J&T Express
J&T Express (Chinese: 极兔速递) is a multinational express delivery company founded in August 2015 in Jakarta, Indonesia, by entrepreneurs Jet Lee, former CEO of OPPO Indonesia, and Tony Chen, founder of OPPO.[1][2] The company specializes in e-commerce logistics and express parcel services, operating in 13 countries primarily across Southeast Asia and China, where it holds a leading position by parcel volume.[3][4] J&T Express has experienced rapid expansion, establishing over 237 transit centers and serving as the top e-commerce delivery provider in Southeast Asia with a 28.6% market share as of 2024.[3][5] In 2024, it reported full-year revenue of US$10.26 billion, a 15.9% year-over-year increase, and achieved profitability for the first time, driven by core express delivery operations that accounted for the majority of its income.[6] The firm has further grown its global footprint, entering markets in Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa since 2022, while handling billions of parcels annually, including 7.39 billion in the second quarter of 2025 alone.[7][8] Despite its growth, J&T Express has encountered operational controversies, including incidents of parcel mishandling captured in viral videos leading to internal sanctions and government probes in the Philippines, as well as labor disputes involving contractualization practices and strikes over working conditions in Southeast Asia.[9][10][11] These issues highlight challenges in maintaining service standards amid aggressive scaling to meet e-commerce demand.[12]
Founding and Early Development
Establishment and Founders
J&T Express was founded in August 2015 in Jakarta, Indonesia, as an express delivery company targeting the burgeoning e-commerce sector in Southeast Asia.[13] [3] The venture was initiated by two Chinese entrepreneurs with prior experience in consumer electronics: Jet Jie Li, who had served as CEO of Oppo Indonesia, and Tony Chen, a key figure in Oppo's establishment and operations.[14] [1] The company name "J&T" directly derives from the founders' given names, reflecting their personal involvement in shaping the brand from inception.[15] Jet Jie Li, the primary founder and current chairman and CEO, brought extensive sales and management expertise from his tenure at Oppo, where he navigated market expansion in Indonesia.[13] [14] Tony Chen complemented this with his foundational role in Oppo's development since 2004, providing insights into supply chain and distribution challenges in emerging markets.[1] Their decision to launch in Indonesia capitalized on the rapid growth of platforms like Shopee and Tokopedia, addressing inefficiencies in last-mile delivery that hindered e-commerce scalability.[16] From its establishment, J&T Express prioritized a technology-driven model, leveraging the founders' tech background to integrate digital tracking and efficient routing systems early on, which differentiated it from traditional couriers in the region.[3] Li has remained at the helm, overseeing strategic direction, while the company's initial focus remained on building a dense network of sorting centers and rider fleets in Indonesia to handle surging parcel volumes.[13]Initial Operations in Indonesia
J&T Express was founded in August 2015 in Jakarta, Indonesia, by Jet Lee, the former CEO of OPPO Indonesia, and Tony Chen, founder and CEO of OPPO, who recognized inefficiencies in local delivery services during their time building OPPO's distribution networks in the region.[1][16] The company launched as a technology-driven express delivery provider targeting the burgeoning e-commerce market, offering last-mile logistics services for parcel pickups and deliveries within cities and provinces.[3][16] Early operations emphasized rapid, reliable service with 365-day availability, partnering with platforms like Shopee, Tokopedia, and Bukalapak to handle online shopping volumes.[16] J&T Express adopted a franchised model, outsourcing deliveries, sorting, and customer service to over 100 regional partners who received equity incentives, which minimized upfront capital expenditures while enabling localized adaptations to Indonesia's diverse geography and traffic challenges.[1] This approach leveraged the founders' established supplier and logistics contacts from OPPO, allowing quick scaling without heavy infrastructure investment.[16] Automated sorting facilities were introduced early to streamline processing, contributing to the company's positioning as an efficient alternative to slower incumbents.