Aldi has unveiled plans to launch in China next year as the discounter continues to break into new markets across the globe.

The German grocer said it will start selling āa carefully selected rangeā of items to Chinese consumers online from the second quarter of 2017.
However, Retail Week understands Aldi has no current plans to establish a bricks-and-mortar presence in the country.
Aldi said it had been āactiveā in China for āseveral yearsā, as it ran the rule over potential options for entering the market.
The āmajorityā of products it plans to sell in the market, which will initially be limited to non-chilled groceries and wine, will be sourced from Aldiās existing suppliers in Australia.
Aldi said the move offered its supply partners āexciting business opportunitiesā for growth, with access to 1.4 billion new consumers.
āStrong demandā
A spokeswoman for Aldi Australia said: āAldi has enjoyed strong and long-lasting relationships with many of our Australian suppliers since our first stores opened in 2001.
āOur growth across the country has provided increased business for these suppliers, allowing them to invest this back into their own operations and contributing to their success.
āWe look forward to further expanding these relationships as we develop further opportunities in Asia.ā
The spokeswoman insisted that there was āstrong demandā for Australian-manufactured products in the Chinese market and said Aldi intended to āprovide a competitively priced alternativeā for grocery shoppers in the market.
The move to launch online in China comes less than a year after Aldi started selling wine and special buys online in the UK.
Aldiās plan to launch online first in the Chinese market goes against its usual preference for a bricks-and-mortar presence.
The discounter has repeatedly shrugged off suggestions that it will launch an ecommerce grocery offer in the UK, due to the pressure online retailing would place on already slim food margins.


















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