E-commerce giant Alibaba said Thursday that Chinese and international consumers spent more than $14 billion in the world’s biggest online shopping day, as it sought to soothe worries over China’s slowing economy. The November 11 ‘Singles Day’, which fell on Wednesday, has evolved into the globe’s biggest online shopping festival since Alibaba began using the date in 2009 to promote sales through its platforms. The $14.3 billion worth of merchandise volume this year smashed through last year’s tally of $9.3 billion, according to figures from Alibaba. ‘This day demonstrates the power of domestic China consumption and the Chinese consumer’s strong demand for international products,’ Alibaba chief executive officer Daniel Zhang said in a statement. The total was more than double the $6.6 billion recorded last year in online buying during the peak US retail period, the five days from the Thanksgiving holiday to the following Monday, according to Internet analytics firm comScore. Alibaba’s New York-listed stock has been hammered by worries over the Chinese economy, serving as a proxy for slowing growth. It closed down 1.94 per cent at $79.85 on Wednesday despite the shopping festival. Chinese growth hit a 24-year low in 2014 and has slowed further this year, as it tries to shift from investment and exports to domestic consumption. Under what leaders call the ‘new normal’, the country logged its worst economic performance since the global financial crisis in the third quarter, with the economy growing just 6.9 per cent. In a bright spot, October retail sales — a key indicator of consumer spending — jumped 11.0 per cent from a year earlier, the fastest increase since December last year, official figures showed Wednesday.