logo
Meituan's food delivery market dominance in China remains stable at 70%, report says

Meituan's food delivery market dominance in China remains stable at 70%, report says

Meituan, the Chinese on-demand delivery giant, is maintaining a steady hold on its 70 per cent market share in domestic food delivery, despite intensifying competition from
JD.com and
Alibaba Group Holding 's Ele.me, as daily orders reached 90 million in recent days, according to a report by Chinese tech media outlet Leiphone.com, citing internal data.
Meituan did not comment on the report. If confirmed, it would show the challenges Meituan's rivals face in changing consumer habits, after a price war broke out in the instant delivery market amid sluggish consumer spending in the world's second-largest economy.
Daily orders on JD.com's rival service have reached 25 million, the company announced on June 18. It launched a food delivery service in February, expanding its instant delivery offering, which aims to bring items to customers' doors typically within an hour. Alibaba said last month that the combined daily orders on Ele.me and its Taobao Instant Commerce reached 40 million. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.
Leiphone reported the numbers based on 'exclusively obtained' Meituan data. The delivery giant, founded by entrepreneur Wang Xing in 2010, has not publicly disclosed operational data.
Since entering the food delivery market, JD.com's billionaire founder Richard Liu Qiangdong has been aggressively recruiting delivery crew, even donning a delivery uniform himself and sharing hotpot with couriers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Xia Baolong holds 3-hour closed-door talks with Hong Kong business leaders
Xia Baolong holds 3-hour closed-door talks with Hong Kong business leaders

South China Morning Post

time33 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Xia Baolong holds 3-hour closed-door talks with Hong Kong business leaders

Beijing's top official overseeing Hong Kong affairs held a three-hour closed-door discussion with local tycoons and business leaders on the third day of his inspection trip to the city on Friday. Advertisement Xia Baolong, director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, also visited Ocean Park in the afternoon before taking a boat trip to Lamma Island. The exchanges on Friday morning, held at the government headquarters in Admiralty, marked the first time since last November that Xia had direct talks with local business elites in Shenzhen. Tycoons at the meeting included Peter Lee Ka-kit, chairman and managing director of Henderson Land Development; Gordon Wu Ying-sheung, chairman of Hopewell Holdings; Stephen Ng Tin-hoi, chairman and managing director of the Wharf Holdings; and Sonia Cheng Chi-man, executive director of New World Development. Wingco Lo Kam-wing, president of the Chinese Manufacturers' Association of Hong Kong, and Jonathan Choi Koon-shum, chairman of the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce, were also among those seen streaming into the venue. Xia Baolong meets the city's tycoons and other business leaders at government headquarters. Photo: Handout Financial sector heavyweights, including Carlson Tong Ka-shing, chairman of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing, and Haywood Cheung Tak-hay, chairman of the Hong Kong Gold Exchange, also showed up.

‘We're not billiard balls': how China's EU charm offensive fell flat
‘We're not billiard balls': how China's EU charm offensive fell flat

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘We're not billiard balls': how China's EU charm offensive fell flat

For half a year, a heated debate has raged over whether US President Donald Trump 's return to office would push Europe and China closer together. Pragmatists, realpolitikers and Beijing's allies argued that the EU could not afford a trade war with both of the world's largest economies while footing the bill for a hot war in Ukraine For months, EU leaders fuelled the speculation by voicing openness to deeper trade ties with Beijing, in a dramatic rhetorical shift from the previous three years of hostilities. But the debate appears to have been settled this week with a resounding 'no'. Behind-the-scenes impatience with China's failure to put any meat on the bones of a much-vaunted charm offensive has spilled into the public realm. Brussels, staggered by Beijing's failure to move even an inch on its trade gripes, has had enough. 'The current global trading system is not working as it should. Guard rails are clearly missing. On this point, Donald is right,' said Ursula von der Leyen at this week's G7 summit in Canada , referring to China's accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001 as 'the biggest challenge' facing the global order.

Hong Kong wedding firm boss arrested as closure leaves couples in lurch
Hong Kong wedding firm boss arrested as closure leaves couples in lurch

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong wedding firm boss arrested as closure leaves couples in lurch

Customs officers have arrested the owner of a Hong Kong wedding decoration company that closed suddenly leaving more than 100 engaged couples in dismay, with the firm revealed to have racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars in debts. Acting assistant superintendent Ho Wai-sum of customs' unfair trade practice investigation division said officers arrested the 40-year-old male owner of a wedding decoration company based in San Po Kong on Friday after receiving 166 complaints about the firm allegedly wrongly accepting payments. 'We suspect that when the owner received prepaid sums, there were no reasonable reasons to believe the company could provide the services promised,' he said. Last month, the suspected closure of Ps Wedding and Event Decoration, which had an office in San Po Kong, sparked 31 complaints to the Consumer Council involving more than HK$337,000 (US$43,200) in losses. Ho revealed that the 166 complaints made to customs involved HK$1.9 million in total, with each contract for between HK$3,000 and HK$40,000. The acting superintendent said preliminary investigations showed that the company, which had been operating for 13 years, owed money for rent and salaries before its abrupt closure.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store