A Chinese retail giant's fast push into Britain has run into political resistance. MPs are urging the UK government to investigate JD.com — one of China's largest e-commerce companies, trading in the UK under the brand Joybuy — over concerns that Chinese state backing could give it an unfair edge over British retailers, Yahoo Finance reported. JD.com denies receiving such support.

Who's raising the alarm

The push is led by Alicia Kearns, the Conservatives' shadow national security minister, and Luke de Pulford, who runs the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, a cross-border group of legislators critical of Beijing. Kearns argues JD.com may have benefited from "financing, tax incentives and grants" from the Chinese state that distort competition. De Pulford put the worry bluntly: "UK businesses cannot compete with a Chinese state-subsidised attempt to exploit import thresholds." These are allegations the company rejects.

What Joybuy is

JD.com — often described as "China's Amazon" — launched Joybuy in the UK recently, hiring about 1,000 workers, operating from distribution centers in Milton Keynes and Luton, and offering fast delivery to a reported 17 million British households. Crucially, by stocking goods in UK warehouses rather than shipping each parcel from China, Joybuy can sidestep one controversy while leaning on local fulfillment — though critics say the broader model still benefits from cheap Chinese sourcing.

The 'de minimis' flashpoint

Much of the anger centers on the de minimis exemption — a rule that lets low-value parcels (in the UK, goods worth £135 or less) enter without customs duty. It was designed to spare customs the hassle of taxing trivial shipments, but the explosion of direct-from-China shopping has turned it into a competitive weapon: rivals like Shein and Temu have used cheap, duty-free parcels to undercut high-street prices. UK retailers, already squeezed by higher taxes and labor costs, want the loophole closed — and both the US and EU are moving to scrap or tighten their own versions.

Europe is already investigating

The UK calls follow a harder line in Brussels. The European Commission has opened an in-depth investigation into JD.com's roughly €2.2 billion bid for Ceconomy, the German parent of the MediaMarkt and Saturn electronics chains — the kind of probe run under the EU's Foreign Subsidies Regulation, a newer tool aimed at deals by companies backed by non-EU governments. The Commission said it had preliminary concerns that JD.com may have received preferential financing, tax breaks or grants linked to the Chinese state that could distort the European market.

JD.com has pushed back firmly, saying the Ceconomy deal will be funded by "external private bank debt and available cash," not state money.

Why it matters

The dispute is a microcosm of a bigger Western reckoning with cheap Chinese commerce. Governments are caught between consumers who like low prices and domestic industries that say they can't compete with rivals allegedly propped up by Beijing and helped by tax loopholes. How Britain handles JD.com — whether it launches a formal probe, tightens the de minimis rule, or does neither — will signal how far the UK is willing to go to shield its retailers, and how closely it wants to track the tougher stances now taking shape in Washington and Brussels. For now, the calls are for scrutiny; no formal UK investigation has been confirmed.