[17] By 2017, within two years of inception, J&T Express had risen to become one of Indonesia's leading express delivery firms, handling significant daily parcel volumes amid e-commerce growth and demonstrating operational resilience through tech-enabled tracking and partner incentives.[18] This period marked the foundation for its dominance in Southeast Asia's logistics sector, with initial traction driven by competitive pricing, speed, and integration with digital marketplaces rather than broad advertising.[16][1]Growth During COVID-19 Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic catalyzed explosive growth for J&T Express in Indonesia, its home market, as nationwide lockdowns and social distancing measures from March 2020 onward drove a sharp pivot to e-commerce, with consumers increasingly relying on platforms like Bukalapak, Tokopedia, and Shopee for essentials and non-essentials. Prior to the pandemic, the company handled approximately 1 million parcels daily, concentrated primarily on Java island. Parcel volumes surged by 40% in 2020 amid this e-shopping boom, reflecting heightened demand for reliable last-mile delivery amid restricted physical retail access.[19] By the end of 2020, daily parcel deliveries had risen to 1.7 million, with roughly two-thirds originating from e-commerce partners, enabling J&T Express to expand its operational footprint beyond Java to meet nationwide demand. This period marked a foundational scaling phase, supported by investments in sorting facilities and rider networks to handle the influx, as articulated by chief executive Robin Lo, who noted the pandemic's role in amplifying delivery requirements. By May 2021, daily volumes had further climbed to 2.5 million parcels, underscoring the company's ability to capitalize on the sustained e-commerce momentum triggered by the health crisis.[19] Globally, J&T Express's expansion during the pandemic years aligned with this Indonesian surge, contributing to a compound annual growth rate of 112.3% in parcel volumes from 2020 to 2022, culminating in 14.6 billion parcels delivered worldwide in 2022, including 2.5 billion in Southeast Asia where it captured a 22.5% market share. This growth was underpinned by the broader e-commerce acceleration across emerging markets, though Indonesia remained the core driver, with revenue from the region accounting for 32.8% of total company revenue by 2022.[20]Global Expansion
Entry into Southeast Asian Markets
J&T Express initiated its regional expansion outside Indonesia in 2018, targeting high-growth e-commerce markets in Southeast Asia by leveraging its technology-enabled network and agent-based model. The company entered Malaysia in August 2018, establishing operations to support express delivery for online retailers amid rising digital commerce.[21] Concurrently, it launched in Vietnam in July 2018, rapidly building a depot network to handle cross-border and domestic parcels, capitalizing on the country's burgeoning e-commerce sector.[22] The expansion accelerated in 2019 with entries into three additional markets. On March 2, 2019, J&T Express officially launched in the Philippines, inaugurating its first facility in Taguig City and emphasizing nationwide coverage for e-commerce shipments.[23] In the same month, it commenced operations in Thailand, targeting coverage across 77 provinces to meet demand from platforms like Shopee and Lazada.[24] Cambodia followed in 2019, extending the network to integrate with regional logistics hubs, though specific launch metrics were initially modest compared to larger neighbors. These moves positioned J&T as a key player in Southeast Asia's logistics landscape, with early focus on last-mile efficiency and partnerships with local e-commerce firms. By prioritizing markets with fragmented delivery services and explosive online sales growth—Vietnam's e-commerce market, for instance, saw parcel volumes surge post-entry—the company achieved rapid scale. Initial investments included sorting centers and vehicle fleets tailored to local infrastructure, enabling J&T to capture significant shares in express delivery within 1-2 years of each launch.[25] This phase of expansion, spanning five new countries by late 2019, laid the foundation for J&T's dominance in the region, handling billions of parcels annually by the mid-2020s through sustained infrastructure buildup.Expansion to China
