
BEIJING, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo will spend at least 500 million yuan (73.8 million U.S. dollars) in subsidies to support sales of brand-name products in small cities and rural areas in 2019, the company announced Friday.
The company has established partnerships with over 100 brands covering fields from food to consumer electronics to subsidize their sales with the aim of bringing more authentic and quality products to the country's less developed regions.
Over 600 million products have been sold since Pinduoduo launched two online stores focusing on brands and home appliances last August, most of which went to fourth and even lower-tier cities.
These efforts will speed up sales of brand-name products in less developed regions while pushing out knock-offs, said Pinduoduo co-founder Da Da.
Founded in 2015, Pinduoduo is known for offering group buying deals with big discounts and enjoys a huge consumer base in rural areas and small cities.
The NASDAQ-listed company earlier this month announced a follow-on public offering plan worth over a billion U.S. dollars, which will be used to enhance and expand its business operations, for research and development, and for general corporate purposes and working capital, including potential strategic investments and acquisitions.
Fire brigade in Shanghai holds group wedding
Tourists enjoy ice sculptures in Datan Town, north China
Sunset scenery of Dayan Pagoda in Xi'an
Tourists have fun at scenic spot in Nanlong Town, NW China
Harbin attracts tourists by making best use of ice in winter
In pics: FIS Alpine Ski Women's World Cup Slalom
Black-necked cranes rest at reservoir in Lhunzhub County, Lhasa
China's FAST telescope will be available to foreign scientists in April
"She power" plays indispensable role in poverty alleviation
Top 10 world news events of People's Daily in 2020
Top 10 China news events of People's Daily in 2020
Top 10 media buzzwords of 2020
Year-ender:10 major tourism stories of 2020
No interference in Venezuelan issues
Biz prepares for trade spat
Broadcasting Continent
Australia wins Chinese CEOs as US loses