Four years after its high-profile withdrawal from China’s online search market over censorship issues, global Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is showing growing signs that it’s gearing up for a new play at the country’s lucrative and less controversial hardware market. Media are reporting the world’s largest online search company has formed a new tie-up that will see it exhibit its cutting-edge glasses product, Google Glass, in partnership with Suning (Shenzhen: 002024), one of China’s leading electronics retailers. Read Full Post…
Journalist China
Weibo: Xiaomi’s Strange Name, Tesla’s Musk Charms Techies
I’ve become a fan of smartphone sensation Xiaomi over these past 2 years, not because I actually own one of their phones but because I’m continually amazed at how good the company is at manipulating the media and general public to create buzz around its products. So I was somewhat puzzled and even a bit disappointed to read about the company’s choice of English name for its new global brand, which included a hefty price tag to purchase the relevant Internet domain.
Meantime, another master of buzz was also well represented in the microblogging realm, as Elon Musk, CEO of electric car sensation Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA), won kudos and praise from many of the tech world’s top executives. Last but not least was a quirky microblog post from an executive at fading smartphone maker HTC (Taipei: 2498), showing that Edward Snowden was quite the common man. The HTC executive revealed the US intelligence super-leaker opted for super-cheap accommodations and dined on ordinary fast food during his brief stay in Hong Kong last year. Read Full Post…
China’s AVIC In UK Solar Build-Up
China’s plan to add up to 35 gigawatts of new solar power capacity by 2015 may be getting off to a slow start, but the nation looks quite happy to fund new plants in other countries to help its struggling solar panel makers. That’s my initial assessment, following reports that state-run giant Aviation Industry Corp of China (AVIC) plans to build up solar power plants with up to 300 megawatts of capacity in Britain.
It’s interesting that AVIC has chosen the UK for its solar experiment, since Beijing is pressuring such big state-owned firms to construct new solar plants at home to boost local panel makers and reduce pollution from conventional power sources. But it’s also not a complete surprise that AVIC is making this kind of move, for reasons I’ll explain shortly. The bottom line could be good news for China’s struggling solar panel makers, though I suspect AVIC will also come under pressure to buy some of the solar panels for these new plants from western manufacturers as well. Read Full Post…
Weak Appetite Kills WH Group IPO
I’ve been writing for much of the last 3 weeks about the rapidly fading appetite for Chinese IPOs among western investors, and the latest reports that pork producer WH Group has scrapped its plans for a Hong Kong listing certainly seem to add to the gloom. But I should add that this particular case is slightly different from the many weak performances we’ve seen these last 2 weeks, as it comes in the food space and mostly involves the re-listing of a recently aquired US asset that was already performing poorly. Read Full Post…
Finance: ICBC In Turkey, Baidu Cleans Up P2P
The financial world is brimming with news from both the biggest and smallest ends of the spectrum today, with banking giant ICBC (HKEx: 1398) making a new move into Turkey as finance newcomer Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) finds headaches in the micro-lending business. ICBC’s acquisition of a majority stake of Turkey’s Tekstil Bankasi is part of its ongoing global expansion, and looks like a relatively good choice of markets for its latest overseas purchase. Meantime, Baidu’s clean-up of its peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platform reflects the kinds of headaches that China’s Internet firms are likely to face as they pile into the lucrative but also fraud-prone financial sector. Read Full Post…
Ctrip Ties With Tongcheng, Eyes Tuniu
An ongoing consolidation in the crowded online travel space has taken a new twist, with word that industry leader Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) has made a major investment in up-and-comer Tongcheng and is eying a similar tie-up with IPO candidate Tuniu. The latest news comes from one official announcement on Tongcheng, and another media report on Tuniu, showing just how active the online travel space has recently become due to the entry of several new players over the last few years. All of this comes just weeks after Ctrip was reportedly in talks to merge with Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR), the sector’s second largest player, in a deal that would have created a sector leader with a market value of around $10 billion. Read Full Post…
Youku Tudou Finds Benefactor In Alibaba
Just a day after getting some extremely worrisome news that could see many of its most popular offerings censored, leading online video site Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) has announced a more positive development in the form of a $1.22 billion investment led by e-commerce leader Alibaba. The move is part of Alibaba’s recent buying binge, which has already included a handful of investments of this size, as it tries to get into every area of the Internet imaginable. The tie-up does have some positive elements that could help Youku Tudou, and comes as a slight surprise since media were reporting just a month ago that the company was preparing to sell a similar stake to Alibaba rival Tencent (HKEx: 700). Read Full Post…
Yingli Fund-Raising Signals Hands-Off By Beijing
China sent an important message to the struggling solar panel sector last week when one of the country’s major manufacturers was forced to turn to global capital markets to raise new funds, hinting that it couldn’t receive the money from state-backed domestic sources. The move sparked a sell-off for New York-listed shares of Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE), as its request for funds met with a frosty response on Wall Street. Read Full Post…
IPOs: Spring In Shanghai, Cheetah In NY, Football In London
A flurry of IPO news is in the headlines as we start this new week, including more troublesome signs from New York for an upcoming tech IPO, and a potentially exciting new offering in Shanghai from China’s leading budget airline. Meantime, another quirky piece of IPO news is making headlines with word that a Sichuan-based soccer club is aiming for an eventual listing in London. The 3 companies involved in these news bits, respectively, are security software maker Cheetah Mobile, budget carrier Spring Airlines and the Sichuan Leaders soccer club. Read Full Post…
Online Video Comes Under Censor Scrutiny
The week ahead could be a rough one for Chinese online video stocks, with word that the government agency in charge of screening content has ordered the removal of 4 popular US television series from services including Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) and Tencent Video (HKEx: 700). Word has circulated for the last few weeks that this kind of a move might be coming, but this looks like the official launch of a new rule that will make these fast-growing video sites subject to the same strict censorship rules that apply to all foreign movies, TV shows, music and other published material entering China. That could mean headaches for the video site operators, which in all fairness do increasingly look like TV station operators. Read Full Post…
New Competition Nears in China 4G, Broadband
Just a day after China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) reported some of its worst results in years, new developments in the telecoms space are showing why the nation’s leading telco will face a rough time for the rest of this year and quite possibly well beyond that. According to the latest media reports, China’s telecoms regulator could issue 4G licenses for the main technology being used by China Mobile’s 2 rivals as soon as next month, injecting a major shot of competition into the market. The second telecoms news bit comes in broadband, with reports that the nation’s newly formed national cable TV company has formally registered and will start business soon. Read Full Post…