J&T Express entered the Chinese market in March 2020, leveraging an acquisition of Longban Express (龙邦物流) in 2019 to secure the necessary national express business license required for operations in the country.[20] [16] This move allowed the company, originally focused on Southeast Asia, to establish a foothold in the world's largest and most competitive logistics sector, where established players like SF Express and STO Express dominated.[26] The entry strategy emphasized rapid network build-out, starting with coverage in key e-commerce hubs such as Guangdong, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang provinces, to capitalize on surging demand from platforms like Pinduoduo.[16] To accelerate expansion, J&T invested heavily in infrastructure, including sorting centers and last-mile delivery stations, aiming to handle high-volume, low-margin parcels from cross-border and domestic e-commerce. By late 2020, the company had integrated Longban's existing routes and begun recruiting franchise partners, mirroring its Indonesia model but adapting to China's regulatory scrutiny on labor and pricing.[27] In December 2021, J&T further consolidated its position by acquiring BEST Express China, a subsidiary of Alibaba-backed BEST Inc., for an undisclosed sum, which enhanced its northern China presence and integrated advanced sorting technology.[28] This acquisition, completed amid intense price wars, helped J&T achieve nationwide coverage across over 2,000 counties by mid-2022.[29] Despite initial operational losses due to aggressive pricing to gain market share—reportedly capturing 10% of the express delivery volume within three years—the expansion prioritized volume over profitability, processing billions of parcels annually through a franchise-heavy model that outsourced much of the delivery workforce.[26] By 2023, J&T's China operations handled over 20 billion parcels cumulatively since entry, supported by partnerships with e-commerce giants and investments exceeding $1 billion in logistics assets, though critics noted risks from over-reliance on unprofitable growth in a saturated market.[30] This "retrograde" expansion from Southeast Asia to China, driven by founders' origins, tested the company's scalability against domestic incumbents but established it as a disruptor focused on underserved rural and cross-border segments.[27]Further International Growth
Following its established presence in Southeast Asia and China, J&T Express initiated further international growth by entering the Middle East in January 2022, launching operations in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia after eight months of site inspections and trial runs.[31][32] This expansion extended the company's network to ten countries at the time, targeting e-commerce logistics amid rising cross-border demand in the region.[33] By June 2022, J&T Express further broadened its Middle East and North Africa (MENA) footprint, achieving coverage across thirteen countries total through additional network buildouts.[34] In Saudi Arabia, operations scaled rapidly, with J&T Express securing partnerships with e-commerce platforms and positioning itself as the twentieth provider for cross-border clearance and local delivery by early 2024.[35] The company participated in Saudi Arabia's LEAP technology conference in March 2024 to deepen e-commerce ties and promote logistics innovations, aligning with national efforts to establish the kingdom as a regional hub.[35] In August 2024, J&T Express introduced its J&T SPEED premium delivery service in Saudi Arabia, effective from June 27, 2024, to enhance same-day and next-day capabilities for high-value shipments.[36] Concurrently, J&T Express advanced into Latin America starting in February 2022 with a network launch in Mexico, increasing its global reach to eleven countries and focusing on cross-border e-commerce from Asia.[37] This was followed by entry into Brazil in May 2022, targeting the region's large economies and integrating with local platforms.[38] By 2025, the company diversified beyond Chinese e-commerce exporters to partner with regional leader MercadoLibre, supporting broader market penetration and contributing to modest parcel volume growth in new markets, including 74.4 million parcels in Q4 2024 (a 0.1% year-over-year increase).[39][40] These efforts underscored J&T Express's strategy of leveraging e-commerce surges for network density, though new markets remained secondary to core Asian operations in volume contribution.[41]Business Model and Operations
Core Services and Logistics Network
