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JD.com Revenue Beats as Singles’ Day Bargains Drive Spending

JD.com Revenue Beats as Singles’ Day Bargains Drive Spending

(Bloomberg) -- JD.com Inc. posted fourth-quarter revenue ahead of estimates, as Singles’ Day promotions helped the Google-backed online retailer fend off competition despite a decelerating Chinese economy.

Sales for the three months ending December hit 134.8 billion yuan ($20.2 billion), surpassing the average projection of analysts. The Beijing-based company expects revenue this quarter of 118 billion yuan to 122 billion yuan, versus the 118.9 billion yuan anticipated. JD’s shares climbed as much as 10 percent in New York.

The result comes at a critical point for the e-commerce giant, which has invested heavily in warehouses and distribution networks but now faces a slowdown in Chinese consumer spending. Its business model relies on a rising middle class willing to pay more for faster delivery and other services, but trade tensions and a slowing domestic economy have driven users to cut-price rivals like Pinduoduo Inc. Annual active buyers reached 305.3 million in the year ending December, rising just 100,000 from the figure disclosed during the previous quarter.

JD’s outperformance on the topline, however, underscored the resilience of overall online sales versus physical retail, and the company’s ability to drive business through promotions.

"We are cautiously optimistic for the second half of this year when the government’s various incentive policies begin to take effect," said JD.com Chief Financial Officer Sidney Huang, adding that the slowing economy had impacted the sale of goods like electronic appliances. "We should see better cashflow this year."

JD.com Revenue Beats as Singles’ Day Bargains Drive Spending

In the fourth quarter JD recorded its slowest ever increase in gross merchandise value, which refers to the total value of goods sold on its platform. It will stop giving this figure on a quarterly basis and instead release it once a year. But Huang said that rising costs in research and development and the expansion of the company’s 7Fresh supermarkets would be more carefully managed in 2019.

“What most people care about is the top-line growth and direct sales,” said Eric Wen, founder and CEO of Blue Lotus Capital Advisors, adding that his company’s market tracker showed strong Chinese e-commerce sales during 2019’s first quarter. “Overall, it was a good result.”

JD, whose billionaire founder Richard Liu was accused of rape last year though no charges were brought, has yet to post an annual net income. It’s taken steps to improve its bottom line by spinning off its finance division and selling shares in a logistics unit to help fund growth. It’s aiming to cull about 10 percent of senior staff. But the company has also pledged to hire 15,000 new employees at a time when many analysts are predicting slowing sales growth.

“Our recent move to trim the number of high-level executives is not about reducing expenses,” a JD spokeswoman said in an emailed statement. “The primary goal is to ensure our leadership team is staffed only with those individuals most qualified to help drive JD.com’s business growth.”

To help oversee its expanding logistics network, JD said it’s set up a property management fund with GIC Pte, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, with committed capital of 4.8 billion yuan. JD will sell facilities to the firm carrying a gross asset value of some 10.9 billion yuan, freeing up capital for investment in growth areas, it said. The sales are expected to be largely completed this year.

“It can add a lot of value,” Wen said. “But I think you have to be careful. These kinds of related party transactions will need a lot of disclosure.”

JD.com Revenue Beats as Singles’ Day Bargains Drive Spending

JD’s net loss for the quarter ended December hit 4.8 billion yuan. However, the company booked a surprise profit on an adjusted basis.

“JD has seen continued solid growth in 2019 and reported solid Gross Merchandise Value growth in January,” CICC analyst Natalie Wu said in a note to clients before the earnings. “It remains to be seen whether the robust data is a recovery sign, or mainly due to the Chinese New Year effect.”

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: David Ramli in Beijing at dramli1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg