The Economist June 11th 2022 Business 65
BigtechinChina
Alive. Unwell?
D
idiglobaloughttobedead.Overthe
pastyeartheChinesegovernmenthas
stopped thedomestic ridehailing giant
fromsigningupnewusersandlauncheda
cybersecurityinvestigationintoitsopera
tions,daysafterits$4.4bninitialpublic
offeringinNewYorklastJune.Ina seem
inglyfatalblow,Didiisbeingforcedtode
listfromAmericabutblockedfromrelist
inginHongKong.Thatthecompanyhas
notcollapsedisa testamenttothestrength
of itsbusiness. Its future survival—and
that ofotherChinesetech darlings—re
mainsinthegiftoftheCommunistParty.
TheprobeintoDidiisexpectedtowrap
upshortlyandonJune6ththeWallStreet
Journalreportedthatthefirmwillsoonbe
abletotakeonnewcustomers.Thenews
propelledDidi’ssharepriceupby60%.It
still faces an investigation in America,
whereit isallegedtohaveunderplayedreg
ulatoryrisksinitsdomesticmarket,and
investorsaresuingitonsimilargrounds.
Buttheseproblemsseempifflingnextto
whatit hassoldieredthroughathome.
ThefirstsignthattheCommunistPar
ty’s twoyear campaignagainst bigtech
wouldeasecameinMarchfromLiuHe,a
topeconomicsadvisertoPresidentXiJinp
ing.InMayMrLiumeta handfuloftechex
ecutivesandspokeofsupportingthedigi
tal economyandbalancingtherelation
shipbetweenstateandmarket.Thepoten
tialresumptionofDidi’sbusinessinChina
isonesignthatthingsareindeednormal
ising. Some large tech platforms’ first
quarter results were also better than ex
pected. Meituan, a delivery superapp, said
on June 6th that revenue grew by 25% year
on year in the first three months of 2022.
Yet China’s tech companies are return
ing to a very new normal. Its two mightiest
tech titans, Alibaba and Tencent, are grow
ing much more slowly than in the past.
Room to expand into new areas beyond
their core businesses (ecommerce, and
social media and videogaming, respec
tively) has all but vanished. Outspoken en
trepreneurs such as Jack Ma, Alibaba’s co
founder, are a thing of the past. Tech exec
utives instead parrot official lines about
ending their industry’s “reckless expan
sion” (which has also meant laying off tens
of thousands of employees). And the state
is taking direct stakes in their firms.
Not long ago global investors shud
dered at the prospect of state ownership.
Now some are coming around to the idea.
When Bloomberg reported on May 27th
that faw, a staterun carmaker, was plan
ning to buy a large stake in Didi, the ride
hailer’s share price surged by 10%. A big
state investor such as fawcould help Didi
navigate compliance and governance is
sues, explains Cherry Leung of Bernstein, a
broker. State investors have been eyeing
the consumerlending and creditscoring
businesses of Ant Group, Alibaba’s finan
cial affiliate at the heart of the techlash.
Once viewed as a drag on profitability,
backing from a powerful government
group is increasingly seen as a precondi
tion for big tech firms to remain going con
cerns. It may be the only way for compa
nies that have fallen foul of Mr Xi, and his
grand plan for achieving “common pros
perity” in China, to stay alive. Investors ap
pear happy to forget about Didi’s death
throes now that the firm has been resusci
tated. They would be wisetoremember
that China’s leader has changedhismind
before—and could do so again.n
S HANGHAI
Investors seem willing to forget Didi
Global’s near-death experience
It was Xi’s call
inFebruary.Inditex, which has more than
500 shops in Russia, derived 8.5% of its op
erating profit from the country in 2021.
This year it has had to make a €216m provi
sion for the estimated cost of the war to its
Ukrainian and Russian businesses.
Beyond eastern Europe, fashion retail
ers are being squeezed by competition
from Shein, an onlineonly challenger
from China that has sashayed into Western
wardrobes in the past few years. And then
there is the twin “stagflationary” challenge
of higher costs and flagging demand. This
is acute for clothes pedlars, since many of
their customers have already replenished
their closets—and a new pair of trousers is
a less urgent need than energy, food and
rent, all of which have been getting pricier.
No fastfashion house is immune to
these forces. But with the exception of the
RussiaUkraine war, Inditex does look less
vulnerable than the others. Shein, whose
items sell for an average of $20 or so, poses
less of a direct threat to the Spanish com
pany’s midmarket frocks, which go for
just under $40 at Zara, according to esti
mates by Anne Critchlow of Société Géné
rale, a bank. In recent years Inditex has also
done a better job than its rivals of unifying
its online operations with its more than
6,000 shops around the world, thanks to
clever radiofrequency trackers, an in
house digital platform and a groupwide
inventory database.
Crucially, Inditex enjoys one more ad
vantage over rivals when it comes to inven
tory, the management of which is particu
larly important in times of stagflation (see
previous article). The company produces
around twothirds of its items in Europe or
in nearby north Africa and Turkey. That al
lows it to adjust output more quickly in re
sponse to demand than firms like h&m,
which sources 80% of its clothes from
Asia. In a slowdown it pays to be faster in
fast fashion.n
Blurry prospects