Chinese government officials have launched enforcement actions against leading e-commerce companies for deceptive advertising practices surrounding their promotional subsidy programs during a prominent nationwide shopping campaign.
The Beijing Municipal Administration for Market Regulation summoned executives from five major platforms: Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall marketplaces, JD.com, Pinduoduo, Douyin, and Xiaohongshu.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The regulatory intervention occurred in advance of the “618” shopping festival, widely recognized as one of China’s most significant annual e-commerce occasions. Officials characterized the competitive behavior as “involution-style” competition — Chinese terminology referring to destructive, hyper-aggressive business practices.
Authorities identified multiple violations including misleading promotional claims, inadequate disclosure of campaign parameters, and insufficient identification of third-party vendors.
Both Alibaba and JD.com promoted initiatives branded as “10 billion yuan subsidies.” Investigators determined these programs were fundamentally misrepresented to consumers.
In Alibaba’s case, regulators concluded the subsidy initiative was actually an ongoing marketing effort rather than a special 618 festival promotion as the advertising suggested. The company failed to provide transparent information about actual subsidy expenditures or merchant cost-sharing arrangements.
JD.com encountered comparable regulatory findings. Officials determined the company obscured essential details including campaign duration, actual subsidy values, and financial responsibility distribution.
The enforcement announcement triggered significant selling pressure for both companies on Thursday.
Alibaba’s Hong Kong shares dropped 6% to HK$106.80 during early GMT trading hours. This represented the security’s weakest performance since July 2025.
JD.com experienced an equivalent 6% decrease, settling at HK$105.6. The session ranked among the most challenging trading days for the stock in recent memory.
U.S.-traded Alibaba shares similarly retreated during early activity, declining approximately 4% intraday. JD.com’s American depository receipts fell nearly 1%.
Regulators went beyond merely identifying violations. They issued mandatory correction orders to all five platforms. Officials additionally cautioned that aggressive subsidy warfare could artificially distort market pricing, erode merchant profitability, and generate consumer protection concerns.
This enforcement action represents the most recent instance of Chinese governmental intervention in technology sector competitive practices. Regulatory oversight has consistently impacted investor confidence and equity valuations throughout this industry segment.
Both Alibaba and JD.com compete within an intensely contested marketplace. Discount-focused promotional campaigns have emerged as critical competitive weapons, particularly during signature events like 618 and the preceding “Double 11” shopping festival.
How the platforms will address these mandates remains uncertain. Neither Alibaba nor JD.com had released official statements as of publication time. The regulatory requirement for corrective action suggests substantial modifications to promotional strategies are forthcoming.
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