| |
| |
 |
| |

|
| |
|
| |
|
SHANGHAI : US auction site eBay announced a partnership with China Post and the US Postal Service in its latest bid to re-establish itself in China, where the market is dominated by homegrown rival Taobao.com.
Under the plan, eBay hopes to woo Chinese merchants by developing shipping programmes that make it easier for them to sell to US consumers, eBay said in a statement.
"USPS and China Post are leaders of global logistics and transportation industry. The partnership will definitely help eBay," Jeff Liao, eBay's Greater China chief executive and head of Asia-Pacific cross-border trade said in a statement.
The partnership centres on an e-commerce express delivery service to the US that will be run by China Postal Express and Logistics Corporation, part of China Post, and which will include online tracking systems, the statement said.
The US auction site largely withdrew from China years ago after being overtaken by Taobao, part of China's largest e-commerce firm, the Alibaba Group, which also operates business-to-business marketplace Alibaba.com.
The American firm shut down its Chinese consumer website in late 2006 and folded its China operations into Eachnet, a joint venture run by Hong Kong's Tom Online Group, after Taobao won the lion's share of the Chinese market.
Unlike eBay, Taobao charges no commission to list items for sale and the site's revenue comes from advertising.
Starting as a consumer-to-consumer auction website, Taobao has grown into an online retailer that also features a growing number online shops run by big brands like US computer maker Dell.
However, eBay is fighting to make a comeback in China, a market with more than 400 million web users, by refocusing on export-oriented Chinese merchants who are keen to reach overseas buyers through international websites.
The firm's current Chinese operations include eBay.cn, a Chinese platform targeting Chinese merchants -- mostly small and medium-sized enterprises -- by offering online training courses on international trade and listing tips.
It also runs Beibao.com, a Chinese version of payment site Paypal. - AFP/jy
|