Journalist China

Business news from China By Doug Young.
Doug Young, journalist, has lived and worked in China for 20 years, much of that as a journalist, writing about publicly listed Chinese companies.

He is based in Shanghai where, in addition to his role as editor of Young’s China Business Blog, he teaches financial journalism at Fudan University, one of China’s top journalism programs.
He contributes regularly to a wide range of publications in both China and the west, including Forbes, CNN, Seeking Alpha and Reuters, as well as Asia-based publications including the South China Morning Post, Global Times, Shanghai Daily and Shanghai Observer

INTERNET: JD, Tencent Cement Ties With Bitauto Buy

Bottom line: The sale of a major stake in Bitauto reflects a growing alliance between buyers Tencent and JD.com, and could be followed by a similar sale of a stake in Bitauto rival Autohome.

JD, Tencent buy into Bitauto

A newly announced deal that will see Internet giants Tencent (HKEx: 700) and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) buy nearly a third of online auto specialist Bitauto (NYSE: BITA) is filled with intriguing implications for China’s consolidating online sector. The deal further cements a growing alliance between Tencent, China’s largest social networking (SNS) operator, and JD, the second largest e-commerce firm. At the same time, the tie-up with Bitauto has fueled speculation that the country’s other major listed online car specialist, Autohome (NYSE: ATHM), could become an acquisition target by one of China’s other leading Internet firms. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Huawei Ramps Up In US, LeTV Joins Crowded Space

Bottom line: Huawei could make significant progress in the US smartphone market this year if it devotes more resources to the campaign, while LeTV’s smartphone foray looks necessary but could face difficulty due to stiff competition.

Huawei to step up US smartphone campaign

Rapid developments in the smartphone space are showing no sign of slowing in the New Year, with the latest reports that stalwart Huawei is preparing for a major new  push in the US, as online video specialist LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) prepares its own campaign to enter the crowded arena. Of these 2 news bits, the Huawei one looks like the most significant, as it will see the company make a major play at a US market that is the world’s largest but has been elusive for the Chinese telecoms giant. LeTV previously hinted at its plans to enter the crowded smartphone space, and its relatively late arrival means its endeavor in the crowded field could ultimately fail. Read Full Post…

RETAIL: Dunkin’ Donuts Takes Second Dip Into China

Bottom line: Dunkin’ Donuts’ second attempt to enter China stands a better chance of success due to a better choice of partners, and also will benefit if it tries to give its brand a more upscale image.

Dunkin’ finds new China partner

The small club of foreign fast food chains with more than 1,000 stores in China could soon gain a new member, with word that donut giant Dunkin’ Brands (Nasdaq: DNKN) is gearing up for a second try at the market. Before I go any further, I should disclose that I’m a big donut fan and was quite disappointed when Dunkin’ ended its first China foray more than a year ago. But that said, I’m a bit more optimistic that it will succeed this second time around for several reasons, including valuable lessons that it learned from the failure during its first time in the market. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: TCL, Lenovo Try To Rejuvinate Palm, Moto

Bottom line: TCL and Lenovo will face uphill battles in rebuilding the Palm and Motorola brands due to stiff competition and lack of experience building upscale brands.

TCL to resuscitate Palm

It’s no secret that PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) has big plans for its recently acquired Motorola smartphone brand, and now we’re learning that cellphone stalwart TCL (HKEx: 2618; Shenzhen: 000100) has similar plans for the former superstar Palm brand. That’s the latest word coming from Las Vegas, where Lenovo, TCL and other Chinese gadget makers are showing off their latest wares at CES, the world’s biggest consumer electronics show that happens this time each year. While TCL was low-profile about its newly acquired Palm brand, Lenovo was much louder about its plans to relaunch Motorola smartphones in its home market next month. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: CEO’s Love Antics Tarnish JD.com

Bottom line: JD.com CEO Richard Liu needs to behave more professionally in his business and personally lives, or risk seeing the reputation of his company suffer.

JD.com CEO love saga buzzes in cyberspace

China’s high-tech world is filled with colorful personalities, but few have managed to capture the public’s imagination like JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) founder Richard Liu, or Liu Qiangdong, whose love life has been the source of major headlines this week. I personally find such this kind of chatter entertaining but don’t usually write about it, because it’s not really related to the companies these executives represent. But in this case Liu’s antics are an increasing embarrassment to JD.com, and don’t seem fitting for an e-commerce giant that generated nearly $5 billion in revenue in its latest reporting quarter and has a market value of $34 billion. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Cash-Rich Ctrip Draws Yawns With UK M&A

Bottom line: Ctrip’s latest M&A reflects the growing scarcity of good acquisition targets for cash-rich Chinese Internet firms, which could pressure them to issue dividends or launch share buy-backs.

