Media/Entertainment

youngchinabiz.com : latest Business news about Media – Entertainment in China by expert / journalist Doug Young : more than two decades of experience in writting about Chinese Companies

MEDIA: Wanda, Baidu Spurned by Film Partners

Bottom line: Wanda will look for new Hollywood assets after being rejected in the bidding for a stake of Paramount, while the departure of a member of the group buying Baidu Video is a minor setback and a new investor will be easily found.

Paramount abandons stake sale plan

A couple of headlines are showing that China’s love affair with the film and video industries isn’t always so smooth, with the collapse of 2 major deals involving cinema giant Wanda and online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). The far larger of the 2 developments has seen leading Hollywood studio Paramount scrap plans to sell a strategic stake in itself, ending a deal that reportedly had seen Wanda emerge as one of the most likely buyers. The Baidu deal is quite a bit smaller, and has seen one of the buyout partners withdraw in a plan to spin off its relatively minor Baidu Video business. Read Full Post…

IPOs: NetEase Eyes Portal Spin-Off, Friends Deliver for Postal Bank

Bottom line: NetEase is likely to complete a spin-off of its news division, possibly through a sale to Sina, while Postal Savings Bank’s massive IPO will meet with tepid reception due to limited growth prospects.

NetEase plans portal spin-off

Two significant but very different IPOs are in the headlines as we get set for the Mid-Autumn holiday break, one from China’s vibrant private sector and the other from a big state-run behemoth. In the former category is NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES), one of China’s oldest Internet companies, which is reportedly mulling an IPO for its news portal, one of its original businesses with a history dating back to the 1990s. In the other news, China Postal Savings Bank has reportedly placed most of the shares for its massive $8 billion listing with a group of 6 cornerstone investors. Read Full Post…

VIDEO: New Alibaba-Backed Alliance Hints at Sina Acquisition

Bottom line: A new alliance between Youku Tudou, Weibo and UCWeb, combined with reports of the imminent resignation of Youku’s CEO, point to a sale of Weibo parent Sina to Alibaba within the next 6 months.

New alliance hints at Sina sale

Two new developments involving several Alibaba-backed (NYSE: BABA) assets are hinting at a major new shakeup in the firm’s online video and social networking (SNS) division, which could include an acquisition of stalwart web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) that I’ve been predicting for a while. This particular series of corporate shuffles is quite complex, but does seem to hint that Alibaba is trying to rationalize and synergize some of its major web-based entertainment and SNS assets outside its core e-commerce business. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Falling Phoenix Hit by TV Decline, Stumbling New Media

Bottom line: Phoenix Satellite TV’s latest results show a traditional broadcaster that failed to make the transition to new media, and could auger a decline that sees the company close or get acquired in the next 5 years.

Phoenix reports sinking revenue

As second-quarter earnings season winds down, I thought I’d take a look at the newly released interim results from Phoenix Satellite TV (HKEx: 2008), a former Chinese media pioneer that’s in a clear state of decline with no sign of turnaround. I used to be a big fan of Phoenix and saw a big future for the company, after it became one of the first independent TV news providers in China in the early 2000s. But the company’s colorful founder Liu Changle hasn’t been very skillful at parlaying his early success into the new media realm, with the result that the company’s outlook is fading rapidly. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Sina Gives Weibo Dividend, Phoenix Fires Editors

Bottom line: Sina’s award of Weibo shares as a dividend reflects recent strong momentum in Weibo’s business, while Phoenix New Media’s firing of 3 top employees for disciplinary reasons will undermine its news division’s credibility.

Sina gives Weibo shares as dividend

Two of China’s leading news portals are in the headlines today, led by word that industry stalwart Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) is giving stock in its Twitter-like Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) unit to shareholders as a dividend. That particular news comes as shares of both Sina and Weibo have soared over the last 2 months, as Weibo finally starts to realize its profit potential.

Meantime, Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) is in more dubious headlines, with word that 3 high-level employees from its news division have been fired for “serious violations of discipline.” There’s no mention of criminal charges in the reports, which cite an internal memo to employees. But it’s a bit noteworthy that the wording is identical to the frequently used phrase for high Communist Party officials being probed for corruption. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Wanda in Yet Another Mega-Park Investment

Bottom line: Wanda’s recent steam of announcements for multibillion dollar deals, including the latest for a $10 billion entertainment complex in Shandong, are mostly hype, and many will never get completed.

