Advertisement

JD.com said to buy majority stake in Hong Kong’s Kai Bo grocery chain

Report says JD.com buys 70 per cent stake in Kai Bo Food Supermarket for US$509 million

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
0
A JD.com booth at AWE2024 in Shanghai. Photo: Future Publishing via Getty Images
Ben Jiangin Beijing
Chinese e-commerce group JD.com reportedly bought a majority stake in Hong Kong grocery chain Kai Bo, marking the mainland company’s latest effort to expand its global presence.

JD.com spent HK$4 billion (US$509 million) to acquire 70 per cent of Kai Bo Food Supermarket, with the deal involving the grocer’s retail network and property assets, Hong Kong media outlet HK01 reported on Monday, citing anonymous sources.

Kai Bo did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A JD.com representative said the report “significantly deviates from the facts and is … inaccurate”, adding that the acquisition price was much lower.

The deal, which was agreed upon four months ago, included a “transition period” clause saying Kai Bo founder Lam Hiu-ngai and the firm’s current management would retain the operational reins for the next three years, the report said. During that time, JD.com would not seek full operational control to ensure a smooth transition.

Kai Bo had around 90 outlets across Hong Kong. Photo: Jelly Tse
Kai Bo had around 90 outlets across Hong Kong. Photo: Jelly Tse

Founded in 1991, Kai Bo had around 90 outlets across Hong Kong and employed more than 1,000 people, according to its website. Analysts said Beijing-based JD.com’s move was significant as it accelerates its push to go global.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2-3x faster
1.1x
220 WPM
Slow
Normal
Fast
1.1x