China Insight: After the 618 Shopping Carnival, What’s the Way Forward for the Uncertain Online Fashion Market in China?

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With 520 in front and 618 behind, the first half of 2024 is coming to an end. On the one hand, the social financing data released by the PBOC in April showed the first declines in nearly 19 years; on the other, the first-quarter earnings reports of Alibaba, JD and listed Chinese apparel companies came out in May and showed significant growth in the performance of the fashion sector.

How to interpret this gap between consumers’ real experiences and the actual economic data? Where is fashion consumption in China, especially online shopping, headed?

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Social financing (i.e., data on total social financing) is a key indicator in the analysis of China’s economic trends. The total social financing is high in a favorable economic environment and active consumer market and vice versa.

Last month the PBOC revealed that the newly added social financing in April was minus $27.4 billion, a rare decline. This was an obvious signal of a weak market, triggering intensified concerns about the future. However, at almost the same time, the significant growth reported by the e-commerce giants in their latest financial results injected confidence in the market.

Among them, Alibaba reported total revenues of $30.6 billion in the first quarter, up 7 percent compared to the same period last year, while JD reported revenues of $35.9 billion in the first quarter, which also was an increase of 7 percent compared to the same period last year. At the same time, PDD realized revenues of $11.97 billion in the first quarter by focusing on the sale of domestic brands through multiple channels and platforms, an increase of 131 percent year-on-year. Meituan, a platform that specializes in China’s consumer market and local services, achieved revenues of $10.11 billion, up 25 percent year-on-year, with the number of core local business users and merchants reaching record highs.

From a macro level viewpoint, exaggerated social financing data being “removed” was the result of the tightening of both the policy and market-oriented financing needs as well as the regulatory governance of the accumulation of idle capital (i.e., flow of funds in the financial system without flowing to the real economy). Financial statement data of these e-commerce giants provide an ideal perspective for the evaluation of whether the consumer market is active or not. In terms of the fashion sector, the first-quarter financial reports of China’s local apparel-listed companies show that most of the 17 A-share listed companies realized benign growth, while nearly a third of the companies, such as Hodo Group, Septwolves, and Sanfo Outdoor, showed varying levels of revenue declines.