The chief executive of eBay Inc. said Tuesday the U.S. e-commerce giant aims to achieve a multibillion dollar business in Japan by offering a range of foreign items with competitive prices.

Devin Wenig, president and CEO of eBay, also said in an interview with Kyodo News in Tokyo that the company will expand operations in other parts of Asia, including the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, citing their growth potential and that it is "always watching" for new business opportunities.

"We would like to be one of the top Japanese e-commerce sites," said Wenig, pitching eBay's strength in providing products at "best" prices by taking advantage of its worldwide inventory networks.

"I think that will take some time but our growth rate is very high," he said, when asked about reaching the company's business target in Japan from the current sales level of over $1 billion. "We're going to build a multibillion dollar Japanese business."

In May, eBay completed the acquisition of Singapore-based Giosis Pte. Ltd.'s Japanese business, including the Qoo10 online shopping platform, which has a membership base of 10 million users in Asia's second-largest economy.

"We are still relatively small compared to the big guys" in the Japanese market led by Amazon.com Inc., Rakuten Inc. and Yahoo Japan Corp., Wenig said. "But there's no reason given what we bring to Japanese consumers that we couldn't be one of the tops."

According to data from Japan's industry ministry, the country's e-commerce market grew 9.1 percent in 2017 from a year earlier to 16.5 trillion yen ($145 million), in contrast to shrinking sales in department stores and supermarkets.

The California-based company, with 170 million active buyers around the world, first entered the Japanese market in 1999 to offer online auctions but was forced to pull out in 2002 due to poor performance in harsh competition with Yahoo Japan.

Since 2009, eBay has been engaging in cross-border e-commerce business with small and medium-sized companies in Japan.

==Kyodo