Alibaba Singles Day sales frenzy surpasses records | mcarchives.com

Sunday 11 November 2018

Alibaba Singles Day sales frenzy surpasses records

E-commerce giant Alibaba has set new sales records on Sunday for its biggest shopping day, the annual Singles Day. The Chinese company hit a record $1bn in sales in 85 seconds, and then just shy of $10bn in the first hour of the 24-hour spree. Alibaba also beat its 2017 revenue total, $25.3bn, with several hours still remaining.

Online discounts have been offered on 11 November, Alibaba's informal holiday for singles, since 2009. The shopping festival is projected to hit over $32bn this year, according to a report by the global app market data provider App Annie.

Alibaba Singles Day sales frenzy surpasses records | mcarchives.com

The event was kicked off on Saturday with a gala featuring US singer Mariah Carey, a Japanese Beyoncé impersonator and a shoe-shopping-themed Cirque du Soleil performance. Alibaba invented the occasion to celebrate the unattached as an antithesis to the romantically involved on Valentine's Day.

It is now the world's biggest online sales event and last year's total was more than Black Friday and Cyber Monday's totals combined, according to Bloomberg. Some 180,000 brands are available in the shopping blitz, including top technology companies Xaomi, Apple and Dyson.

Alibaba Singles Day sales frenzy surpasses records | mcarchives.com

Last year, the Chinese company expanded the event to the Western market, with downloads of its app AliExpress surging in the US and UK. The shopping frenzy has broken world records in e-commerce sales - surpassing last year's record at 17:34 Hong Kong Time (10:34 GMT).

However, observers believe as the event matures, its growth rate will slow down. Alibaba has also faced new challenges this year, such as new rivals in the market, a slowing economy and its stock dropping 16% thanks to China's trade war with the US.

The November sale event is expected to founder Jack Ma's last at the helm of the company. The current chief executive will take over as schairman next year, Alibaba announced in September.

(BBC News)



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