Bottom line: Sina’s latest financials show it could be benefiting from recent woes at Baidu, while JD.com’s results show its growth is slowing as it moves towards its important goal of becoming profitable.
Two of China’s top Internet companies have just reported their latest quarterly earnings, with web stalwart Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) wowing Wall Street with new numbers that show its Twitter-like Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) service may finally be gaining some traction. Meantime, investors were less impressed by e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdsaq: JD), which continued to post strong revenue growth but remained squarely in the loss column. JD tried to comfort investors by saying its operations are now quite profitable on a non-GAAP basis, but that didn’t seem to change sentiment too much. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Ele.me’s new fees will raise the ire of restaurant partners on its platform but is unlikely to produce a mass revolt, and reflects growing pressure on the company to find new revenue sources and become profitable.
Signs of stress are showing up at leading online take-out dining service Ele.me, which is facing howls of protest from its restaurants partners over a major new fee. This kind of mass complaining is relatively common in China’s cyber realm, especially in industries where online companies are losing money and desperately looking for new revenue sources. The take-out dining industry certainly fits that description, as stiff competition from names like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Meituan-Dianping forces companies like Ele.me deeply into the red. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Baidu and Tencent’s new co-investment in Bitauto’s Yixin could be followed by other similar tie-ups between the pair for assets in their non-core areas if they work well together.
The past week has been a turbulent time for China’s “Big 3” Internet companies, which have been thrown into uneasy partnership with the surprise mega merger between hired car services leaders Didi Chuxing and Uber’s China operations. Now a new wrinkle has emerged in an unusual story that made headlines in June, when 2 of the Big 3, Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent (HKEx: 700), jointly invested in Bitauto (NYSE: BITA), a provider of car-related online services. The latest development is seeing Baidu and Tencent co-invest again in a car financing venture backed by Bitauto. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qihoo’s reorganization is part of its hurried bid to re-list in China to pay off backers of its privatization, while shareholders of Trina and Dangdang are likely to approve final management-led buyout offers for the 2 companies.
The homeward migration of US-listed Chinese companies is in a trio of new headlines, showing that financiers are still willing to back de-listings for stronger companies. The largest of the headlines has security software specialist Qihoo 360 undergoing a major overhaul as it seeks to re-list in China, following its record-breaking privatization from New York last month. Meantime, solar panel maker Trina (NYSE: TSL) and e-commerce site Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) have also announced major advances in their own plans to privatize. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Reports that Tencent and Baidu have withdrawn from Wanda’s O2O e-commerce venture are probably true, and the service may be quietly retired over the next 12 month due to lack of progress.
Real estate giant Wanda Group may be zipping ahead with its diversification drive into entertainment, but its lower profile move into Internet services doesn’t seem to be gaining nearly as much traction. That’s my latest assessment, following new reports saying Internet giants Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) have quietly pulled out of Wanda’s high-profile foray into e-commerce announced more than a year ago. The reports are based on market talk citing some business filings that indirectly hint at such a withdrawal, which wouldn’t be too surprising. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Recent calls for boycotts of KFC, iPhones and McDonald’s by Chinese patriots are unlikely to result in long-term damage for any of the companies, but could become a problem if any of China’s ongoing territorial disputes escalate.
It seems China’s restless patriots are back at work following a 4 year break, venting their latest anger at the US by smashing Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhones and calling for boycotts of KFC. This particular bout of Chinese patriotism follows a ruling 2 weeks ago by an international court that found in favor of the Philippines in a territorial dispute with China. The last major bout of similar patriotism came back in 2012, and involved another territorial dispute between China and Japan. But in that instance, Beijing gave much freer rein to many of the patriots, which resulted in long-term Chinese sales declines for the big Japanese automakers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s bid for Polish C2C site Allegro looks like a smart move into a related developing market, but could be thwarted by rival Tencent, while affiliate Ant Financial’s new Taiwan insurance tie-up also looks smart though relatively small.
E-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and its Ant Financial affiliate are in a couple of major headlines as the weekend approaches, each focusing on a strategic growth area. In the first case, Alibaba has entered the bidding for a leading Eastern Europe online auctions site, competing with global rival eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) for Poland’s Allegro. The second deal has Ant, owner of leading electronic payments service Alipay, expanding its financial services holdings with the purchase of a majority stake in the insurance unit of Taiwan’s Cathay Financial (Taipei: 2882). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The appearance of JD.com as China’s first Internet company in the Fortune 500 and exclusion of the nation’s 3 biggest players underscores major shortcomings of the list due to its reliance on revenue as the basis for its rankings.
Everyone is buzzing these last few days about the latest edition of the Fortune 500, including the rising presence of China on the list of the world’s largest companies by revenue. But as a China tech watcher, the fact that most caught my attention was the absence of China’s top 3 Internet companies from the list, namely Tencent(HKEx: 700), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Adding to the puzzle was the appearance of Alibaba’s much smaller e-commerce rival JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), which became the first Chinese Internet company to make the Fortune 500 list. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China Logistics’ IPO could rise 5-10 percent in its trading debut, while AirAsia could list in Hong Kong by year end and online lender Qufenqi could follow with an IPO in the first half of 2017.
Hong Kong IPOs continue to heat up as we head into the heart of summer, with word of a major new listing from China Logistics Property and reports that budget carrier AirAsia may also be eyeing an offering in the market. Meantime, Qufenqi, the hot online lender that targets students, has just raised a hefty 3 billion yuan ($450 million) in new funding, in a prelude to what could become one of next year’s hottest IPOs. All of this comes against the backdrop of a looming mega offering by China’s Postal Savings Bank, whose $8 billion fund-raising target would make it the world’s biggest IPO since Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) blockbuster $25 billion offering 2 years ago. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new marriage between Midea and Kuka may get off to a rocky start due to cultural differences, but could ultimately do well and see the formation of a joint venture to sell industrial robots in China.
After a tense 2 months, a controversial tie-up between Chinese home appliance maker Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) and German robotics firm Kuka (Frankfurt: KU2) has just taken a major step forward, with the former sharply boosting its stake in the latter. Midea took the $1.3 billion step after providing numerous assurances to Berlin, including guarantees that it didn’t plan to relocate German jobs to China or take over Kuka’s management.
The step forward looks like a big victory for free trade, as it shows that governments like Germany won’t meddle in market-driven M&A and other cross-border tie-ups even when they involve cutting-edge technology. But this new cross-border marriage is just beginning, and I suspect there will be many bumps in the road ahead as this pair from very different cultural backgrounds gets to know each other. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Postal Savings Bank’s IPO is likely to get a moderately strong reception and come close to the upper end of its $10 billion target, while Yum China’s IPO is unlikely to come until the end of this year at earliest.
What’s likely to become the world’s biggest IPO in 2 years has just officially launched in Hong Kong, with word that China’s Postal Savings Bank has made its first filing for an offering that could raise up to $10 billion. Meantime, another high-profile IPO by the Chinese unit of fast-food giant Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) is getting hit by delays, as operator of the KFC chain seeks key local backers in the run-up to a listing that could also come in Hong Kong. The Yum offering could also be quite large at around $2 billion, though it appears the deal may not come now until the end of this year or may even get pushed back to 2017. Read Full Post…