Cellphones/Computers

Latest Business and financial news about Cellphones – Computers industry in China – YoungChinabiz Professional Magazine about Business in China

INTERNET: New Intrigue at Qihoo With Coolpad Move, Insider Trading Charge

Bottom line: Qihoo is likely to soon take control of Coolpad by buying shares from its controlling stakeholder, while allegations of insider trading surrounding Qihoo’s recent buyout bid are unlikely to affect the company.

Qihoo eying Coolpad stake?

Security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is in a couple of noteworthy headlines as we end the week, led by an announcement that hints it could be close to buying a sizable stake in its smartphone partner Coolpad (HKEx: 2369). At the same time, Qihoo’s name has appeared in another headline that says a Guangzhou man is being accused of insider trading related to a plan announced last week to take the company private.

These 2 headlines aren’t really too related beyond the fact that they both involve Qihoo, whose aggressive business tactics and outspoken CEO have made the company a lighting rod for controversy. The Coolpad news reflects Qihoo’s recent aggressive push into smartphones, mirroring similar actions by many other Chinese Internet firms. The insider trading news is more reflective of China in general, where such dealing is rampant and largely tolerated by a securities regulator that has other larger issues on its agenda. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Google Eyes Nexus Tie-Up with Huawei

Bottom line: Google is likely to soon announce that Huawei will make its next generation of Nexus smartphones, in an alliance that looks savvy for both companies for political and practical reasons.

Google, Huawei preparing Nexus partnership?

Global search giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is continuing its low-key drive back to China, with word the next model from its Nexus line of smartphones will be produced by fast-rising domestic brand Huawei. The move is unconfirmed and sourcing in the reports comes from an unnamed Huawei employee.

But such a move would certainly be consistent with Google’s other recent actions, which have seen it moving quietly behind the scenes for a more active role in China’s smartphone market, the world’s largest. Despite its lack of formal presence, Google already enjoys a huge passive role in the market due to the huge popularity of its Android operating system, which is used by nearly all of China’s homegrown smartphone makers. Read Full Post…

IPOs: NY Says Bye-Bye to iDreamsky, HK Welcomes Legend

Bottom line: The see-saw performance of iDreamSky shares after its buyout offer reflects a growing number of speculators in the market for US-listed China shares, while Legend’s Hong Kong IPO is likely to price and debut weakly.

iDreamSky gets buyout offer

As we head into the end of June, the first half of 2015 is set to set an unusual record of becoming the first such period to see a negative number of New York IPOs by Chinese companies. That fact is being driven by a record number of companies that have announced privatization plans, including the latest by mobile game developer iDreamSky (Nasdaq: DSKY). If this latest plan is successful, iDreamSky would also set a new record for shortest time ever as a New York-listed Chinese firm, since the company only made its IPO last August.

Meantime, one actual IPO that is moving forward is coming in Hong Kong, where Legend Holdings, parent of PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), has set a price range, date and chosen a ticker for its offering. This particular deal appears to be getting a ho-hum reception in Hong Kong, as most investors remain fixated on a rally across the Chinese border that has seen China’s domestic stock markets more than double over the last year. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Technology Issue Gives Xiaomi New Headache

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s newest technology headache, if true, could delay the launch of its fifth-generation phone, further sapping its momentum and making it difficult to reach its 2015 sales target.

Xiaomi reportedly hits technology glitch

The once invincible Xiaomi is starting to look increasingly mortal, with reports that the smartphone high-flyer may have to delay the launch of its newest model due to technical reasons. I’m not too knowledgeable on the technical issues in this instance, but the potential new delays for the release of the Xiaomi 5 appear to be related to fingerprint recognition technology that the company plans to build into the new models.

If these latest reports are true, the delays could put a big crimp in the Xiaomi’s ambitious sales plans this year as it attempts to maintain its breakneck growth. Maintaining that kind of growth looks increasingly difficult due to all the technical issues, combined with intensifying competition in Xiaomi’s core China market. That competition is causing the company to abandon the online-only sales model that helps it keep costs down, which will ultimately undermine its profit margins. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: HP, Intel Get Strange China Bedfellow In Online Lottery Site

Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s latest investment in an online lottery ticket seller hints that it may add Internet services to its growing list of high-tech products and services through separate tie-ups with Intel and HP.

Unigroup invests in 500.com

A previously little-known company connected with China’s leading science university has made headlines over the last year through major new tie-ups with global tech titans Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HP), which makes its latest investment just slightly puzzling. That investment is seeing Tsinghua Unigroup pour a relatively modest but still significant $124 million into 500.com (NYSE: WBAI), a New York-listed Chinese firm that sells lottery tickets over the Internet.

I’m being just slightly whimsical in tying Unigroup’s latest purchase to its much larger recent tie-ups with Intel and HP, which I’ll recap shortly. But that said, Unigroup has rapidly emerged as a player to watch in a China’s underperforming domestic microchip and IT services sectors, and most of its high-profile investments since it first moved into the spotlight have been centered on efforts to assemble a homegrown Chinese giant in those spaces. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Xiaomi On Defensive As Momentum Slows

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s latest moves and remarks reflect attempts to rekindle its fading momentum, as its growth slows and it faces a rising challenge from LeTV and a resurgent Apple.

Xiaomi battles slowing momentum

Sputtering smartphone sensation Xiaomi is in a flurry of headlines as we go into the weekend, spotlighting the recent challenges it is facing as it tries to maintain its breakneck growth and live up to huge expectations it created for itself. The most revealing of those portrays Xiaomi’s charismatic chief Lei Jun in a rare defensive posture, at a company event where he took aim at the increasingly threatening LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104).

