By Julien Girault, AFP/Beijing

The Chinese tradition of giving gifts of money in red envelopes at Lunar New Year has turned into big business for Web giants Alibaba and Tencent, which now both offer electronic “hung bao” (literally, red packet).
At the end of each lunar year, it is customary in China to give children hung bao – small sums of money in envelopes that are red, the colour of prosperity. But now the age-old practice is going high-tech.
It is now possible to exchange “red envelopes” via smartphone, which is proving a popular trend in China and has sparked a battle for the lucrative market between the two companies providing the service, Tencent and Alibaba.
“You don’t have to pay the same fees or wait as long as you would for a traditional bank transfer. It’s more convenient, simple and fun,” Wang Le, a 28-year-old Beijing resident, told AFP.
The Year of the Sheep, which begins today, is an opportunity to relive the childhood magic of the lunar holiday at any age, according to Wang.
“I loved getting red envelopes when I was little, but it was only my older relatives who would give them, and only around the new year,” he said. “With electronic red envelopes, you’re not limited by your identity or the time of year. It’s a new, fresh way of playing the game.”
The idea was introduced in 2014 by WeChat, a mobile messaging system with over 400mn users and operated by Tencent, China’s largest Internet service portal. It was immediately successful.
Within 10 days, some 8mn users had exchanged 40mn virtual envelopes.
The minimum amount that can be exchanged is modest – one yuan, or 16¢ of the US dollar – and there’s also the fun option of splitting a sum between several recipients.
This year, Alipay Wallet, the payment system run by online retail giant Alibaba, is ready to take on the competition. It is allowing its 190mn users to send digital gifts, notably via the Twitter-like Sina Weibo, of which Alibaba is a shareholder.
For the past few weeks a digital battle has been raging, with Tencent banning Alipay from sending red envelopes via WeChat, saying that they posed a “security” threat.
Recently, WeChat also blocked Alibaba’s music app Xiami.
To compete for the public’s favour, the two rivals have launched lotteries through which they award red envelopes to users in an online game.
Tencent agreed to give out 800mn yuan (about $127mn) in envelopes on its WeChat and QQ messaging apps over a 10-day period, with each one worth as little as several cents or as much as $800.
For its part, Alipay has promised to give out $95mn in envelopes as well as coupons and discounts totalling several billion yuan as part of its publicity quest.
“It’s great. I never thought that at my age, I’d be able to ‘reap without sowing’ like this,” said Wang, who frantically checks his phone each morning to see the flood of hung bao coming in.
Tencent and Alibaba are not just playing Santa Claus, however – the publicity surrounding the lotteries has garnered the Web giants many more new users.
It’s easy to send and receive hung bao or participate in the lotteries: you simply need to register your bank details.
Once users have signed up, they are more likely to make spontaneous electronic payments, “especially given Chinese people’s tendency to make impulse buys”, according to Liu Xingliang, chairman of Hongmai Software, a Beijing-based Internet data analysis company.
“In China, people traditionally send red envelopes to celebrate the new year, so it’s quite an easy way to attract the public,” he said.
According to market research group iResearch, Alipay controls 82.6% of the Chinese mobile phone payment market, compared to 10% for Tencent’s Tenpay.
However, Tenpay only controlled 4% of the market before the red envelope campaign debuted on WeChat in 2014.
Alibaba founder Jack Ma has dubbed WeChat’s red envelope campaign a “Pearl Harbour-like attack” on Alipay.
The stakes are high.
In 2014 in China, mobile payment transactions reached 7.77tn yuan ($1.24tn), six times the amount the previous year, according to research group Analysys.