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JD.com Beats Estimates, Adds Record New Users amid Regulatory Tightening

E-commerce delivery from JD.com. Shutterstock.
E-commerce delivery from JD.com. Shutterstock.

JD.com Inc on Monday beat analysts’ expectations for the quarter through June and added a record number of new users as the Chinese e-commerce giant benefited from a post-Covid surge in online shopping.

The results come amid a crackdown on the tech industry by Chinese regulators that has led to an upheaval in sectors such as e-commerce, gaming, ride-hailing and cryptocurrency.

Excluding items, the company posted a profit of 2.90 yuan per American depositary share (ADS), compared with analysts’ expectations of 2.35 yuan.

Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders fell to 794.3 million yuan ($122.48 million) from 16.4 billion yuan ($2.53 billion) a year earlier. Non-GAAP net income to ordinary shareholders fell to 4.6 billion yuan compared to 5.9 billion yuan a year earlier.

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Net revenue at JD.com rose about 26 percent to 253.8 billion yuan ($39.14 billion) in the second quarter ended June 30. Analysts had expected revenue of 249.27 billion yuan, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

JD’s annual active customer accounts jumped 27.4 percent to 531.9 million.

In the quarter, JD added 32 million new users, a company record, following a strong showing at its annual shopping festival in June.

The results come amid ongoing Chinese regulatory tightening in a range of industries, which has affected both JD and the tech industry.

China’s anti-monopoly regulator fined rival Alibaba a record $2.5 million dollars in April for anti-competitive behaviour. Alibaba later missed its revenue estimates for that quarter.

In December, regulators fined JD.com 500,000 yuan for pricing irregularities.

In April, the China Shanghai stock exchange terminated a planned IPO for JD Digits, JD’s fintech division, citing a request from the company to withdraw it. The pullback came after authorities abruptly blocked the listing of Alibaba’s financial affiliate Ant Group

Sales in JD’s product segment, which consists of revenue from e-commerce customer purchases, rose over 23 percent to 219.69 billion yuan.

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By Akanksha Rana and Josh Horwitz; editors: Sriraj Kalluvila, Anil D’Silva and Bernadette Baum.

Learn more:

How Worried Should Fashion Brands Be About China’s Tech Crackdowns?

Experts say that a slew of new regulations spanning livestreaming, anti-trust and data collection could actually be an opportunity for fashion and beauty brands to reduce their reliance on giants like Alibaba.

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