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Amazon Plans Discount Web Store in Effort to Counter Temu, Shein

The Seattle-based company’s plans show Amazon shipping goods directly to customers from China.
Amazon
The e-commerce giant has also began cutting the fees it charges merchants to sell low-priced clothing. (Shutterstock)

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Amazon plans to launch an online storefront for low-priced apparel and home goods, the company’s biggest move to date to counter the rise of discount upstarts like Temu and Shein.

The Seattle-based company’s plans, described in slides posted to websites for third-party Chinese sellers, show Amazon shipping goods directly to customers from China. Amazon, which has sought to hold its ground with promises of speedy shipping, previously encouraged Chinese merchants to use logistics services that concentrate merchandise at US-based warehouses.

The new mall will appear in its own section of Amazon’s website, the slides say. For now, it’s open only to invited sellers.

“We are always exploring new ways to work with our selling partners to delight our customers with more selection, lower prices, and greater convenience,” Amazon spokesperson Maria Boschetti said in response to questions about the programme, which was reported earlier by the Information.

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Among the documents is a screenshot of an apparent invitation from Amazon for a July 5 launch event in Yiwu, a famous manufacturing and export hub in China’s eastern Zhejiang province.

Amazon and other US retail incumbents are grappling with the rapid rise of Temu, a unit of PDD Holdings Inc., and online fashion retailer Shein, which have lured customers with steep discounts and, in Temu’s case, a barrage of advertising on television and social media.

Amazon this year began cutting the fees it charges merchants to sell low-priced clothing, a move seen as an attempt to compete with Shein’s bargain basement prices.

By Matt Day and Jacob Gu

Learn more:

Temu Lures More Repeat Customers than EBay, Pressures Amazon

The top source of consumer dissatisfaction is Amazon’s pricing, suggesting that deals — not speedy delivery — have become a priority for inflation-battered consumers.

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