JD.com is expanding its delivery network in Europe and accelerating its localization strategy.

Chinese e-commerce is accelerating its transformation in Europe: JD.com is preparing to launch Joybuy, a retail platform designed for the European market, and is relying on JoyExpress (the group’s logistics branch) to deploy an “in-region” distribution chain. Specifically, the ambition is to shift from a model largely based on cross-border shipping to a model that is locally stocked and locally delivered, with teams, vehicles, and preparation capabilities on-site.

The strategy covers several major markets (United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, France) and relies on a network of warehouses and depots designed to support rapid delivery promises, including next-day delivery in dense areas. This orientation is also an implicit response to a stricter European regulatory environment on low-value flows: as costs and formalities increase, platforms seek to preserve the customer experience by bringing stock closer to the consumer.

This movement is not isolated: other e-commerce players are already reorganizing their logistics schemes in Europe, thru regional hubs, partnerships, and “local-to-local” models. For air transport, this could reshuffle the cards: if a portion of the “small parcel” flow transforms into a replenishment flow toward European stocks, the structure of capacity demand could change (fewer parcel-driven peaks, more inventory logistics and intra-Europe distribution).

In the end, JD.com sends a strong signal: the e-commerce battle in Europe will increasingly be played out on the mastery of the local supply chain — not just on the ability to ship quickly from Asia.

The post JD.com is expanding its delivery network in Europe and accelerating its localization strategy. appeared first on The Logistic News.

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