Wanda announces new multibillion-dollar project in Shandong

It used to be that I would get quite excited on seeing the word “billion” when used in connection with new investments, since such major sums are relatively rare. But these days the word is becoming almost a cliche in China, and one of the most egregious abusers of the figure is real estate and aspiring entertainment giant Wanda Group. True to that tendency, Wanda and its increasingly chatty chief Wang Jianlin have just announced yet another multibillion-dollar investment, this time for an entertainment complex in the industrial city of Jinan in eastern China’s Shandong province. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Baidu Gets Proactive with Bitcoin Ban

Bottom line: Baidu’s bitcoin advertising ban represents a more proactive stance that major Chinese firms are starting to take towards controversial business, as they seek to boost their images and avoid scandals.

Baidu bans bitcoin ads

Online search giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) rippled through the headlines last week with the relatively small news that it would no longer take advertising business from services that hosted trading in bitcoin and other virtual currencies. While seemingly minor on the surface, the move had larger significance due to the controversial nature of virtual currencies and Baidu’s decision to take action without government prodding or the threat of a scandal. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Wanda Eyes Hollywood Mega-Deals, Paramount in Sight?

Bottom line: Wanda Group is making an aggressive bid to be selected for a $1 billion strategic investment in Paramount, but the bid is likely to fail due to objections by the studio’s controlling shareholder.

Wanda’s Paramount bid likely to fail

New comments from China’s richest man indicate he is aggressively bidding for a stake in leading US film studio Paramount, which was put up for sale earlier this year as its parent sought to find a strategic investor. But separate reports last week show that such a deal could face difficulty due to objections by Sumner Redstone, who controls Paramount parent Viacom (Nasdaq: VIAB).

Redstone and Viacom’s current CEO Philippe Dauman have been locked in a battle for control of the company, but a resolution of that feud now appears to be close. Unfortunately for Wanda, that resolution would see a departure from Viacom by Dauman, the main proponent of the Paramount stake sale plan. That would leave Redstone, who was cool on such a plan, with the final rights to approve or veto a stake sale. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Smartisan Sale Rumors Point to Face-Saving Exit for Luo

Bottom line: Rumors of a LeEco purchase of Smartisan are probably true as the company seeks a wealthy backer to continue funding its operations, and a deal could be announced in the next 2 months.

Smartisan in rumored sale talks to LeEco

Rumors surrounding a possible sale of the uppity Smartisan smartphone brand are rippling through the headlines today, providing some lively entertainment in the overheated sector. This particular story is drawing attention mostly due to Smartisan’s founder, the slightly pretentious Luo Yonghao, who was trying to parlay his success as China’s best-known English teacher into a smartphone brand. But Luo’s plan hasn’t materialized quite the way he imagined, and Smartisan is often rumored to be doing quite poorly and losing big money. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: LeEco Names Coolpad CEO, Eyes China Smartphone Crown

Bottom line: LeEco and Coolpad could see a brief surge in smartphone sales due to strong promotional efforts, but will rapidly fade when consumers realize its models are the same as many other products on the market.

Coolpad gets new CEO

Just a day after the release of new data showing the surging Oppo was close to stealing China’s smartphone crown from a stumbling Huawei, sector newcomer and online video superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) is talking up new sales targets that imply it believes it can win the title as soon as next year. That’s quite big talk for a company that only entered the smartphone business last year and has never finished among the top 5 vendors for China. But LeEco CEO Jia Yueting has never been afraid of making such bold predictions, following a Chinese tradition that has seen similar big talk come from most of the nation’s other major smartphone makers. Read Full Post…

SPORTS: China Moves Down Sports Food Chain With UK Soccer Buy

Bottom line: A Chinese group’s latest purchase of British soccer club shows China’s appetite for overseas sports teams is moving to smaller entrepreneurs and lower profile assets, in a trend that could expand to North America over the next year.

Perhaps it’s Olympic fever that’s behind China’s latest global sports purchase, with word that yet another local entrepreneur has taken over a western sports club. This time it’s UK soccer club West Bromwich Albion that’s being purchased by a Chinese group led by a local entrepreneur named Lai Guoquan that’s making headlines, in what one report is calling the first purchase of an English Premier League soccer club by a Chinese buyer. (English article; Chinese article)

Of course I’m being a bit facetious by tying this latest sports sale to the Rio Olympics, which opened over the weekend in Brazil. That’s because this latest Chinese soccer purchase has been in discussions for a while, and the team has been on sale for nearly a decade. The reports say this particular deal was actually reached back in June, and that it still requires approval from the Premier League. Read Full Post…