Germany cleared JD.com's €2.2 billion takeover of Ceconomy, the owner of MediaMarkt and Saturn, but imposed strict data protection conditions that set a new benchmark for Chinese acquisitions in Europe.
Germany cleared JD.com's €2.2 billion takeover of Ceconomy, the owner of MediaMarkt and Saturn, but imposed strict data protection conditions that set a new benchmark for Chinese acquisitions in Europe.

Germany approved JD.com's €2.2 billion acquisition of Ceconomy on Tuesday, attaching data protection conditions that give Berlin broad oversight powers over the Chinese e-commerce giant's handling of customer information.
"The approval reflects a pragmatic approach to Chinese investment, but the conditions signal that Berlin views data security as a red line for any future tech acquisitions," said Tom Brennan, M&A analyst at Edgen. "This sets a precedent for how Europe may handle similar deals going forward."
The deal, first signed in July 2025, values Ceconomy at €4.6 per share, or roughly 10% of the German retailer's €22.4 billion in annual revenue. JD.com, China's second-largest e-commerce company with annual turnover exceeding €140 billion, will acquire Ceconomy's network of more than 1,000 consumer electronics stores across 12 countries, including the MediaMarkt and Saturn chains. The German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs said it approved the transaction after assessing risks to public order and security, but reserved the right to revoke approval if JD.com violates the data protection terms.
The deal comes as the European Union tightens scrutiny of Chinese investment across multiple fronts. Brussels this week imposed a €3 levy on low-value Chinese parcels and cut steel import quotas by 47%, while the EU-China goods trade deficit has reached roughly €1 billion a day. For JD.com, the acquisition offers a physical retail foothold in Europe's largest economy as competition in China's domestic e-commerce market intensifies and growth slows.
The approval conditions require JD.com to ensure that personal data of Ceconomy's German customers remains protected under European standards, with the German government retaining broad monitoring rights. The economy ministry said it could revoke the approval if violations emerge, a clause that gives Berlin ongoing leverage over the Chinese company's operations.
JD.com said it expects the transaction to close in the second half of 2026, pending any further review by EU regulators. The European Commission has been investigating the deal under its foreign subsidies regulation, though Germany's approval suggests the national-level review has been satisfied.
A strategic bet on European retail
For JD.com, the acquisition represents its largest European bet to date. The Beijing-based company, which trails only Alibaba Group Holding in China's B2C market, has been seeking international expansion as growth at home slows. Ceconomy's network of electronics stores — including Saturn's Hamburg location, the largest electronics retail store in Europe — gives JD.com an established logistics and retail infrastructure.
Analysts expect JD.com to push digitalization across the MediaMarkt and Saturn chains, improve logistics efficiency and expand online sales to broaden product range and lower prices. The company has said it plans to maintain the brands' operational independence, a strategy that helped ease regulatory concerns.
Europe's cooling gap and China's export machine
The deal lands as Chinese companies deepen their footprint in European consumer markets. Chinese manufacturers exported $27.2 billion worth of air conditioners in 2025, nearly 40% of global exports, with sales surging during European heatwaves. Chinese coffee chain Cotti Coffee now serves €0.99 espressos opposite the European Commission's headquarters in Brussels.
But the political climate for Chinese investment is shifting. The EU's new steel safeguards and parcel levy reflect growing concern over Chinese overcapacity and market dependency. Germany's approval of the Ceconomy deal, with its data protection strings attached, suggests Berlin is trying to balance economic engagement with strategic caution — a tightrope other European capitals are watching closely.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.