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Businesses China The Internet

Amazon Will No Longer Sell Chinese Goods In China (cnn.com) 74

Amazon announced today that it will close its marketplace in China in the coming months, meaning Amazon customers in the country will no longer be able to buy goods from Chinese merchants. "Amazon did not explain why it was withdrawing its marketplace service, saying only it will instead focus on selling goods shipped from other countries into China," reports CNN. From the report: "We are notifying sellers we will no longer operate a marketplace on Amazon.cn, and we will no longer be providing seller services on Amazon.cn effective July 18," the company said in a statement. Amazon's platform competes for Chinese sellers with Tmall, owned by the country's e-commerce leader Alibaba.

Users logging onto Amazon's Chinese site after July 18 will see products sold from its global store, the company said. "Over the past few years, we have been evolving our China online retail business to increasingly emphasize cross-border sales, and in return we've seen very strong response from Chinese customers," Amazon said. It will retain its other operations in China, such as cloud computing services. It will also continue to sell its Kindle e-readers and content in the country. "Amazon's commitment to China remains strong. We have built a solid foundation here in a number of successful businesses and we will continue to invest and grow in China," the company added.

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Amazon Will No Longer Sell Chinese Goods In China

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  • by SlaveToTheGrind ( 546262 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @09:37PM (#58457652)

    and has the ears of a whole bunch of influential people in China. Why is this particularly surprising?

    • in its stores inside America would you blame Amazon?

    • LOL, Alibaba may not like competition but Amazon aint fucking competition to them in any way shape or form. Amazon is insignificant there.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      It is more like with Amazons costs they can't actually compete with Alibaba. They will never have a significant footprint over there for Chinese goods, there only hope is stuff you can't get on alibaba
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @05:17AM (#58458530) Homepage Journal

      Or maybe Amazon just genuinely can't compete with them. Amazon was late to the game, Alibaba was already well established and thriving when they got there.

      Also have you looked at Amazon.cn? It's been translated but not tailored to the local market. You know how people complain that Chinese sites have a confusing layout and strange design? It's the same for Chinese people using Amazon.cn.

    • Alibaba doesn't like competition and has the ears of a whole bunch of influential people in China. Why is this particularly surprising?

      No, it's not because Alibaba doesn't like competition. It's because Amazon can't compete with them at their own game.

      Chinese marketplaces are a sewer. Don't get me wrong, it's a sewer I regularly visit in the form of shopping on places like Ali Express. But you have to know what you're doing to buy there. And you have to know what you're doing to sell there. The Chinese consider lying in business an art form. Something like in that to them there is no difference between when your friend asks you if yo

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @10:19PM (#58457748)
    Looking for whatever, cute Chinese girl squeels "Oooo! I made that yesterday!".
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Business dynamics in (mainland) China are kind of weird, but one of the core principles is lack of trust, and specifically, lack of trust in domestic products. Anything imported is almost universally regarded as automatically better than anything made locally, especially if it is _provably_ imported (which is often tricky, because local producers are fairly good at counterfeiting foreign goods). For certain particularly important products (e.g., baby formula), people will take the train all day to get to

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