ruble.
About 70 percent of
packages shipped to Russian consumers from abroad this year came from China,
up from 40 percent in 2013, a report by industry watcher East-West Digital
News (EWDN) found.
With the ruble having
fallen nearly 40 percent against the euro this year, Russian consumers are
ever more conscious of price — and if it's price you care about, Chinese
retailers take the cake.
For this reason, even
as they dominated by number of packages shipped, Chinese players' relatively
cheaper goods took only 50 percent of total revenues in the cross-border
sector this year, the study found.
While money was many
consumers' main concern, some have deliberately turned away from Western
vendors amid political tensions between Moscow and the West, said Adrien
Henni, chief editor of EWDN.
Russia's annexation of
Crimea in March and ongoing support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine
has set off a deluge of international repercussions, including U.S. and EU
economic sanctions against Russia and Moscow's retaliatory ban on a range of
Western food imports.
But geopolitical
tensions aside, well-known European brands are still doing well on the
Russian market, said Yakov Geronimus, business director for China at Russian
Internet giant Yandex.
Where China dominates
is with customers who search for generic items — such as "buy dress
online" — rather than specific brands, he said.
China's growth in the
sector was driven by massive Chinese online marketplace AliExpress and
Chinese sellers operating through Internet auction house eBay, the report by
EWDN found.
AliExpress is now the
single largest foreign player on the Russian e-commerce market with 35
percent of cross-border sales, business daily RBC reported last month, citing
data from analytics company RBC Research.
In
second place came eBay with 30 percent of the market followed by U.S.
e-commerce titan Amazon with 7.5 percent, the report said.
AliExpress shouldn't rest on its laurels, however,
as other Chinese producers and brands may soon be making their own bids to
conquer the Russian market.
"Over the next few years … those who are now
selling their products on online marketplaces will strive to open their own
websites and independent advertising campaigns for Russian consumers,"
EWDN's Henni said.
Although diminished consumer spending power has
slowed sales growth this year, Russia's cross-border e-commerce market still
expanded from about $3 billion in 2013 to $5 billion in 2014, according to
EWDN.
Other estimates are even higher. Denis Lyudkovsky,
the president of Russia's Association of Online Vendors, or AKIT, said
earlier this month that cross-border trade would grow to $7 billion and account
for 30 to 35 percent of the total e-commerce market by the end of the year.
AKIT expects cross-border e-commerce trade will
continue growing at a rate of more than 100 percent a year, claiming 60
percent of the total Russian e-commerce market in 2015.
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