J&T Express's core services focus on express parcel delivery optimized for e-commerce, including last-mile solutions with standard and express options, door-to-door pickup, cash-on-delivery, and real-time tracking via mobile applications.[42][43] The company also provides fulfillment services, such as warehousing and order processing, alongside international logistics for cross-border shipments to regions including Asia, Europe, Africa, America, and Oceania.[42] These offerings emphasize efficiency in handling high-volume e-commerce parcels, with capabilities demonstrated by processing over 100 million parcels globally in a single day during peak periods in 2024.[44] The logistics network operates across 13 countries: Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, Cambodia, Singapore, China, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Mexico, Brazil, and Egypt.[3] Infrastructure includes 237 large-scale transit centers for sorting, 19,600 pickup points, and partnerships with 7,200 network entities to facilitate widespread coverage.[3] Over 400,000 service personnel support operations as of December 31, 2024, enabling daily parcel volumes exceeding 24.65 billion annually by integrating automated sorting lines—reaching 303 by March 31, 2025—and line-haul vehicles numbering 5,600.[42][45] In specific markets, the network features tailored expansions, such as 12 sorting centers and 26 distribution centers in Mexico covering all 32 states since its 2022 launch, and upgrades to four sorting centers plus five distribution hubs in Thailand with added automated equipment.[46][47] Similar enhancements in China include 32 renovated sorting centers and over 600 upgraded distribution hubs, bolstering capacity for its largest market.[48] These investments prioritize self-built hubs at transportation nodes to improve throughput and reliability in cross-border and domestic flows.[49]Technology Integration and Efficiency Measures
J&T Express has prioritized digital transformation through substantial investments in artificial intelligence (AI), automation, and data analytics to streamline its logistics operations across global markets. The company pledged in 2023 to enhance its digitization efforts, focusing on AI integration to optimize supply chain processes and improve service reliability.[50] This includes deploying AI-driven tools for predictive analytics in demand forecasting and operational planning, which have contributed to handling over 100 million daily parcels by enabling scalable efficiency.[51] In sorting and warehousing, J&T Express employs automated sorting systems and smart industrial facilities to boost throughput and reduce manual errors. On October 14, 2024, the company launched its first self-built smart supply chain industrial park in China, covering 150,000 square meters and capable of processing up to 6 million parcels per day at peak capacity through integrated automation and real-time monitoring technologies.[49] Complementary measures include dynamic digital mapping for route optimization and intelligent line-haul management systems that enhance punctuality, minimize fuel consumption variability from driver behavior, and support just-in-time delivery.[52][53] For last-mile delivery, J&T integrates AI and automation to address urban congestion and variable demand, incorporating unmanned vehicles and drones to optimize routes, cut costs, and accelerate fulfillment.[54][51] Warehouse management systems (WMS) and order management systems (OMS) further enable seamless e-commerce integration, allowing real-time inventory tracking and automated order routing to reduce turnaround times.[55] These technologies collectively lower operational costs by up to 20-30% in high-volume scenarios, as evidenced by performance metrics from automated hubs, while maintaining on-time delivery rates above 95% in key Southeast Asian markets.[54]Workforce and Supply Chain Management
J&T Express maintains a workforce of 156,851 full-time employees as of December 31, 2024, comprising 79.04% males and 20.96% females, with over half under 30 years of age.[56] The company also engages more than 400,000 service personnel globally, including network partners and couriers, to support its express delivery operations across 13 countries.[3] Employee turnover reached 43.46% in 2024, attributed in part to proactive workforce optimization amid expansion.[56] Recruitment emphasizes talent acquisition for management roles and operational staff, incorporating campus hiring with subsidies and management trainee programs to build local market expertise.[56] Training initiatives cover 77.85% of employees, averaging 8.04 hours per employee in 2024, with programs focused on courier service quality, safety (1,089,000 person-times trained), ethics, technical skills, and compliance; these include online sessions, app-based quizzes reaching 250,000 participants, and ESG training for all new managers across 13 countries.