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China’s E-Commerce Giants Burn Billions in Price War Over “Instant Retail”

China’s biggest e-commerce firms — Alibaba, JD.com, and Meituan — are locked in a bruising price war to dominate the fast-growing “instant retail” one-hour delivery market, a battle that is slashing profits, fueling deflationary pressures, and drawing regulatory scrutiny.

To capture market share, the platforms are showering consumers with deep discounts and coupons, triggering a cash burn estimated at $4 billion in Q2 alone, according to Nomura. S&P Global projects the three companies could collectively spend 160 billion yuan ($22B) over the next 12–18 months, with little chance of margin recovery for at least two years.

  • JD.com’s CEO Sandy Xu called the rivalry “unsustainable excessive competition.”

  • Meituan’s CEO Wang Xing described a “new phase of competition.”

  • PDD Holdings’ co-CEO Zhao Jiazhen said the intensity had “further escalated.”

The fight began earlier this year when JD.com launched a service to challenge Meituan’s core food-delivery business, prompting Alibaba (via its Ele.me app) to also ramp up spending. Analysts liken the standoff to a “game of chicken,” where whichever firm blinks first risks wasting billions.

Meituan faces the biggest hit, since food delivery is its primary revenue driver. JD.com nearly saw its food-delivery losses erase Q2 profit, while Alibaba is cushioned by its more diversified model.

Despite the bloodletting, executives argue the long-term prize is worth it. Alibaba’s Jiang Fan projects the instant retail segment could add 1 trillion yuan ($137B) in incremental annualized GMV within three years. Early signs show cross-platform benefits: JD.com’s active users grew 40% YoY in Q2, and Alibaba’s Taobao app saw MAUs jump 25% in August, helped by converting food-delivery users.

Still, Beijing is watching closely. Regulators have warned against a “race to the bottom”, and in July the companies pledged to curb destructive price wars under government “anti-involution” measures. Analysts expect some rationalization in competition by 2025, but until then, short-term pain looks inevitable as firms chase long-term dominance.

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.

Alibaba Partners with RedNote to Boost Instant Retail Amid Fierce China E-Commerce Battle

Alibaba Group (9988.HK) has entered a strategic partnership with lifestyle content platform RedNote (Xiaohongshu), allowing users to directly shop from RedNote posts via clickable links to Alibaba’s Taobao platform, the companies announced this week. This integration formalizes app-to-app commerce, creating a smoother path from content discovery to purchase and reflecting Alibaba’s aggressive push in the instant retail” space.

By combining Taobao and Tmall’s commerce expertise with Xiaohongshu’s strength in lifestyle content, we’re helping brands reach consumers more effectively,” said Liu Bo, Alibaba VP and Tmall president.

Context: Rising E-Commerce Rivalry and Instant Retail Race

The move comes amid intensifying competition among China’s tech giants as consumer confidence remains weak, prompting heavy discounting and platform subsidies.
Alibaba and rivals like JD.com (9618.HK) and Meituan (3690.HK) are increasingly focused on instant retailoffering one-hour delivery of everything from food to fashion and electronics.

  • Meituan continues to dominate China’s instant delivery market

  • Alibaba’s Ele.me supports fast fulfillment for Taobao purchases via a new instant commerce” section

  • JD.com pledged 10 billion yuan ($1.38B) for its own instant retail strategy in 2024

Strategic Impact of the RedNote Tie-Up

  • Enables shoppable lifestyle content, turning Xiaohongshu posts into direct retail channels

  • Pilot programme will prioritize fast-moving consumer goods and healthcare productstwo hot-growth segments in instant retail

  • Supports Alibaba’s ambition to blend social media discovery with seamless, fast commerce

In just five days this month, Alibaba reported completing 10 million instant retail orders, showcasing the scale and momentum behind its rapid delivery model.

This partnership signals Alibaba’s broader aim to tighten ecosystem integration and tap into RedNote’s social commerce influence, especially among China’s younger, trend-focused consumers.