Key facts
- China's 618 mid-year shopping festival is concluding with subdued sales, indicating weak consumer confidence.
- E-commerce platforms are shifting focus from aggressive discounting to prioritizing profit margins.
- Retail sales in China declined 0.6% in May, with significant drops in big-ticket items.
- AI tools are being increasingly integrated by e-commerce platforms, such as Alibaba's Qwen model on Taobao.
- The festival is serving as a testing ground for AI technologies in e-commerce.
China's mid-year 618 shopping festival is concluding with subdued sales, reflecting weak consumer confidence and a shift away from aggressive discounting as authorities pressure e-commerce platforms to focus on profit margins. The festival, which has grown from a single day to a weeks-long event, saw overall revenue expected to rise by a single-digit percentage point this year, despite a longer duration than last year.
Retail sales in China fell 0.6% year-on-year in May, the first decline since December 2022, with notable drops in purchases of autos, home appliances, furniture, and building materials, even with government subsidies in place. This economic backdrop has led consumers like Yu Yang, an engineer in Beijing, to buy only necessities rather than discounted items.
Concurrently, e-commerce firms are increasingly integrating Artificial Intelligence tools. Alibaba has incorporated its AI model Qwen across its Taobao platform, enabling consumers to interact with an AI agent for browsing, comparing, and purchasing items. This trend positions the 618 festival not only as a sales event but also as a crucial testing ground for these new AI technologies, according to Jason Yu, general manager at CTR Market Research.