China’s
e-commerce giant, Alibaba Group, has been fined 800,000 yuan ($129,000)
by the price bureau in eastern Zhejiang province for violations by
third-party sellers during promotions on its e-commerce platforms.
Since
Alibaba turned “Singles’ Day”, a November 11 Chinese response to
Valentine’s Day, into an online shopping festival in 2009, the event has
grown to similar proportions as Cyber Monday and Black Friday in the
United States.
Sales
of more than $9 billion were achieved at last year’s event, and the
company has copyrighted the phrase “Double 11″, a reference to the date
(11/11), which in turn, refers to the status of single people.
“The
company has been fined 500,000 yuan ($81,000) for matters related to
Singles’ Day pricing by third-party sellers on our Tmall marketplace in
2013 and 2014 and 300,000 yuan($48,000) for pricing in other promotions
in 2013 and 2015,” Alibaba Group said in a statement on Friday.
While
pricing is handled by third parties, not directly by Alibaba, the group
said, it would nevertheless reinforce pricing rules and regulations
with sellers to protect consumers.
The
27,000 vendors featured on Alibaba’s Singles’ Day shopping sites hope
to boost sales and gain customers, but some have complained that
discounts and cut-throat corporate rivalry undercut the benefits.
Alibaba
has had occasional difficulties regulating its sprawling e-commerce
empire, which now includes online markets such as Taobao; Tmall, a
platform for larger retailers linked to Taobao; group-buying site
Juhuasuan and the original flagship platform Alibaba.com, which links
exporters with foreign buyers.
In
2011, Alibaba.com was hit by a scandal when sales staff colluded with
professional criminals to defraud foreign customers, leading to multiple
arrests and the resignation of then Chief Executive David Wei.
Alibaba
was also publicly chastised by regulators for failing to control the
sale of counterfeit products on its platforms, an accusation echoed by
trade groups and regulators in the U.S., where the company is listed.
In
February Alibaba said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had
sought more information about a reported talk between its executives and
China’s State Administration for Industry and Commerce regarding sales
of counterfeit goods, which the company did not mention in its IPO
prospectus prior to listing.
Alibaba
shares have lost more than a fifth this year, with analysts citing
concern about counterfeits along with lacklustre third-quarter earnings
and waning investor excitement after last September’s record-setting
$25-billion IPO.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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