The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Didi Kuaidi Meet Driver Opposition Post-Merger, May Target Q4 IPO (Chinese article)
Foreign Drugmakers Face More Pressure to Lower Prices in China (English article)
Bottom line: Recent raids on Uber’s offices in 2 major Chinese cities reflect resistance it is meeting from traditional taxi operators, which could significantly limit its growth potential in the politically sensitive market.
The turmoil in China’s overheated market for paid car services has cruised into the offices of global fast-riser Uber, which has been raided twice in the last 2 weeks over its aggressive move into the market. The first raid came last week, when local officials visited the company’s offices in the southern metropolis of Guangzhou, sometimes also called Canton. (Chinese article) Now the raids have extended to the interior city of Chengdu, where Uber’s offices have again been visited by local officials conducting an unspecified investigation. (English article) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: 3 new $100 million fundings reflect the recent popularity for Chinese tech and media start-ups among investors, pushing valuations up to unrealistic levels for these young companies that operate in mostly niche areas.
I can remember a time not long ago when $100 million seemed like a huge figure for start-ups raising new funds, and such amounts were quite infrequent. But in today’s overheated Chinese tech world, that figure is in 3 separate headlines this week, including 2 involving the hot area of location-based services (LBS). That pair of items has ride-sharing app Dida Pinche and mobile chauffeur app E Daijia each reaching the coveted $100 million mark in their third and fourth funding rounds, respectively. Meantime, the new sports unit of fast-rising video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) has also just won its own $100 million in new funding, reportedly from one of China’s richest men. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeTV’s new smartphones should generate major buzz when they go on sale this weekend and could easily sell 1 million units in their first 3-4 months, challenging domestic “cool” incumbent Xiaomi.
Smartphone sensation Xiaomi has emerged as one of China’s hottest tech names in the last few years with its cool and trendy image, focusing its sights largely on global leaders Samsung (Seoul: 005930) and especially Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) as it looks for a place on the global stage. But this globally-minded company could soon have to watch its back as well, with the recent meteoric rise of LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) as the newest hipster in town.
LeTV went largely unnoticed for the first part of its life, when it was mostly an Internet-based provider of video content similar to YouTube. But it has zipped into the spotlight over the last year, first as it posed a serious challenge to China’s traditional broadcasters and now as it rolls out its own new line of smartphones. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeTV’s smartphone gamble, based on relatively cheap phones tied to its video services, could succeed despite tough competition if its newly launched models get positive reviews.
Online video sensation LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) is all over the tech headlines this morning, with the formal launch of the first 3 models for its previously announced foray into smartphones. The company is taking a page from its successful business model with smart TVs, once again selling what it’s billing as a relatively high-end product for low prices in a bid to attract customers to its core paid video services.
LeTV’s biggest problem will be finding an audience for these models, as it’s quite late to the smartphone game. That fact is being underscored by new industry data that shows China’s cellphone market contracted 5 percent in March, amid growing signs of saturation due to stiff competition. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The Baidu-led union of Uber and Yidao in China looks like a smart move for all 3 parties, but could come under strain due to internal and external factors that could ultimately lead Baidu to buy out the venture.
China’s rapidly evolving paid car services realm is creating some strange marriages, bringing together e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) last month with a merger of their taxi app services. Now we’re getting word of another unusual marriage, this time as leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) steers domestic heavyweight Yidao into a union with global giant Uber.
This latest deal would come just 3 months after Baidu made a large investment in Uber, reportedly worth $600 million, and would give Baidu a solid foothold in the fast-growing market for Internet-based car hiring services. China’s other 2 Internet majors, Tencent and Alibaba, already had major Internet hired car assets through their strategic stakes in industry leaders Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, respectively, which surprised the industry when they announced a plan to merge last month. (previous post) Read Full Post…
Two of China’s most successful tech companies, Xiaomi and Huawei, took center stage in the microblogging realm over the past week, engaging in a rare direct war of words over their competing products in the nation’s overheated smartphone market. Their online sparring aside, the pair of tech stars also engaged in their own separate globally-focused activities that emphasized attempts by each to become the nation’s first truly international smartphone brand.
Huawei’s media-shy founder Ren Zhengfei traveled to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he gave a rare public speech in which he appealed to the US to accept his company’s products, in remarks chronicled by some of his top deputies on their microblogs. Meantime, several recently recruited member of Xiaomi’s high-profile international team met at the company’s headquarters in Beijing, where they were talking strategy as the company continues its global expansion. Read Full Post…
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…
The microblogging realm has been relatively quiet this past week as Chinese tech executives enjoy the long October 1 holiday. Still, a few couldn’t completely stay away from their online accounts, led by TCL’s (Shenzhen: 000100) thoughtful Chairman Li Dongsheng who hinted at a possible tie-up with struggling former Taiwanese smartphone giant HTC (Taipei: 2498).
Meantime, LinkedIn’s (NYSE: LNKD) China chief Derek Shen commented on the current overheated investment environment in China’s Internet, reinforcing a view I’ve been stating for a while now. Finally there was Lenovo (HKEx: 992) CEO Yang Yuanqing, who let his deputies do the talking on his behalf as he donated a portion of his annual bonus to rank-and-file company employees in a goodwill gesture for the third straight year. Read Full Post…
Smartphone makers Xiaomi and Huawei are learning tough new lessons this week, reflecting intense competition in the overheated market where a feisty field of Chinese players are vying for a place alongside global leaders Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung (Seoul: 005930). In Xiaomi’s case, the company has become emboiled in an embarrassing new gaffe in Taiwan involving collection of personal data. Meantime, Huawei’s Honor line of smartphones, which it’s trying to position as an mid- to upscale brand, is rapidly moving into the bargain bin with word that it has slashed the price on a new 4G model to just 799 yuan, or $130. Read Full Post…
Anyone who thought that Chinese telcos behaved like commercial companies is getting a lesson in the country’s unique blend of capitalism, with news that all 3 state-run carriers have been ordered to slash their promotional spending. In any other market, such a move would carry huge anti-competitive overtones and the regulator would quickly step in and stop such coordinated action. But this isn’t any other market, and the order to slash spending is coming from the government organization that is effectively the major shareholder of China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL), China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU) and China Telecom. (HKEx: 728; NYS:E CHA) Read Full Post…