The second headline comes from the same event, and boasts of Xiaomi’s heavy spending on content for its online services over the last 2 years, again taking aim at LeTV. Lastly there’s the news that US chip giant Qualcomm’s (Nasdaq: QCOM) China chief has jumped ship to take up an executive position at Xiaomi. Again, this looks like Xiaomi’s attempts to portray itself as a hot company that can still attract top talent away from leading western companies. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Google U-Turns Back To China With App Store Plan

Bottom line: Google could open a Chinese version of its app store by the end of this year and spend aggressively to quickly gain market share, but would face negative backlash from western critics for its U-turn back into the sensitive market.

Google lobbies China smartphone makers to include Play Store

Global Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is reportedly eying a return to China, with plans to launch a Chinese version of its flagship Google Play app store. The move, if true, would mark a major flip-flop for Google, which withdrew its core search engine from China in 2010 after a high-profile spat over Beijing’s strict censorship policies. But as many similarly principled companies quickly discover, China is a market that is simply too big to ignore.

That quandary led top business networking site LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD) to enter China last year, despite expressing its own reservations about censorship, and top social networking (SNS) site Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) is also lobbying strongly for such a move. Google’s latest campaign comes in a the slightly less sensitive area of app store operation, though even that business would involve some self-censorship to eliminate apps that Beijing might consider sensitive for political or other reasons. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: LeTV Raises Funds, Lenovo Changes Mobile Chief

Bottom line: LeTV’s impressive first fund-raising for its new smartphone unit reflects big hopes due to its earlier success with Internet TVs, while Lenovo’s replacement of its mobile chief reflects concerns about its smartphone unit.

LeTV mobile unit raises big cash

A trio of new smartphone stories are highlighting rapid changes in the highly competitive landscape, where a steady stream of new entrants is creating constant challenges for existing players. Many of the newest entrants aren’t really worth mentioning, as they come from state-run backgrounds and have little or no chance of success.

That’s certainly the profile for construction equipment maker Sany Heavy (Shanghai: 600031), which has no place in this smartphone race but has just unveiled its inaugural model anyhow. Meantime, the industry’s hottest new entrant is online video high-flyer LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), whose newly formed mobile unit Leshi Mobile has just raised a cool $400 million in its first funding round. Finally there’s the struggling Lenovo (HKEx: 992), whose failure to make a strong name for itself in the space despite numerous advantages may have prompted the departure of its mobile division chief. Read Full Post…

COMPUTERS: Wintel CEOs Look For Relevance At Lenovo Beijing Bash

Bottom line: The presence of the CEOs of Microsoft and Intel at a Lenovo tech fest in Beijing represent the struggles that all 3 former PC giants are facing, and how each is looking to China in a bid to reverse its slide.

Lenovo, Microsoft, Intel CEOs share stage in Beijing

It’s not often that anyone uses the term Wintel anymore, which refers to the duopoly of Microsoft’s (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows operating system (OS) and central microprocessing chips from Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) that dominated the computing world for decades. But Wintel was center stage this week in Beijing, in a rare case where the CEOs of both Microsoft and Intel shared the stage with the CEO of Lenovo (HKEx: 992), the world’s largest PC maker, which was holding a bash to launch a wide range of new products.

Lenovo has been steadily hyping this event that finally took place on Thursday, where it unveiled a wide range of new products like a dual-screen smart watch and laser projector smartphone, all of which looked interesting but not too exceptional. I wasn’t planning on writing about the event at all for that reason, until I spotted the photo featuring Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing taking a selfie of himself with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Intel CEO Brian Krzanich at the Lenovo Tech World event in Beijing. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Huawei’s Big Order, Coolpad’s Continuing Struggle

Bottom line: Huawei’s big deal with JD.com reflects growing momentum that will see it overtake Xiaomi in China’s smartphone market by year end, while Qihoo’s boosting of its stake in its Coolpad joint venture could be a prelude to an eventual buyout.

Huawei’s Honor scores big smartphone win

Two big smartphone stories are in the headlines today, led by a massive new order for Huawei that could help it move up the charts to unseat the stumbling Xiaomi as China’s second largest manufacturer. Another struggling player is in the second headline, with software security specialist Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) announcing it will boost its stake in its joint venture with Coolpad (HKEx: 2369), another former superstar that is fast fading out of the China smartphone race.

After a period of brief quiet at the start of this year, these latest developments reflect some major shuffling happening in China’s smartphone market, which is at once the world’s largest but also extremely competitive. The latest trends show that global giant Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) has begun to resurge in the market, and that the stodgier Huawei is also rapidly moving up the food chain. Meantime, former high-flyers like Xiaomi and Coolpad seem to be moving in the other direction. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Xiaomi Overheats In India, Eyes Brazil

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s latest headaches in India due to a technical glitch are just one of many growing pains it will experience more frequently due to its rapid expansion, as it targets developing markets under its push to become a global brand.

Xiaomi prepares to launch in Brazil

Xiaomi is fast becoming the unofficial smartphone of the BRICS, with word that it’s getting ready to start producing its signature phones in India as it also gets set to launch in Brazil next month. The company is also likely to enter Russia later this year, leaving South Africa as the only BRICS country missing from its global footprint by the end of 2015.

At the same time, Xiaomi’s ride into India has been quick but also bumpy, starting with a patent dispute last year and now including a problem that has seen its latest model in the market, the Mi 4i, experience overheating problems. Those kinds of problems will only be magnified in more developed western markets, which is why Xiaomi says it won’t be selling its smartphones in North America or Europe anytime soon. Read Full Post…