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Pinduoduo has become one of the fastest-growing technology start-ups in China by creating a sort of Facebook-Groupon mash-up, in which people spot deals on merchandise and then recruit friends to buy at a discount. Photo: SCMP

Chinese e-commerce player Pinduoduo files for US$1 billion US initial public offering

PDD offers merchandise at up to 20 per cent cheaper than market price by letting consumers buy directly from manufacturers

A Chinese e-commerce service provider called Pinduoduo, or PDD, is planning to raise at least US$1 billion in a US initial public offering, as it fights for market share against giants including Alibaba Group Holding.

The Shanghai-based firm saw revenue more than triple to US$278 million in 2017, according to its filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, under the name Walnut Street Group Holding. Losses rose 55 per cent to US$79.5 million, while transaction volumes reached 141.2 billion yuan (US$21.3 billion).

PDD has become one of the fastest-growing start-ups in China by creating a sort of Facebook-Groupon mash-up, where people spot deals on products such as fruit, clothes or toilet paper, and then recruit friends to buy at a discount. It offers merchandise at up to 20 per cent cheaper than market price by letting consumers buy directly from manufacturers, cutting out middlemen, advertising and acquisition costs.

The company was founded by ex-Google engineer Colin Huang and counts Tencent Holdings and Sequoia Capital China as backers.

Pinduoduo saw its valuation jump about 10 times in its previous round of fundraising in April. It raised more than US$1 billion, at a valuation of about US$15 billion, people familiar said at the time.

Besides its reputation for low prices, PDD has benefited from a large base of users in lower-tier cities. The idea behind PDD is to give people a different experience than at traditional e-commerce sites like Amazon.com or Alibaba, where shoppers tend to plug in a keyword and then pick out an item after sorting through a few options.

Pinduoduo’s daily active users surpassed that of JD.com in January and reached 55.9 million in June, according to research from Shenzhen-based consultant Jiguang. Alibaba’s Taobao Marketplace online shopping platform had 172 million daily active users and JD 34.3 million, it said. Alibaba is the parent company of the South China Morning Post.

Huang launched his career in Silicon Valley and then returned home to become a serial entrepreneur. His app is supposed to be more like a digital version of shopping at the mall with friends, where you can share ideas and get feedback from people you trust.

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