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

News Digest: June 24, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Mobile Subscriber Growth Continues Unbalanced In May At Big 3 Telcos (Chinese article)
  • China’s Fosun (HKEx: 656) To Invest In Robinov’s Studio 8 (English article)
  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) To Launch TV Gaming Platform – Source (English article)
  • BMW (Frankfurt: BMW) Extends Joint Venture With Brilliance China To 2028 (English article)
  • Jiugui Liquor (Shenzhen: 000799) Retreats To Home Base, Limits Area (Chinese article)

SMS Teeters On Extinction In 4G Era

Texting revenue decline accelerates

New data is showing an acceleration in the decline of text messaging (SMS) in the new age of over-the-top (OTT) services like WeChat, underscoring the urgency for China’s 3 telcos to find new replacements for this important revenue generator. The decline of SMS isn’t new, and has been discussed by all 3 of China’s state-run telcos at one time or another over the last 2 years. The issue was also at the center of a high-profile dispute between China Mobile (HKEx: 941) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) in late 2012, involving the rapid rise of WeChat. But the latest figures do point to an acceleration of the decline, which will lead to hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue for the big telcos. Read Full Post…

Pangu Trips Up ‘Transformers’ China Debut

Dispute threatens “Transformers” China debut

Everyone loves to talk about the huge potential of the China box office, but equally noteworthy are behind-the-scenes risks due to the market’s many unique uncertainties. Regulation is one of the biggest risks due to Beijing’s strict censorship policies. Now legal issues are also coming into the spotlight with news that a company is trying to delay the Chinese premier of the new “Transformers” movie due to a business dispute. We’ll have to wait and see if the complaint by a company that paid for promotional space in the film wins its request for the delay, which could translate to big headaches for US film studio Paramount. Read Full Post…

Investors Favor Online Travel With Tujia Funding

Tujia lands new mega-funding

Online travel is quickly taking on a new cult-like status among investors, with word of a major new funding for vacation rental site Tujia. This latest fund-raising frenzy in online travel looks very similar to what happened in group buying about 4 years ago, when investors pumped billions of dollars into a wide range of money-losing start-ups. Internet watchers will know that many of those companies later went bust, raising the prospect that a similar fate could be waiting for the online travel sector. Read Full Post…

KFC Goes Upscale In Search Of Growth

KFC goes upscale

Nearly 3 months after announcing its first major overhaul since entering China in the 1980s, fast-food giant KFC (NYSE: YUM) is saying it plans to move upscale as part of a drive to reignite its sputtering growth in the market. This kind of repositioning looks quite shrewd, and plays to a more upscale image that overseas brands naturally receive due to their foreign status. KFC actually enjoyed such upscale status when it first came to China in 1987, when its clean restaurants, friendly service and and quality food were considered superior to the fare at many local eateries at that time. But as China’s economy has boomed and income levels have risen, KFC’s image has moved considerably downscale, and the chain is now considered quite average. Read Full Post…

Starwood Eyes Luxury Hotels In Tier-Two Cities

Starwood opens luxury hotel in Dalian

China’s building economic slowdown isn’t dampening enthusiasm from hoteliers, with word that Starwood (NYSE: HOT), operator of the Sheraton and Westin chains, is about to double the number of its top-end luxury properties in the market. Starwood’s announcement comes just 3 months after US rival Hyatt (NYSE: H) announced its own major China expansion. (previous post) I should be fair and point out quickly that Starwood’s latest expansion isn’t all that large in terms of actual numbers, involving the opening of just 4 new properties. I should also point out that this kind of plan was probably the result of at least 3 or 4 years of planning, meaning work began well before China’s current economic slowdown. Read Full Post…

China Mobile Games: De-Listing Ahead?

China Mobile Games hit by bribery scandal

Another US-traded Chinese online game firm could be headed for de-listing, after shares of China Mobile Games (Nasdaq: CMGE) tanked on reports of a major bribery scandal. China Mobile Games’ woes are just the latest in a growing list for US-traded online game makers, which have earned the official title of “no respect” from Wall Street investors. Two of the sector’s biggest players, Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) and Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA), are in the process of privatizing, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see a buyout offer emerge for China Mobile Games following this new scandal. Read Full Post…

ZTE Protests Vringo’s High-Cost Patents

ZTE lodges complaint against Vringo in Europe

A new complaint in Europe by smartphone maker ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) is shining a spotlight on Chinese gadget makers’ dependence on foreign technology, which often ends up making them hostages to big western patent holders. I personally find ZTE’s new complaint against Vringo just slightly amusing, since ZTE and crosstown rival Huawei are consistently among the world’s largest global patent recipients these last few years — a fact both companies love to trumpet. Apparently many of those patents aren’t worth too much, which leaves companies like ZTE still quite reliant on foreign technology. Read Full Post…

Gamers Giant, Ourgame Bet On HK

Ourgame files for HK listing

Hong Kong has always been a distant second to New York for Chinese technology stocks, which prefer more mature US investors to a less predictable environment in Asia. But the market could be quietly gaining some important momentum in the gaming space, with word of 2 new listing plans from the sector. The first of those has game developer Ourgame filing for a listing to raise up to 750 million yuan ($120 million) in Hong Kong, while the latter has media reporting that privatizing Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA) may also be eying a listing in the former British colony. Read Full Post…

Weibo: ZTE, Vancl, Jumei In Verbal Sparring Online

Accusations fly in microblog attacks

The World Cup kick-off seems like an appropriate theme for this week’s wrap of the microblogging realm, where a series of verbal sparring matches has broken out among a number of tech officials. One of the most entertaining saw a ZTE (HKE: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) smartphone executive launch a sarcastic assault at Xiaomi’s Lei Jun, who was spouting his usual nonstop promotional hype. While ZTE went on the offensive, executives from e-commerce firms Jumei (Nasdaq: JMEI) and Vancl were on the defensive, deflecting accusations and insinuations against their companies and executives. Meantime, a top JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) executive provided some lighter entertainment with his own reminiscences of watching actual World Cup games in his younger years. Read Full Post…

Huayi, Englight Stray From Film-Making With New M&A

Huayi buys online ticketing site

Two of China’s leading filmmakers are in the headlines today, with Huayi Bros (Shenzhen: 300027) and Enlight Media (Shenzhen: 300251) both making mid-sized acquisitions to diversify their operations in the rapidly changing media space. Both companies are taking steps outside their core businesses, reflecting the latest in a series of uneasy marriages between traditional content makers and newer companies involved in an array of content making and media-related services.

In the first case, Huayi is buying a controlling stake in Shenzhen Huayuxun Tech Co, operator of the maizuo.com Internet ticketing platform. The second deal will see Enlight buy a similar controlling stake in game developer and operator Refeng Network Technology. Read Full Post…