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CEO Daily

Tencent and Alibaba Are Engaged in a Massive Battle in China

By
Clay Chandler
Clay Chandler
Executive Editor, Asia
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By
Clay Chandler
Clay Chandler
Executive Editor, Asia
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 13, 2017, 12:27 PM ET

I spent most of last week in Guangzhou with Time Inc. Colleagues making arrangements for December’s Coins2Day Global Forum. On Thursday we stopped by WeChat, the popular messaging app developed by Tencent Holdings. I came away marveling anew at the pace and scale of technological innovation in China.

You can tell WeChat isn’t a typical Chinese company from the moment you set foot on its campus in Guangzhou Creative Park, a cluster of old textile factories redesigned by U.S. Architecture firm M Moser Associates. The space exudes confidence and cool. WeChat is less an app than an operating system—and one that, since its launch in 2011, has become so ubiquitous and indispensable to Chinese consumers that it verges on a way a life. The list of things you can do with it is staggering: trade text and voice messages; create group chats; hail a taxi or ride-share; play video games; read the news; download emojis; make travel arrangements; order dumplings; pay the corner fruit-vendor; find a date; get rid of your acne; cure your hiccups; raise your IQ. Well, okay, those last few are debatable, but the other stuff is only the beginning. WeChat is emerging as China’s One App to Rule Them All.

WeChat’s size, efficiency and creativity make it a formidable force, and not just within China. (At the end of 2016, WeChat claimed 890 million active users, more than half of whom were logged into WeChat more than 90 minutes a day.) In a recent post on Strategery.com, Ben Thompson argued WeChat poses a long-term problem for Apple, the only major U.S. Tech company to have succeeded in cracking the China market. In the U.S., consumers are willing to pay more for iPhones not just to get the device itself but because they value the superior quality of its operating system. In China, the operating system that matters is WeChat, which works fine on iPhones. Unfortunately for Apple, WeChat works just as well on cheaper Android phones, which means, says Thompson, that Chinese consumers face “no penalty to switching away from an iPhone.” Apple’s China sales fell 14% in the last quarter compared to a year earlier. In 2016, its China market share fell to 9.6%, from 13.6% the year before.

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Many analysts think WeChat’s share of China’s mobile payment market will soon overtake that of Alibaba Group’s Alipay. In just the past two years, WeChat’s share of the mobile payment market has more than quadrupled to 37%, while that of Alipay has tumbled to 54%, down from 79%. Together the two tech giants control nine out of every ten renminbi Chinese consumers spent using their phones last year. And that was a lot of renminbi: In 2016, the value of China’s third-party mobile payments surged to $5.5 trillion, according to China-based forecaster iResearch. That’s 50 times the size of the U.S. Mobile payments market, which Forrester Research estimates at $112 billion.

The battle between Tencent and Alibaba is spilling beyond China’s borders. Earlier this week, Tencent announced a partnership between WeChat and Silicon Valley startup Citcon to roll out a cashless payment service for Chinese travelers in the United States. WeChat now offers cashless payment in 15 other countries, including Japan and Singapore. Alipay offers cashless payment in 26 countries. In the past month, Ant Financial, Alibaba Group’s financial services arm, announced a tie-up between Alipay and U.S. Card processing service First Data, and offered $1.2 billion to acquire MoneyGram, the U.S.-based cross-border payments.

The two giants waged a similar slugfest in the ride-sharing sector, with Tencent-backed Didi Dache squaring off against Alibaba-backed Kuaidi Dache. They spent hundreds of millions of dollars on promotions and rebates until agreeing in 2015 on a “strategic merger.” The new company, Didi Chuxing, turned its combined firepower on Travis Kalanick’s Uber, which surrendered and exited China last summer.

This year, the war between Tencent and Alibaba has erupted on a new front: bike-sharing. Tencent-backed Mobike (which uses WePay), and Alibaba-backed Ofo (which uses Alipay) dominate the sector. I saw evidence of the bike battle everywhere on the streets of Guangzhou this week. Mobike’s orange bikes seemed to outnumber Ofo’s yellow ones. But the colors are misleading: at the parent level, orange is Alibaba’s color, while WeChat’s is green. Reuters and Quartz offer good dispatches from the front lines. The two titans have taken their fight to Singapore and San Francisco, and are headed for the United Kingdom.

What fascinates me is that in all three of these sectors–mobile payments, ride-hailing, and bike-sharing—Chinese tech firms aren’t just innovators, they’re innovation leaders, and the competition with each other for domination in their home market has unleashed a scramble to conquer markets overseas.

About the Author
By Clay ChandlerExecutive Editor, Asia

Clay Chandler is executive editor, Asia, at Coins2Day.

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