Alipay unveils ePass for US retailers
CHINA’S half billion online shoppers will soon have an easier way to shop in the US.
Alipay, the payments unit recently spun off from Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, is launching a service for US retailers called ePass. Alipay has already been working in beta mode with retailers such as Gilt.com, The Gap and H&M.
“We want to demystify the Chinese consumer for US retailers,” said Jingming Li, president and chief architect of Alipay, which has a US base in Santa Clara, California, alongside its affiliate Alibaba.
Alipay targets English-reading young professionals in the four biggest regions of China (it doesn’t offer a translation service).
The move will let US retailers tap into the estimated 500 million Chinese online shoppers who spent US$298 billion online in 2013. EPass will be available to any US retailer interested in reaching the Chinese consumer, Li said in a briefing.
And it comes as the payment-service category is heating up with new offerings including Apple Pay, and eBay’s plan to split off its PayPal payments business next year.
Cross-border shopping is growing. PayPal, which also offers cross-border payment services, estimates that by 2018, there will be 130 million cross-border shoppers spending over US$300 billion globally.
It is possible for a Chinese customer to make purchases on US retail sites without ePass, but the process involves using an international credit card and typically brings markups on Western products. EPass aims to ease the “friction” of international purchases, Li said.
Users of ePass will see an ePass payment option when they check out on a retailer’s site. Chinese shoppers pay in yuan using their Alipay account, and Alipay transmits the payment to merchants in 14 currencies via 180 international financial institutions. Customs duties are calculated at checkout.
Alibaba started Alipay in 2004 to facilitate payments on its websites and spun off the unit in 2011 into a company controlled by Alibaba founder Jack Ma. Because it was spun off, Alipay was not part of Alibaba’s huge US$25 billion IPO in September, the largest ever.
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