China's E-Commerce Market Is Bigger Than Just Single's Day. 1 ETF To Gain

 | Nov 12, 2020 04:37AM ET

China's Singles' Day, a massive shopping event, occurs annually on Nov. 11 each year.

The holiday which celebrates being single grew out of Nanjing University and eventually became widely celebrated in the 1990s. E-commerce and technology giant Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) first popularized the day as a 24-hour online shopping event in November 2009. Since then, the retail event has shown record-breaking growth and is now the largest online shopping day worldwide. This year, the company kicked off the sales event on Nov. 1.

Although other Chinese and global companies rake in higher sales on that day, Alibaba attracts the most attention. In 2019, 1.29 billion orders were placed through the company's e-commerce platforms and the final number this year is expected to surpass that figure.

Preliminary numbers indicate that Alibaba's gross merchandise value—the total value of orders across its platforms since Nov. 1—was over $70 billion. Over half of all Chinese e-commerce happens on Alibaba's platforms. By comparison, Amazon's (NASDAQ:AMZN) share in the U.S. is just over a third.

Today, we will look at how investors can participate in the staggering growth of Chinese e-commerce and digital services.

h2 Numbers Tell The Story/h2

As the most populous country with the second-largest global economy behind the U.S., China gets a lot of economic attention.

According to $700 billion in 2020.

How can investors profit from such sales numbers as well as the growth of e-commerce in the country and worldwide? One way would be to invest in the shares of Chinese companies directly.

In addition to Alibaba, examples would include e-commerce services provider Baozun (NASDAQ:BZUN), China Mobile (NYSE:CHL), which benefits from the growth of mobile users, the other e-commerce titan JD.com (NASDAQ:JD), food-delivery platform Meituan (OTC:MPNGY), the third-largest e-commerce group Pinduoduo (NASDAQ:PDD), social media and entertainment giant Tencent (OTC:TCEHY), which also owns the ever-popular WeChat app, online discount retailer Vipshop (NYSE:VIPS), phone maker Xiaomi (OTC:XIACF), and logistics and delivery group ZTO Express (NYSE:NYSE:ZTO), among others.

There will likely be ebbs and flows in their revenue and profit metrics in the coming quarters. For instance, the Chinese government has recently proposed new antitrust regulations. As a result, the shares of many Chinese tech companies have come under pressure.

However, it is important to remember that these businesses all have carved out a niche and investors can, for the most part, expect them to be proactive in offering goods and services in line with the demands of the marketplace.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Those investors who are not ready to commit capital into a single company may want to buy an exchange-traded fund (ETF).

We previously covered the Global X MSCI China Consumer Disc ETF (NYSE:CHIQ) and the Invesco Golden Dragon China ETF (NASDAQ:PGJ). Year-to-date, they are up about 74% and 35%, respectively.

Below we take a look at another ETF to consider to gain exposure to China's growth:

h2 KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF
/h2
  • Current price: $73.45
  • 52-week range: $38.63 - 79.53
  • Expense ratio: .73%

The KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (NYSE:KWEB) provides exposure to a range of China-based firms whose primary businesses are either online or in internet-related sectors. In addition to e-commerce marketplaces, these companies are part of internet search, social media, entertainment, or microblogging industries.