[56] Compensation includes competitive salaries, bonuses, pensions, and share-based incentives under 2020 and 2024 plans, with total employee benefits expenses rising to USD 1.385 billion in 2024.[56] The supply chain relies on a regional sponsor model for network partners, managing approximately 7,200 partners and 2,992 suppliers, all new entrants required to sign a code of conduct covering ethics and sustainability.[56][3] Infrastructure includes 238 sorting centers, 19,100 outlets, 76 warehousing centers, and 11,900 line-haul vehicles (of which 6,600 are self-owned), enabling customized solutions for warehouse management, transportation, and distribution.[56] Efficiency measures feature an 80% increase in automated sorting equipment in 2024, optimized route planning, and vehicle utilization enhancements, reducing per-parcel costs—such as pickup/delivery from USD 0.40 to USD 0.36 in Southeast Asia and sorting from USD 0.09 to USD 0.05 regionally.[56] Sustainability efforts integrate green practices across the chain, including 1,327 LNG vehicles (26% of fleet), 31.65 million reusable transit bags with 99% utilization, photovoltaic panels generating 1.09 million kWh, and supplier preferences for eco-friendly materials, contributing to clean energy consumption of 497,291 MWh in 2024 despite overall energy use rising to 4.175 million MWh.[56] These initiatives support e-commerce-focused logistics while addressing emissions through biodiesel use and tree-planting programs absorbing 250-300 tons of CO2 annually in select markets.[56]Financial Performance and Investments
Revenue Growth and Profitability Milestones
J&T Global Express reported revenue of approximately US$8.1 billion in 2023, reflecting continued expansion in parcel volumes across its core markets.[57] This grew to US$10.0 billion in express delivery revenue for 2024, marking a year-over-year increase driven by a 24% rise in total parcels handled to over 5.6 billion globally.[57] [6] The company achieved its first full-year net profit in 2024, recording US$110 million, a reversal from the US$1.16 billion net loss in 2023 attributable to prior investments in network scaling and operational efficiencies.[6] [41] Adjusted net profit for 2024 reached higher levels, supported by improved margins in Southeast Asia, where revenue increased 22.3% to US$3.22 billion and adjusted EBITDA rose 21.3% to US$460 million.[6] In the first half of 2025, revenue climbed 13.1% year-over-year to US$5.5 billion, with adjusted net profit surging 147.1% to US$156 million, indicating sustained momentum from cost optimizations and volume growth exceeding 20% in key regions.[58] Core express delivery services contributed US$5.34 billion, up 12.7%, underscoring the scalability of its logistics network amid e-commerce demand.[59]| Year | Revenue (US$ billion) | Net Profit/Loss (US$ million) |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 8.1 | -1,160 |
| 2024 | 10.0 | 110 |
Funding, Valuation, and Public Listing
J&T Express raised substantial capital through private funding rounds prior to its public listing. On November 24, 2021, the company secured $2.5 billion in a private equity round, achieving a post-money valuation of approximately $20 billion; key investors included Sequoia Capital China, Boyu Capital, and Hillhouse Capital Group.[60][61] In May 2023, J&T Express conducted concurrent second-tranche Series C and Series D rounds, raising an additional $1.8 billion, though specific valuation details for these rounds were not publicly disclosed.[62] The company's public listing occurred on October 27, 2023, when J&T Global Express Limited, its Cayman Islands-incorporated holding entity, completed an initial public offering (IPO) on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange under the ticker 1519.HK. The IPO raised approximately HK$3.92 billion (about $500 million), with shares priced at HK$12 each; this implied a valuation of around $13 billion, lower than the 2021 private round figure amid market conditions for tech-logistics firms.[63][61][64] Shares debuted at a 1.33% discount to the offer price, reflecting investor caution in Hong Kong's IPO market that year.[65]| Funding Event | Date | Amount Raised | Valuation | Key Investors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private Equity Round | November 24, 2021 | $2.5 billion | $20 billion | Sequoia Capital China, Boyu Capital, Hillhouse Capital Group[60][61] |
| Series C/D Rounds | May 2023 | $1.8 billion | Not disclosed | Undisclosed[62] |
| Hong Kong IPO | October 27, 2023 | ~$500 million (HK$3.92 billion) | ~$13 billion | Public investors[63][64] |