AliExpress, Temu threaten Coupang’s lead in S.Korea

Monthly active users of the Chinese online marketplaces each surpassed 8 million, more than Korean competitors’ MAU

AliExpress ad in Korea 
AliExpress ad in Korea 
Jae-Kwang Ahn 3
2024-04-05 13:59:38 ahnjk@hankyung.com
E-commerce

Coupang Inc. is the only South Korea-native e-commerce platform with more monthly active users than China's e-commerce giants AliExpress and Temu in Korea following the rapid ascent of Chinese online shopping mall operators despite growing complaints about their fake and low-quality products.

Monthly active users of AliExpress and Temu in Korea added 8% and 42% on-month in March to 8.87 million and 8.29 million, respectively, according to Korea-based mobile app analytics firm Wiseapp.Retail.Goods on Thursday.

The two Chinese e-commerce platforms now rank second and third, respectively, in the Korean e-commerce platform market by MAU after beating direct local competitors such as 11Street, Gmarket and WeMakePrice.

Despite different business models, the Chinese e-commerce giants are encroaching on Korea’s e-commerce behemoth Coupang's lead with more than 30 million MAUs.

AliExpress and Temu are online marketplaces allowing third-party merchants to directly list, sell and ship their products to consumers, whereas Coupang mainly sells and delivers a variety of its own inventory already purchased from outside merchants.  

(Graphics by Sunny Park)
(Graphics by Sunny Park)

Temu’s rise in Korea is notably faster than its crosstown peer AliExpress, which entered the Korean market in 2018. Temu’s monthly users topped 8 million just seven months after arriving in Korea last year. Its users jumped nearly 2.5 million from February to March of this year.

To speed up their advance into the Korean market, the Chinese e-commerce platform operators have vowed to invest more to expand their Korean offices and set up fulfillment centers, a move expected to directly threaten Coupang as well as Kurly Inc. and SSG.COM, which also sell their own inventory.

DETERMINED TO CRACK HOMEGROWN E-COMMERCE DOMINANCE

Temu is fearless in spending money to improve its brand awareness.

According to global investment bank JP Morgan Chase & Co., Temu is estimated to have spent $1.7 billion on global marketing last year. It is expected to nearly double its marketing budget to $3 billion this year from last year.

Temu ads are everywhere in the virtual space. Korea is no exception as Temu appears on top when googling any product in the country.

Temu ad in Korea
Temu ad in Korea

The popular Chinese discount online marketplace is expected to contract with a local agency to even advertise on Korea’s largest portal Naver, according to industry sources.

Its operator PDD Holdings Inc., formerly Pinduoduo, has also set up a Korean entity, Whaleco Korea LLC, heralding its more aggressive foray into Korea.

While Temu allows China-based vendors to sell and ship directly to customers without relying on intermediate distributors in the destination country to lower prices, AliExpress has gone a step further by adding Korean retailers to its platform to sell both Chinese and Korean products to Korean consumers.

Korean brands available on AliExpress include LG H&H Co., formerly LG Household & Health Care; beauty product maker Aekyung Industrial Co. and tissue paper companies KleanNara Co. and Yuhan-Kimberly Ltd.

The Chinese online marketplace giant even sells fresh strawberries and products of Korea’s biggest food maker CJ CheilJedang Corp.

Its parent Alibaba in mid-March announced a plan to invest about $1.1 billion in Korea over the next three years while promising Korean consumers unconditional returns and refunds within 90 days for cross-border online purchases.

AliExpress Korea CEO Ray Zhang at a press conference to announce consumer protection measures in December 2023 (Courtesy of AliExpress Korea)
AliExpress Korea CEO Ray Zhang at a press conference to announce consumer protection measures in December 2023 (Courtesy of AliExpress Korea)

In January, it even offered a promotion to take zero commissions from Korean vendors to encourage them to sell their products at AliExpress, underlining the Chinese e-commerce giant’s strong will to conquer the Korean e-commerce market.

COMPLAINTS GROW

Chinese e-commerce giants’ success in the Korean market has, however, comes at the cost of quality.

The Korean government last month announced a set of consumer protection measures targeting overseas online shipping platform operators upon receiving increasing complaints about fake products and the lack of dispute settlement services by e-commerce sites.

Industry officials said the government’s move to strengthen regulations in the country’s e-commerce sector is largely aimed at Chinese e-commerce players' rapid expansion in Korea.

In 2023, Chinese platforms accounted for 48.7% of Koreans’ online shopping while US online shopping malls took 27.5%, according to Korea Customs Service data.

Write to Jae-Kwang Ahn at ahnjk@hankyung.com


Sookyung Seo edited this article.

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