China's JD posts higher Q3 profit as supply snarls ease, revenue misses estimates
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Reuters
Synopsis
The company has seen challenges in China's rapidly changing ecommerce landscape, with the joining of livestream players and short video social networking service providers such as Douyin, which is China's TikTok, and Xiaohongshu.
By Reuters
Last Updated:
Chinese ecommerce firm JD reported a quarterly revenue below estimates on Wednesday but posted a surge in profit as supply chain problems eased.
The company also said that CEO Xu Ran will take up the role of chief executive of JD Retail, its retail business.
The company has seen challenges in China's rapidly changing ecommerce landscape, with the joining of livestream players and short video social networking service providers such as Douyin, which is China's TikTok, and Xiaohongshu.
JD has fewer popular livestreamers than its competitors, such as Austin Li, who exclusively streams on Alibaba Group's platform.
The company's shares were trading at about $60 at the beginning of this year but ended at $26.71 on Tuesday. In October, several banks and brokers including Citi, Daiwa and Jefferies cut price targets and revenue growth forecasts for the firm.
JD and Alibaba both reported year-on-year sales growth for China's largest shopping festival, Singles Day, which ended at midnight on Saturday.
However, according to third-party data provider Syntun, the cumulative gross merchandise volume (GMV) across major traditional ecommerce platforms - including Alibaba's Tmall, JD and Pinduoduo of PDD Holdings -- was 923.5 billion yuan ($127.42 billion), a 1% decline from the previous year.
The company reported net revenue of 247.7 billion yuan ($34.19 billion) for the third quarter, missing analysts' average estimate of 249.26 billion yuan according to LSEG data.
But it posted net income attributable to shareholders of 7.94 billion yuan, up 33% from 5.96 billion yuan a year earlier.
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US-listed shares of the firm rose 5.6% to around $28 in premarket trading.Elevate Your Tech Prowess with High-Value Skill Courses
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The company has seen challenges in China's rapidly changing ecommerce landscape, with the joining of livestream players and short video social networking service providers such as Douyin, which is China's TikTok, and Xiaohongshu.
JD has fewer popular livestreamers than its competitors, such as Austin Li, who exclusively streams on Alibaba Group's platform.
The company's shares were trading at about $60 at the beginning of this year but ended at $26.71 on Tuesday. In October, several banks and brokers including Citi, Daiwa and Jefferies cut price targets and revenue growth forecasts for the firm.
ADVERTISEMENT
JD and Alibaba both reported year-on-year sales growth for China's largest shopping festival, Singles Day, which ended at midnight on Saturday.
However, according to third-party data provider Syntun, the cumulative gross merchandise volume (GMV) across major traditional ecommerce platforms - including Alibaba's Tmall, JD and Pinduoduo of PDD Holdings -- was 923.5 billion yuan ($127.42 billion), a 1% decline from the previous year.
ADVERTISEMENT
The company reported net revenue of 247.7 billion yuan ($34.19 billion) for the third quarter, missing analysts' average estimate of 249.26 billion yuan according to LSEG data.
But it posted net income attributable to shareholders of 7.94 billion yuan, up 33% from 5.96 billion yuan a year earlier.
ADVERTISEMENT