Ctrip makes UK acquisition

A new overseas purchase by leading online travel agent Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) is drawing yawns from investors, reflecting the very real fact that Chinese Internet firms have far too much cash in their coffers and no place to spend it. This particular dilemma is one that most western companies would love to have, since excess cash can be used for not only M&A and organic expansion, but also to pay dividends or buy back shares. But in the case of Chinese companies, a big chunk of the cash has been raised in a series of massive bond and share offerings over the last 2 years, meaning it would be strange to turn around and return the money to investors through a dividend or share repurchase. Read Full Post…

RETAIL: Wanda E-Commerce Raises Funds, Adds TCL

Bottom line: Wanda’s new e-commerce initiative looks overvalued following a recent investment, but could have the resources and expertise it needs to pose a serious challenge to Alibaba and JD.com.

Wanda raises money for e-commerce JV

Fresh from the successful listing of its core real estate arm, Wanda Group is pushing full-steam ahead into another major new initiative in e-commerce, aiming to challenge industry leaders Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD). Wanda’s colorful and very wealthy founder Wang Jianlin was busy talking up his e-commerce initiative this week, announcing a major new funding and important new partner for the project. Wang has forged ahead in several new areas over the past year, including hotels, theme parks and movie theaters, as he attempts to build up an entertainment empire to rival global names like Disney (NYSE: DIS). Read Full Post…

WEIBO TALK: Murdoch Back In China, Xiaomi’s Banner Year

News Corp’s Murdoch back in China

Tech executives welcomed in the New Year with some intriguing hints on their  microblogs, with posts suggesting major new moves in China from global media titan News Corp (Nasdsaq: NWSA) and online video operator LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104). In the former case, a local tech executive posted a photo of himself meeting with Rupert Murdoch in China, indicating the News Corp chief was back doing business in the country after a long absence. In the latter case, LeTV chief Jia Yueting was hinting that his company could soon become the latest Chinese Internet firm to enter the overheated smartphone market. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: UnionPay Defends At Home, Challenges Abroad

Bottom line: UnionPay will see its market share stagnate or even start to decline at home as it faces new competition in the next 3 years, while it’s likely to see sharp growth in its overseas expansion.

UnionPay faces new challenges at home

The coming year could be a groundbreaking one for the important but low-profile business of providing financial settlement services in China, now dominated by bank card issuer UnionPay. Such services allow banks and companies to transfer money back and forth between each other electronically, facilitating things like credit and debit card purchases and letting people withdraw cash from other banks’ ATMs besides their own.

While UnionPay has dominated the sector for domestic transaction settlement service for the last decade, its state-granted monopoly will officially end this year as China complies with a WTO ruling in response to complaints from global leaders MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V). At the same time, UnionPay is getting challenged by homegrown domestic players led by e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), whose financial arm is also pushing into the business. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Perfect World Privatizes, Renren Next?

Bottom line: Perfect World’s de-listing plan is likely to succeed and could be followed by a merger with Shanda or Giant Interactive, while Renren is likely to also get bought out and de-list by the end of the year.

Perfect World gets buyout offer

Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) has become the latest US-listed online game operator to decide it’s unappreciated by shareholders, announcing a plan to privatize and de-list its shares from New York. The management-led buyout offer shouldn’t come as a surprise, as it follows a steady stream of similar moves that has seen peers like Giant Interactive and Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) also leave or prepare to leave the market.

At the same time, another headline from struggling social networking site (SNS) Renren (NYSE: RENN) is fueling speculation of a similar imminent de-listing. That news has Renren announcing the resignation of its CFO — news which should normally have a neutral to negative effect on the company’s stock. But in this case the stock has jumped on the news, indicating investors may think a buy-out offer is coming. Read Full Post…

News Digest: January 3-5, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 3-5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Fosun (HKEx: 656) Wins Contest For Club Med As Andrea Bonomi To Drop Bid (English article)
  • Haier-Evergrande, JD.com-Midea In New Alliances For 2015 (Chinese article)
  • Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) Receves “Going Private” Proposal at $20 Per ADS (PRNewswire)
  • Renren (NYSE: RENN) Announces Resignation Of CFO, Board Changes (PRNewswire)
  • Xiaomi Doubles Revenue to $12 Billion as Phone Sales Triple (English article)