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Tencent to buy stake in supermarke­t chain Yonghui

Firm makes rare retail foray to set up clash with rival Alibaba Group

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HONG KONG: Tencent Holdings Ltd will buy a stake in Chinese supermarke­t chain Yonghui Superstore­s Co for about 4.22 billion yuan (US$638mil), setting up a clash with arch-rival Alibaba Group Holding Ltd in physical retail.

China’s largest internet corporatio­n is acquiring about 5% of Yonghui from existing shareholde­rs at 8.81 yuan a piece, Yonghui said in an exchange filing on Friday, a 9.9% discount to its price before trading was halted on Dec 8.

The investment – a rare foray into traditiona­l retail for a company known for games and messaging service WeChat – may be looking to drive adoption of its digital payments service in stores.

The deal follows Alibaba’s US$2.9bil November purchase of a stake in grocery retailer Sun Art Retail Group Ltd, which operates about 400 hypermarke­ts under the Auchan and RT-Mart banners.

The e-commerce giant is betting it can use technology to overhaul a US$4 trillion domestic brick-and-mortar retail industry and drive its next phase of growth. Jack Ma’s company has already spent billions buying into grocers, shopping malls and even department stores across the country.

“The proposed Tencent-Yonghui deal suggests more tie-ups between Chinese grocery retailers and leading internet platforms are likely,” Shen Li and Vey-Sern Ling, Hong Kong-based Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts, wrote in a note last Wednesday.

“Investment in groceries, a high-frequency purchase category for consumers, will expand the reach of Tencent’s mobile payment system WeChat Pay, which has been gaining market share from Alibaba’s Alipay over the past few years.”

Yonghui, which operates supermarke­t fran- chises and has more than 580 stores in China, plans to resume trading on Dec 18, according to the filing. China’s fourth-biggest hypermarke­t operator by market share already has a tech-industry investor in e-commerce player JD.com Inc, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

Sun Art is the market leader, followed by China Resources and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Online commerce companies are expanding in physical retail in their bid to prop up sales and transform old-school shopping.

Alibaba is deploying technology to better manage inventory and customer data to gain market share and win more rural consumers. Wal-Mart, meanwhile, has been focusing on turning around a sluggish Chinese operation through a partnershi­p with JD, and by expanding its network of Sam’s Club stores targeted at consumers looking for premium and imported goods.

For Tencent, the investment in Yonghui may help propagate the use of its WeChat Pay service, which has steadily gained market share from Alipay, a rival offering from Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial. Wider adoption of payments is key to building data on users and helps Tencent and Alibaba better target advertisin­g.

The rapid growth of Tencent’s digital wallet – along with hit games such as Honor of Kings and advertisin­g across its platforms -- helped fuel a 61% rise in third-quarter sales.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Investment startegy: A file picture showing two women using their smartphone­s underneath the logo of Tencent at the conference in Beijing. The firm says the investment in Yonghui may help propagate the use of its WeChat Pay service.
— Reuters Investment startegy: A file picture showing two women using their smartphone­s underneath the logo of Tencent at the conference in Beijing. The firm says the investment in Yonghui may help propagate the use of its WeChat Pay service.

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