Tag: alipay

Chinese mobile commerce spending is taking off

Alipay, the Alibaba smartphone payments arm, released a report to describe these digital shopping trends.

In China, the trend in mobile commerce has been a rapid growth this year, according to a report that was released by the smartphone based payments branch of Alibaba, Alipay.

The report detailed the way in which the less developed western region of China has driven mobile shopping.

The Alipay report showed that over half of the online transactions that occurred at Alibaba over the first ten months of the year occurred over mobile commerce. In fact, mobile phones were responsible for 54 percent of the online transactions using Alipay from January through the end of October. Comparatively, throughout all of last year, it had represented a much lower 22 percent of total online payments volume for purchases made online through the service.

The western, inland parts of China are easily the fastest growing areas being seen for mobile commerce.

Mobile Commerce Spending - ChinaThe Tibet autonomous region, the Ningxia Hui autonomous region, and the province of Shaanxi were identified as the areas where mobile commerce was taking off most rapidly, at 62.2 percent, 58.3 percent, and 59.6 percent, respectively. Those areas are quite remote and lack a solid infrastructure of broadband internet service. Desktop and laptop computers are also still quite expensive there, making them less appealing than the far more affordable smartphone.

On the other hand, Guangdong province and the cities of Shanghai and Beijing, all well developed areas, saw growth of a much lower 27, 24, and 29 percent during that same period of time when it came to mobile shopping transactions.

According to expert in online shopping and the vice president of greater China for hybris AG (the enterprise software provider division of SAP AG software giant, based in Germany), Burghardt Groeber, who commented on this mobile commerce trend, “As mobile penetration in rural China far outpaces fixed-line Internet penetration and with continued upgrades to mobile network connectivity and the popularity of new devices, it is natural that consumers are rapidly taking up mobile shopping.” In China m-commerce is expected to reach $162 billion by the close of 2017.

Mobile payments will soon outpace payments from laptops and desktops

New study highlights the growth of digital payments throughout the world

Mobile spending is growing at an alarming rate and may soon replace spending from desktops and laptops, according to a new study from Juniper Research. The study highlights the growing prominence of mobile commerce and the role that smartphones and tablets are playing in the field of mobile transactions. While consumers can shop online using their desktops and laptops, mobile devices allow them to shop online from anywhere in the world at any given time.

Global digital payments expected to hit $4.7 trillion by 2019

The study predicts that global digital payments will reach $4.7 trillion by 2019, up from the estimated $2.5 trillion digital payments that will be made this year. Much of this growth is being attributed to mobile shopping. Consumers favor shopping from mobile devices because it provides them with a more convenient option when compared to traditional shopping. Notably, tablets are showing more mobile commerce activity than smartphones.

China will continue to be a prominent mobile commerce market

mobile payments may surpass computer paymentsAccording to the study, China is likely to play a major role in the continued growth of mobile payments. The country’s largest e-commerce organization, Alibaba, accounted for 20% of all global business-to-consumer and consumer-to-consumer sales in 2013. The company has been playing a more dominating role in the mobile space. Alibaba has established a powerful position in the mobile commerce sector with its Alipay application.

Market continues to become saturated with mobile platforms from many companies

Other markets are expected to play prominent roles in the growth of mobile commerce as well. Banks, retailers, and telecommunications companies in Australia, Poland, and the United Kingdom have all shown strong interest in engaging mobile consumers. These organizations are responsible for supporting the growing mobile commerce infrastructure, providing consumers with the platforms they need to conduct mobile payments. The mobile market is currently heavily saturated with a wide variety of mobile commerce platforms, some of which are less appealing to consumers that others. Security is currently one of the greatest challenges facing the growth of mobile commerce throughout the world.