Internet

Latest Financial Trends & News for Internet in China

INTERNET: US Trade Group Steps Up Alibaba Piracy Attack

Bottom line: A major US trade group’s new call for censure of Alibaba over piracy will bring more negative publicity, though the company’s name is unlikely to reappear on the next edition of Washington’s “notorious markets” list for trade in counterfeit goods.

Group says Taobao still plagued by fakes

A major US trade group that launched an assault on Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) earlier this year is ratcheting up the volume of its attack, calling for direct censure of the Chinese e-commerce giant for not doing enough to fight piracy. The American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA) was quite scathing in its earlier criticism of Alibaba back in July, blasting the company for its flawed approach and lack of transparency in tackling piracy on its Taobao C2C marketplace.

At the time of that critique the AAFA said it was sending a letter detailing its concerns to the US Trade Representative’s office, which compiles an annual list of “notorious markets” where piracy is rampant. Now the AAFA, which represents more than 1,000 American clothing and shoe makers, is being even more direct by specifically calling for Alibaba to be included on the next edition of the “notorious” list that is likely to be published in the next 2-3 months. (AAFA announcement; English article) Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Tencent, Alibaba Odd In-Laws Again in O2O Mega-Merger

Update: An official at an investment firm involved in the deal confirmed to YCBB that the merger talks are happening.

Bottom line: The merger of Dinaping an Meituan will make uneasy in-laws of Tencent and Alibaba, and will likely be followed within a year by a buyout by one of the partners or IPO for the new company.

Meituan, Dianping in uneasy union

The headlines are buzzing today with word of an imminent merger between leading group buying sites Dianping and Meituan on this first day back to work after the week-long National Day holiday. The deal is certainly a landmark one, as it will create a clear leader in the emerging category of online-to-offline (O2O) companies that bring together the convenience of Internet buying with offline products and services like restaurant dining, going to the movies and hailing a taxi.

Some media are pointing out the merger will pose a major new challenge to the aggressive O2O aspirations of Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into building out its own rival services. But for me, this particular marriage represents the latest chapter of an increasingly close but also uncomfortable alliance between the country’s other 2 Internet giants, Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which are major stakeholders in Dianping and Meituan, respectively. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Zuckerberg, Sandberg Keep Up Facebook China Press

Bottom line: Mark Zuckerberg’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and new China-related remarks by Sheryl Sandberg show Facebook is closing in on a goal of launching its signature service in China, with a breakthrough possible as soon as next year.

Facebook thrives on China ad sales

Despite being blocked in the world’s largest Internet market, social networking (SNS) giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) is using every opportunity to quietly remind the world that it’s determined to include China in its global footprint. Just a week after company founder Mark Zuckerberg met with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a high-profile event in Seattle, his chief deputy Sheryl Sandberg was quoted at an event in New York talking up the big business Facebook is already doing in China.

Company watchers will know that Facebook quietly opened a China office in Beijing last year, with an aim to courting local advertisers seeking to reach the company’s global audience of 1.5 billion users. That business is doing quite well, according to Sandberg, though the Facebook’s ultimate China goal is still its eventual entry into a domestic Internet market that boasts nearly 700 million web surfers. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Microsoft Cozies with Baidu, Bing Set for China Exit?

Bottom line: Microsoft’s new tie-up with Baidu could presage a major scale-back for its China-based Bing search engine, paving the way for Baidu technology to power the struggling service.

Microsoft, Baidu in new China search tie-up

An interesting new dance is taking shape between global software titan Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and leading Chinese search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), paving the way for a potential exit of Microsoft’s Bing search engine from China after years of disappointing results. After announcing a new tie-up that will see Baidu promote Microsoft’s upcoming Windows 10 operating system in China, the pair are saying said that Baidu will now become the default search engine on the web browser associated with the newest Windows.

Microsoft will clearly benefit from the first move, which should help it to sell more legal copies of its core Windows OS in China. Baidu is the clear beneficiary from the second move, making this look somewhat like an even trade-off. But while the first move is relatively neutral to Baidu, the second will see Microsoft effectively sacrifice Bing in China. That’s because very few people use the search engine, and now that number will drop even more if Bing loses its default status on the new Windows browser. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba’s Govt Relations Campaign in Overdrive

Bottom line: Alibaba needs to take a more low-key approach to improving its government relations, rather than making a big spectacle of cultivating better ties with Beijing.

Alibaba govt relations campaign in overdrive

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder and chief cheerleader Jack Ma has never really understood the meaning of the word “moderation”, which is all too clear with his sudden interest in cultivating better relations with Beijing. Ma has been pulling all the stops in a bid to be closely associated with this week’s US trip by Chinese President Xi Jinping, appearing at related events and announcing a new donation that synchronized nicely with a concurrent speech by Xi.

All that schmoozing certainly looks understandable, and Ma was actually just one of many US and Chinese tech leaders trying to share the stage with China’s president on his first state trip to the US. But Alibaba’s public relations machine was taking things just a bit too far when it joined the Beijing love affair and began promoting stories related to US-Chinese themes from the official Xinhua news agency, often considered the mouthpiece of the Chinese government. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Huawei Calls on US, Google on China with Nexus Tie-Up

Bottom line: Huawei’s new Nexus tie-up with Google could help Huawei make significant inroads to the US, and could see Google enter the crowded Chinese smartphone market by year-end.

