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Overseas investors making hay from e-commerce bet

(Agencies) Updated: 2014-08-19 14:23

A wager by the teachers of Ontario, Canada, on Beijing-based online retailer JD.com is paying off in a big way.

Their C $141 billion ($129 billion) retirement fund bought about 44 million of the then-privately held company's shares in November 2012 for $175 million, according to a May filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

By the end of June, after JD.com went public in the US and its stock soared, the investment's value more than tripled to $630 million, a separate filing made on Thursday with the SEC showed.

The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan's investment is part of a growing trend that has seen overseas asset managers, from Singapore's Temasek Holdings Pte to Baltimore-based T Rowe Price Group Inc, scoop up stakes in Chinese e-commerce operators to benefit from surging online shopping in the world's largest pool of Internet users. JD.com's shares gained 4.3 percent last week, bringing its advance since its May debut to 56 percent.

"It's a clear positive that JD has the support of sophisticated investors with deep emerging markets experience," Eric Brock, who helps oversee about $4.6 billion as a portfolio manager at Clough Capital Partners, said by e-mail on Friday.

"JD is investing in a big market. Having the support of large, long-term investors will be very helpful as they create value."

Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan spokeswoman Deborah Allan declined to comment on what the asset manager has done with its JD.com shares since the end of June.

The Toronto-based fund's 2.03 percent stake in the online retailer, which has a business model similar to that of Amazon.com Inc, makes it the company's largest equity holder among external investors tracked by Bloomberg.

China's e-commerce sales increased 47 percent to 629 billion yuan ($102 billion) in the April-June period, surpassing 10 percent of the nation's consumer goods spending, according to data from Shanghai-based Internet consultant IResearch.

Online shopping may reach 16 percent of retail sales by 2017, driven by increased mobile purchases.

JD.com's gross merchandise volume, the value of all goods sold on its website, jumped 107 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier as revenue surged 64 percent to $4.6 billion, the company said on Friday.

Hangzhou-based Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, which may debut in New York as soon as next month with the biggest IPO in US history, said in June that net income rose to about 23.1 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the 12 months through March from 8.4 billion yuan a year earlier.

"People are clearly looking for ways to play this tremendous growth and this is creating demand for Chinese e-commerce plays," David Riedel, president and founder of Riedel Research Group in New York, said by e-mail. "Details coming out of the reports and filings leading up to the Alibaba IPO have highlighted to investors the strong trends in e-commerce in China."

Los Angeles-based Capital World Investors owns 11.9 million of JD.com's ADRs, or about $340 million as of June 30, while Temasek Holdings Pte, Singapore's state-owned investment firm, added a $17.2 million stake.

Baltimore-based money manager T Rowe Price increased its position in Guangzhou-based online fashion retailer Vipshop Holdings Ltd to 7.1 percent in the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Vipshop has soared 161 percent this year, second among the 79 members of the Bloomberg China-US Equity Index. The gauge added 2.1 percent last week to 115.63.

Overseas investors making hay from e-commerce bet

Overseas investors making hay from e-commerce bet

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