Shares in US online auction giant eBay fell in China over the
past year as its competitor Taobao.com claimed more of the
country's online trading market, according to a China Internet
Network Information Center (CNNIC) report released yesterday.
CNNIC said in the report that eBay Eachnet, the Chinese arm of
the US firm, took almost 30 percent of the market share in
Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou, while its local competitor Taobao,
partly held by Yahoo!, grabbed two thirds of the pie, based on the
number of active registered traders and the frequency of their
transactions last year.
Paipai.com, under the largest Chinese instant messaging service
provider Tencent.com, had a market share of 2.2 percent with the
strongest growth, while 1pai.com, a former joint venture between
Yahoo! and a Chinese counterpart and now part of Taobao, took only
1.4 percent.
CNNIC, a semi-official organization, monitors Internet traffic
and releases half-yearly reports on the development of the Web in
China; this is the first time it has released a report on the
consumer-to-consumer (C2C) e-commerce market.
Although buyers in the three cities accounted for less than 20
percent of the total in the country, they bought almost 40 percent
of goods. Sellers in these cities sold around half of the goods,
despite the fact that they accounted for fewer than a third of the
country's total traders.
The report said more than 2 million people in the three cities
traded on C2C websites last year. And almost 20 percent of all
Internet users in Shanghai bought or sold goods on C2C websites,
while the ratios in Beijing and Guangzhou were 17.5 percent and
11.5 percent.
"The shift of the leadership from eBay Eachnet to Taobao took
place mainly in 2005," said Peter Lu, senior consultant with
CNNIC.
According to the report, half of the traders on Taobao
registered last year and 64 percent of sellers and 56 percent of
buyers trading both on Taobao and eBay Eachnet were registered with
eBay Eachnet in 2004 before they migrated to Taobao.
Ebay Eachnet has experienced slower growth compared to its
rivals due to increased competition, its service charges, lack of
online chat software before 2005 and slower log-on speed.
Over 60 percent of survey respondents said they would buy more
frequently on Taobao, while almost 40 percent preferred eBay
Eachnet, according to the report. Two thirds of respondents said
they would recommend trading on C2C websites to their friends and
relatives.
(China Daily May 10, 2006)