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JD.com Beats Quarterly Revenue Estimates Amid Strong Electronics Demand

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com (9618.HK) exceeded market expectations for quarterly revenue on Thursday, reflecting steady consumer demand supported by price cuts and government subsidies. U.S.-listed shares of the platform, a leading online retailer for electronics and home appliances in China, fell nearly 4% in morning trade.

Despite muted overall consumption amid economic pressures and trade uncertainties, JD.com boosted sales through deep discounts, promotions, and state subsidies. Analyst Vinci Zhang of M Science noted that the revenue upside was largely driven by electronics and appliances propped up by government support. Zhang cautioned that year-on-year comparisons may become tougher as subsidies wind down.

In response to sluggish domestic consumption and fierce competition, JD.com is pursuing growth internationally and in new sectors. Last month, the company made an offer to acquire German electronics giant Ceconomy (CECG.DE) for €2.2 billion ($2.57 billion), a strategic move to expand its European footprint. In February, JD entered the food delivery market—dominated by Meituan (3690.HK) and Alibaba’s Ele.me—offering consumer incentives to capture market share. CEO Sandy Xu said the new food-delivery unit is already driving traffic to JD’s core retail operations but warned that “excessive competition” could harm pricing and merchant profitability.

JD.com reported total revenue of 356.66 billion yuan ($49.73 billion) for Q2 ended June, up 22.4% from a year earlier and above the analyst consensus of 331.63 billion yuan. Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders fell to 6.2 billion yuan from 12.6 billion yuan a year ago.

Alibaba Misses Revenue Estimates as Price Wars and Economic Uncertainty Pressure Growth

Alibaba reported fiscal Q4 revenue of 236.45 billion yuan ($32.8 billion) on Thursday, narrowly missing analyst expectations of 237.24 billion yuan, as the company grapples with a sluggish Chinese economy, intensifying e-commerce price wars, and global trade uncertainties.

The company’s adjusted earnings of 12.52 yuan ($1.74) per American Depositary Share also came in slightly below the 12.94 yuan forecast by analysts polled by LSEG. U.S.-listed Alibaba shares dropped nearly 7% in early trading, though they remain up 58% year-to-date.

E-Commerce Under Pressure:

Alibaba’s domestic retail arm (Taobao and Tmall) reported 9% revenue growth, bolstered by new consumer engagement and rising order volumes. However, the gains weren’t enough to fully offset competitive pressure from:

  • JD.com, which beat its Q1 estimates earlier this week

  • Pinduoduo (PDD Holdings), known for aggressive discounting

Facing price-sensitive consumers amid a property crisis and low consumer confidence, Chinese e-commerce giants are locked in a pricing battle. To stay competitive, Alibaba is doubling down on instant retail, offering 30- to 60-minute delivery services.

This instant retail market could grow from 500–600 million consumers to 1 billion,” said Jiang Fan, CEO of Alibaba’s E-commerce Business Group. “We’ll be investing aggressively in this space.”

International and Cloud Segments:

  • International digital commerce (AIDC) rose 22%, missing the expected 26.4%, with analysts noting a lack of commentary on AliExpress and potential U.S. tariff impacts.

  • Cloud Intelligence, a bright spot, posted 18% growth to 30.13 billion yuan, driven by Alibaba’s leadership in China’s AI development. In April, the company launched Qwen 3, an upgraded AI model with hybrid reasoning capabilities.

Strategic Outlook:

CEO Eddie Wu warned of uncertainties in global trade regulations”, a veiled reference to tariff risks in Western markets. He reaffirmed the international division’s path to profitability in the coming fiscal year.

Looking ahead, investors will watch Alibaba’s performance during the 618” shopping festival in June — one of the year’s biggest consumer events — as a gauge of demand recovery and market competitiveness.