Huawei, Google link up through Nexus

Just days after the launch of the newest iPhone, fast-rising Chinese smartphone maker Huawei will make its own renewed push into Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) home turf through a highly-anticipated tie-up with Internet titan Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). This particular tie-up will see Huawei make one of the newest phones in Google’s Nexus line, in a tie-up that has been written about quite a bit already but is set for a formal announcement later on Tuesday.

That announcement would come just days after the launch of the newest iPhone 6s models, which broke records by selling 13 million units over their first weekend. Apple was able to break that record in no small part due to contributions from China, the world’s biggest smartphone market, which was absent in the last iPhone global launch due to delays for technical reasons. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Doctor App Raises Big Bucks, Hertz Cashes Out of CAR

Bottom line: Guahao’s new mega-funding spotlights big growth possibilities for private medical service providers, while Hertz could continue to sell down its stake in Car Inc as China’s auto market slows.

Guahao finds riches in medical booking app

IPOs may have ground to a halt due to China’s recent market volatility, but that hasn’t stopped a steady flow of buying and selling into high-growth companies by big investors looking for the next hot trend. One such operator of a medical services app looks like the latest flavor of the day, with reports that a company called Guahao has just landed nearly $400 million in new funding. Meantime, leading rental car operator Car Inc (HKEx: 699) moved in the opposite direction, losing some momentum after early strategic investor Hertz (NYSE: HTZ) sold down more of its stake in the company.

Both of these deals are part of the natural ebb and flow of funds into and out of Chinese companies, and are often a good pointer of where the next trends might emerge. App developers have become a hot investment area, and private medical service providers are also gaining momentum under China’s overhaul of its healthcare system. Meantime, the car market is moving in the other direction due to China’s slowing economy, which is probably making big global names like Hertz less bullish on the market. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Finds New Home in Beijing

Bottom line: Alibaba’s establishment of a dual headquarters in Beijing for its Tmall unit looks like a smart move to improve relations with government regulators, and should help to avoid future clashes over issues like piracy.

Alibaba’ss Tmall opens second HQ in Beijing

Embattled e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is finally realizing that only the passage of time will the ease the weight of negative sentiment dogging the company, and is moving on to the important business of laying a more solid foundation for its future development. That’s my interpretation based on the company’s latest major move, which has Alibaba’s Tmall online marketplace set to establish a second headquarters in Beijing.

Media have been buzzing with rumors about the move for much of this week, with some saying Tmall might be preparing to relocate its headquarters completely to Beijing from Alibaba’s hometown of Hangzhou. But the reputable China Business Network (CBN) says it has finally gotten to the bottom of the story, and that Alibaba’s intent is to have Tmall co-headquartered in both Beijing and Hangzhou. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Baidu Eyes Sale of Piracy-Plagued Music Unit

Bottom line: Baidu’s reported plan to sell its online music unit looks like a smart way to rid itself of a controversial piracy-plagued business that holds little value for its main strategic focuses going forward.

Baidu set to dump music unit?

In what could be a move that’s long overdue, leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is reportedly eyeing a sale of a music division that was once one of its major attractions but in recent years has become more a liability due to frequent accusations of copyright violations. Baidu wasn’t commenting on the reports, but such a move would be consistent with its recent diversification into a range of new areas, none of which include music as part of their core business.

Such a deal, if it’s really in the works, probably wouldn’t be worth too much, perhaps in the $100-$500 million range at the very most. More significantly would be the disposal of a unit that in the past has come under fire for allowing rampant piracy through illegal peer-to-peer (P2P) trading of copyrighted music. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Spending Hits 58.com, Cost Cuts Dog LightInTheBox

Bottom line: 58.com’s buying binge and LightInTheBox’s cost-cutting drive are both risky strategies that could boost profits if they succeed, but also stand a sizable chance of backfiring if they become too excessive.

Buying binge pushed 58.com into the red

When the history books are written, “turbulence” and “volatility” are 2 words likely to get liberal usage when describing the second half of 2015 for Chinese companies. Two mid-sized Internet names are in the headlines this week as they face their own separate headwinds, pressuring the profits and stocks of leading online classified site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) and struggling e-commerce company LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB).

The first story quotes 58.com’s CEO saying he’s engaged in a buying spree this year that could result in $200 million in losses for his company. The news around LightInTheBox stems from reports saying the company has embarked on a major cost-cutting campaign that has seen numerous employees leave and also suppliers express dissatisfaction over slow bill payments. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Poised for 2016 Uptick a Year After Record IPO

Bottom line: Alibaba’s stock is likely to face downward pressure through the end of the year, but could see a modest rally of up to 20 percent in 2016 as speculators pile out and founder Jack Ma enters a period of relative silence.

Jack Ma heading for hibernation after bearish year?

Many are taking advantage of the one-year anniversary of Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) record-breaking IPO to reflect on the past 12 months and what the future might hold for the company, especially for its stock that has gone on a roller coaster ride in that period. Many are quite subdued and even bearish on the stock, citing bad investments and a slowing Chinese economy. But I would actually take a contrarian view and say the shares could be poised for a modest rebound next year after China’s stock markets settle from their current turbulence.

My theory is rather simple. Alibaba’s stock became the plaything of speculators in the first year of trading after its $25 billion New York IPO last September became the biggest offering of all time. First it was the bulls who piled in, buying into the hype that Alibaba happily dished out about the explosive growth potential of China’s e-commerce market. More lately the bears have moved in, seizing on slowing growth, questionable investments and a piracy scandal to make some short-selling profits on the overvalued stock. Read Full Post…