TradingKey - In the world of Chinese technology stocks, e-commerce companies one of the most popular cohort of names among investors. In recent years, there have been strong upstarts that have grown and taken market share away from incumbents in the highly-competitive Chinese retail scene.
One of those challengers was PDD Holdings (NASDAQ: PDD), the parent company of Chinese e-commerce platform Pinduoduo and the fast-expanding Temu.
The company just dropped its Q4 2024 and FY2024 earnings on Thursday (20 March) before the market opened in the US – and there’s a lot for investors to digest. Revenue growth is slowing. Consumer demand in China remains fragile. And while Temu is on fire globally, there are regulatory storm clouds forming.
Let’s dive into six key takeaways from the latest PDD earnings report, including both the opportunities and the risks investors should be considering.
For Q4 2024, PDD posted revenue of RMB 110.6 billion (US$15.3 billion), up 24% year-on-year but that fell short of analysts’ estimates of RMB 115.4 billion.
The market didn’t love it: shares dropped more than 3% in pre-market trading but actually ended the trading day up 4%.
Despite running heavy discount campaigns and benefitting from Chinese government stimulus efforts, consumers are still cautious. And that’s a red flag. The Chinese economy is going through a slow recovery, and even aggressive price cuts aren’t enough to spark a strong rebound in discretionary spending.
This could be a sign that the company and Chinese e-commerce in general may not be out of the woods yet.
There’s no denying Temu is one of PDD’s most exciting growth drivers. Its cheap prices and vast product selection have made it wildly popular in the US and Europe, especially with cost-conscious consumers.
But this growth is partly thanks to a US trade loophole known as the de minimis exemption. It allows items under US$800 to enter the country tariff-free, and Temu has taken full advantage of that. In January alone, 89 million packages from China entered the US under this rule.
Here’s the big risk: Washington is watching closely. President Trump briefly moved to suspend the de minimis policy last month before walking it back due to the chaos it caused in customs and logistics. Still, with growing political scrutiny on Chinese imports, it’s clear that the exemption may not last forever.
If that loophole closes, Temu’s low-cost advantage could take a serious hit and so could PDD’s global growth story.
Despite the revenue miss, PDD delivered strong profits. For Q4 2024, net income hit RMB 27.45 billion and adjusted earnings per ADS came in at RMB 20.15, beating expectations.
But margins are starting to compress. Operating margin dipped to 24% from 28% a year ago, mainly due to hefty spending on subsidies, logistics upgrades, and merchant incentives.
The company has made it clear it’s in investment mode but there’s only so long it can keep spending aggressively without seeing a corresponding revenue payoff.
PDD isn't the only player fighting for wallet share in China's massive (but slowing) e-commerce market. Rivals Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (HKEX: 9988) (NYSE: BABA) and JD.com Inc (HKEX: 9618) (NASDAQ: JD) both reported better-than-expected revenue recently, a reminder that PDD’s deep discounts alone may not be enough to win over cautious consumers.
While Pinduoduo’s rural focus and group-buying model have worked in the past, the company now faces the challenge of differentiating itself in a market where everyone is cutting prices and chasing the same customers.
Investors should monitor whether PDD can maintain its user engagement and brand loyalty, especially as the low-hanging fruit of rural expansion gets picked.
PDD is investing heavily in platform “quality.” This includes merchant support programmess, agricultural technology, supply chain modernisation, and logistics services to underserved regions. These are the kinds of investments that can build a durable moat, but they come at a cost.
It’s hard to quantify the Return On Investment (ROI) on initiatives like free rural shipping or smart farming contests, and there’s no guarantee these will translate into faster growth or stronger margins down the line.
In a more supportive macro environment, these long-term plays would look brilliant. But in the current climate of weak consumption and rising costs, they could weigh on short- to mid-term performance.
Perhaps the most important thing for investors to understand: this is not a "set it and forget it" stock. PDD’s management openly acknowledged that growth and profits may be choppy in the near term as it ramps up investments and navigates macro uncertainty.
With so many moving parts – Chinese consumer weakness, intense competition, US policy risks, and high capital outlays – PDD may not deliver smooth quarterly results.
But for investors willing to stomach some volatility, the long-term opportunity in building a next-gen, global e-commerce platform could be compelling.
Exciting opportunities but bumpy road ahead
PDD Holdings is betting big on ecosystem quality, global expansion, and long-term innovation. But that bet comes with real risks — from domestic demand weakness to regulatory uncertainty abroad.
Temu’s momentum is exciting. Pinduoduo’s scale is impressive. But investors should stay clear-eyed about the challenges ahead.
For now, PDD is one of the most intriguing and most unpredictable stories in global e-commerce. If you're considering investing, make sure it fits your risk profile.