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

Beijing Bans Symantec, Kaspersky; Warns Microsoft

Beijing bans Symantec on government computers

Beijing’s recent campaign against foreign tech firms is picking up more momentum, with word that security software makers Symantec (Nasdaq: SYMC) and Kaspersky Lab have been banned from selling to government agencies. The move continues a trend that has seen Beijing take similar moves against software from Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and hardware from IBM (NYSE: IBM) over worries that their products could compromise national security.

Meantime in another ominous sign for foreign tech firms, a government ministry that conducts anti-monopoly investigations is warning Microsoft not to interfere with its ongoing probe of the company. Industry watchers will note that the warning from the State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC) comes as an unrelated trial gets set to start for a British-American couple being charged with interfering in a bribery probe into British drug giant GlaxoSmithKline (London: GSK). Read Full Post…

Games: Alibaba’s New Tie-Up, Tencent’s Candy Crush

Alibaba invests in game company Kabam

A year after entering the ultra-competitive online gaming market, e-commerce leader Alibaba is boosting its drive into the space through a major new tie-up with Kabam, a fast-growing American designer of free online games. The move looks squarely aimed at archrival and leading Chinese game operator Tencent (HKEx: 700), which has just made its own major advance in the space with the launch of an officially licensed version of the wildly popular “Candy Crush” game in China. Read Full Post…

News Digest: August 5, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Beijing Bans Symantec (Nasdaq: SYMC), Kaspersky Software From Govt Computers (Chinese article)
  • Fosun (HKEx: 656) To Buy Roc (Sydney: ROC) For $442 Mln, Ending Horizon Deal (English article)
  • SAIC Warns Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Not To Impede Anti-Monopoly Probe (Chinese article)
  • McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) To Resume Full Menu In Beijing, Guangzhou This Week (English article)
  • Baidu’s (nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi In Talks To Invest In Huace Film & TV (Shenzhen: 300133) (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Huawei, Lenovo Smartphones Surge, ZTE Fades

Huawei soars in smartphones

The aggressive duo of Huawei and Lenovo (HKEx: 992) may be consolidating their spots on the global smartphone stage, as domestic rival ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 00063) shows signs of stumbling. Those are my major takeaways from the latest quarterly smartphone results released from industry research firm IDC, which show big sales and market share gains for Huawei and Lenovo in the second quarter of this year. ZTE, meantime, appeared to be moving in the opposite direction, falling further in the ratings after briefly surging last year. Read Full Post…

GUEST POST-WeChat Story Part 5: Potent Partnerships

The following is Part 5 in a multi-part series about the rise of WeChat, the popular mobile instant messaging service owned by Tencent.

By Lanie Nie

Tencent targets smart partnerships

Venture capitalists on Sand Hill Road always ask young entrepreneurs with little business knowledge what they would do if Facebook did the same thing, and similar concerns exist for China start-ups in dealing with the “Tencent factor”. With the strategic goal of providing users with “one-stop online lifestyle services”, nearly everything has become a must-have for Tencent, making it a public enemy for the entire community of Internet-based service providers in China. Read Full Post…

Alibaba Eyes Snapchat, Qihoo Raises Big Money

Alibaba in talks for Snapchat stake

The slower summer months haven’t cooled down appetite for new M&A among Chinese Internet firms, with word that e-commerce leader Alibaba is chasing a massive investment that could see it purchase a stake in US social networking high-flyer Snapchat. At the same time, software security specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) has just announced new plans to raise up to $1 billion through a convertible bond offer, in what also could be the prelude to a major new acquisition. Read Full Post…

Solar Tensions Grow In EU, LDK Reborn

New solar storm brewing in Europe

The war of words against Chinese solar panel makers is heating up from both sides of the Atlantic, with growing signs that Europe may reconsider anti-dumping duties as the US moves closer to imposing its own new duties on the beleaguered manufacturers. Meantime, 2 of the biggest Chinese victims of the sector’s recent turmoil have risen from the ashes, with LDK and Suntech both announcing new moves more than a year after each became insolvent. Among those 2 moves, LDK’s looks the most worrisome, potentially bringing major new volumes of polysilicon, the main ingredient in solar panel production, back into a market whose current recovery is still quite weak. Read Full Post…

GUEST POST-WeChat Story Part 4: Getting Into Business

The following is Part 4 in a multi-part series about the rise of WeChat, the popular mobile instant messaging service owned by Tencent.

By Lanie Nie

WeChat as a potent business partner

As China ended last year with an online population of 618 million and more and more people access the Internet over their smartphones, it has become evident that the Internet will play a growing role in the way Chinese people live and do business. Internet thinking has emerged as a concept that empowers newer start-ups to challenge older businesses not necessarily via cutting-edge technology, but more by rethinking the whole business in the context of a more connected world.

Many Chinese firms are thrilled by the widely-touted story of Xiaomi, the 4-year-old smartphone maker that calls itself an Internet company. Xiaomi is already outselling Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) in its home market using a web-only marketing strategy, redefined cost structure, fan-centric product philosophy and flat organizational composition. But Tencent (HKEx: 700), China’s undisputed Internet leader with a market cap that is challenging global online retailer Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), labels itself as an online company that partners with old industries, with service accounts hosted by WeChat as the magic tie in that relationship. Read Full Post…

Weibo: Huawei’s Loss, Smartisan’s Headaches

Smartisan hits capacity bottleneck

Smartphone chatter has dominated the microblogging realm among tech executives this past week, led by nonstop debate surrounding the hyperactive Xiaomi and its newly launched fourth-generation model. But I’m personally growing a bit tired of this company, and thus thought I’d turn my attention this week to smartphone chatter from 2 lower profile brands, namely the unappreciated Huawei and recently launched Smartisan brand.

Huawei executives were in a state of mourning over the past week following the sudden death of one of their colleagues, cellphone chip executive Wang Jin. Meantime, Smartisan’s top executive was bemoaning problems facing his young company due to capacity constraints, as several CEOs of similar young rival brands looked on in sympathy that was perhaps mixed with just a touch of gloating. Read Full Post…

New Probe Rattles Shanghai Corporate World

Shanghai probes former Bright Food chairman

The national string of investigations against executives at major Chinese firms appears to be going local, with word that a man associated with some of Shanghai’s biggest companies is being probed for corruption. In this case the person under investigation is Wang Zongnan, whose name is tied to such Shanghai giants as the Lianhua (HKEx: 980) supermarket chain, as well as food products giant Bright Food. This latest case has several major potential implications, showing local investigators may be joining Beijing’s anti-corruption campaign that began a year ago. At the same time, the investigation could also ultimately cast doubt on several major recent cross-border acquisitions by Bright Food. Read Full Post…

Fake Goods Sellers Take Polish Off Jumei

Jumei exposed for piracy

Investors have taken some of the shine off of recently listed online cosmetics seller Jumei International (NYSE: JMEI), following reports that some third-party merchants on its site were engaged in the sale of fake goods. In an interesting twist, the news had little or no effect on another recently listed e-commerce firm, JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), which was also mentioned in the same reports. To some extent the mixed reaction shows that investors are still less familiar with Jumei, which is a younger firm and was far less known to Wall Street before the company’s recent listing. Still, this kind of selling of knock-off goods is always a risk for any e-commerce firm that allows third-party vendors to sell products on its sites. Read Full Post…