Chinese e-commerce group JD.com on Thursday reported forecast beating second-quarter profits, helped by price cuts that attracted cost-sensitive consumers to its platform.
U.S.-listed shares of the company rose 3.13% in premarket trading.
Major Chinese vendors like JD.com and Alibaba have increased focus on discounting and lower-priced goods as the world's second largest economy sees a pullback from customers that as conscious about spending.
A stuttering post-COVID recovery in China has benefited low-cost e-commerce players such as PDD Holdings. Increased competition has triggered a price war between larger rivals as they look to attract the same pool of customers.
The retailers rely heavily on major discounting events such as China's mid-year e-commerce sales festival which took place in June, to boost overall growth and exposure.
The so called "618" shopping event, named after the June 18 founding date of e-commerce provider JD.com, but embraced by all platforms, gauges the market sentiment among household consumers.
JD.com said in June its turnover and order volumes reached a new high over the festival period, which ran from the end of May to June 18 this year.
JD.com's second-quarter profit rose 73.7% to 9.36 yuan per share, excluding items, compared with estimates of 6.07 yuan, according to LSEG data.
JD.com's general and administrative costs reduced by 9.6% in the quarter.
After JD.com prioritised a "low price" strategy at the close of 2022, its share price has experienced a decline, plummeting from approximately $60 to the current value of around $26.
Jacob Cooke, CEO of e-commerce consultancy WPIC Marketing + Technologies, said despite economic challenges, consumers are not only motivated by price-product quality and shopping experience also contributes to driving conversions and cultivating marketplace loyalty.
"JD.com should lean into its strengths rather than engaging in a race to the bottom of excessive discounts," he said.
The company's total revenue rose 1.2% to 291.40 billion yuan ($40.71 billion) in the second quarter, compared with estimates of 292.89 billion yuan.
($1 = 7.1585 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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