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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday November 12 2017, @07:49PM   Printer-friendly
from the anti-couples-day dept.

China shopping festival smashes record with $25 billion haul

Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant, said on Saturday its Singles' Day sales extravaganza hit $25.4 billion, smashing its own record from last year and cementing it as the world's biggest shopping event. Once a celebration for China's lonely hearts, Singles' Day has become an annual 24-hour buying frenzy that exceeds the combined sales for Black Friday and Cyber Monday in the United States, and acts as a barometer for China's consumers.

As tills shut midnight on Saturday, Alibaba's live sales ticker registered 168.3 billion yuan, up 39 percent from 120.7 billion yuan last year. The dollar figure was up more steeply due to the strength of the yuan against the greenback this year.

The event began soon after a star-studded event in Shanghai late on Friday. As midnight hit, a deluge of pre-orders helped drive a billion dollars of sales on Alibaba's platforms in the first two minutes and $10 billion in just over an hour. "In terms of scale it just dwarfs any other event out there," said Ben Cavender, Shanghai-based principal at China Market Research Group.

But what is Singles' Day?

Chinese Singles' Day or Guanggun Jie (Chinese: 光棍节; pinyin: Guānggùn Jié; Wade–Giles: Kuang-kun chieh; literally: "Single Sticks' Holiday") is an entertaining festival widespread among young Mainland Chinese people, to celebrate the fact that they are proud of being single. The date, November 11th (11/11), is chosen because the number "1" resembles an individual that is alone. This festival has become the largest offline and online shopping day in the world,[2] with sales in Alibaba's sites Tmall and Taobao at US$5.8 billion in 2013, US$9.3 billion in 2014, US$14.3 billion in 2015 and over US$17.8 billion in 2016.

Related: Alibaba Revenues Surge 61% On Online Shopping


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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Sunday November 12 2017, @08:55PM (2 children)

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Sunday November 12 2017, @08:55PM (#595991) Journal

    I bet you don't even have an Amazonk or Baba account!

    Get with the program and worship disposable consumer junk!

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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 12 2017, @09:22PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 12 2017, @09:22PM (#595997)

    you jest but I boycott amazon since the one click buy patent. My reasoning is that anybody who patents that AND uses the patent non-defensively cannot be a good person.

    I got stuff through amazon for friends, no prob, and I paid 1 eur less for an item by bypassing amazon and going to the vendor's online shop.

    I should boycott firefox and google and paypal too, though.

    • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Monday November 13 2017, @11:23AM

      by TheRaven (270) on Monday November 13 2017, @11:23AM (#596127) Journal
      Do you actually know what the one-click patent covered? Hint: It wasn't just putting a button on a web site, it also covered a lot of the coalescing of orders to minimise postage costs, but not introduce noticeable latency for customers. There were lots of ways of adding a one-click order button to a web site without infringing.
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