Bottom line: Didi Kuaidi’s IPO could come as early as the fourth quarter, with Hong Kong, China and New York standing equal chances of winning what could be the year’s biggest China Internet listing, worth up to $2 billion.
Just days after launching a massive promotion to attract new customers to its private hired car services, Didi Kuaidi is reportedly starting the process that could end with a major IPO for China’s largest taxi app operator by year end. Such a development wouldn’t come as a huge surprise, following the company’s formation earlier this year through the merger of 2 bitter rivals to create a Chinese market leader reportedly valued at up to $9 billion.
But equally interesting will be where this fast-driving company chooses to list. Just a year ago the answer would have almost certainly been New York, which is where most of China’s top Internet companies are traded. But a recent boom in China’s own stock markets and a new program that allows mainland investors to buy Hong Kong stocks have made Chinese Internet companies start to seriously consider both of these markets for IPOs as well. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: CCTV’s new attacks on LeTV and JD.com reflect its growing assertiveness to counter the rise of new media, and could become more frequent in the months and years ahead.
The rapid rise of new media is posing a serious challenge to China’s traditional media, which is perhaps partly behind a couple of headlines that have state-run broadcasting giant CCTV leveling separate attacks against online video high-flyer LeTV and e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD). The first case has seen CCTV sue LeTV for copyright infringement related to its popular Lunar New Year’s eve TV program. The second has CCTV airing an investigative report accusing JD.com of offering refurbished iPhones over its site that used unauthorized components, causing some to break down. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Beijing should step in to mitigate the latest cutthroat competition in the smartphone and hired car services spaces, or risk seeing meltdowns that lead to chaos and job losses.
New battles broke out in 2 of China’s most hotly contested high-tech sectors last week, casting a spotlight on the aggressive and even potentially illegal tactics that Chinese companies sometimes use in their fierce rivalries and quest for market share.
One of those saw taxi app operator Didi Kuadi announce a major promotion offering aggressive subsidies for its hired car services. The other saw video high-flyer LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) use equally aggressive tactics to launch its new line of smartphones, igniting a war of words after another prominent rival criticized its actions as “irrational”. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A Yidao Yongche merger with Uber China continues the rapid consolidation in China’s hired car services, which could be followed soon by a successful bid by Uber and Baidu for Nokia’s digital mapping division.
Rapid consolidation is taking place in China’s hired car services market, with word that a new alliance is shaping up between major local player Yidao Yongche and an existing tie-up between global giant Uber and local Internet search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). As a longtime Chinese Internet watcher, I’m quite surprised at the sudden and rapid speed of consolidation in this particular sector, since such consolidation in other areas tends to be a slow and painful process that often takes years.
A major factor behind this sudden and rapid consolidation could be the participation by all 3 of China’s top Internet players, including Baidu, alongside social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) and e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). Two of those companies are also involved in a related headline that is seeing Baidu and Tencent making separate bids for the digital mapping division being sold off by former cellphone giant Nokia (Helsinki: NOK1V). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple is likely to reach a deal to bring Apple Pay to China in the next 12 months, while Xiaomi’s addition of traditional offline sales channels acknowledges it needs to diversify its approach to maintain its breakneck growth.
The old saying “An apple a day” seems to be appropriate this week in China, where Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Tim Cook is being quite talkative on his latest China trip with a steady stream of small but noteworthy news. He began the week by announcing a new environmental China initiative for Apple, then followed by launching his own microblog on the locally popular Sina Weibo (Nasdaq: WB), often called the Twitter of China. (previous post)
Now he’s candidly talking about hopes for bringing his company’s Apple Pay electronic payments service to China, perhaps through tie-ups with local e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) or UnionPay, China’s largest electronic transactions network operator. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Beijing should be commended for its recent program to open up telecoms services to private investment, and should consider accelerating the program and allowing in foreign participation.
A campaign to bring private money into China’s telecoms sector was in the headlines twice over the last 2 weeks, reflecting a broader Beijing campaign to inject new life into traditional sectors like banking and energy that are now dominated by large and often slow-moving state-run firms.
One headline came late last week, when media reported that 20 million new phone numbers would be injected into a year-old program allowing private companies to sell mobile service. That followed even bigger news a week earlier, when media said the telecoms regulator hoped to allow private investors to build domestic telecoms network infrastructure for the first time. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: JD.com’s latest results show it could reach profitability on an operating basis later this year, while its new tie-up with Tuniu looks like a well-conceived plan that reflects a growing wave of equity tie-ups among Chinese Internet firms.
China’s second largest e-commerce firm JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) has been busy wowing investors these last few days, starting with its latest quarterly ressults that shows it is making strong progress in moving towards sustainable profits. Meantime, the company has also become the largest individual stakeholder in online travel site Tuniu (Nasdaq: TOUR) through its participation in a deal that saw Tuniu raise $500 million by selling shares to a larger group of investors.
Wall Street greeted the pair of news stories with mildly positive reaction, bidding up JD.com shares by 2 percent after the reports came out. The stock has rallied nearly 50 percent this year and is 77 percent above its IPO price from a year ago, as investors grow more bullish on this company that is China’s biggest challenger to the much larger Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). Tuniu shares also got a nice lift from the news, rising 4.5 percent. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Baozun’s IPO is likely to price in the middle of its range and debut flat despite its strong credentials, as waning sentiment towards Chinese Internet companies may prompt other recently listed names like Jumei to launch privatization bids.
Sentiment towards China-listed US firms continues to show signs of weakening, with word that e-commerce website designer Baozun has had to scale back its IPO in New York as its shares move closer to their trading debut. Meantime, shares have jumped over the last week for e-commerce firm Jumei International (NYSE: JMEI), amid talk that it may be considering a privatization bid to re-list back back in China.
Both stories reflect a recent trend that has seen a growing number of second-tier Chinese Internet companies abandon New York listings due to lack of investor interest. Many are believed to be eying re-listings in China, where their names are better known and companies of all types have achieved lofty valuations these days during a stock market surge that has seen shares double since a rally dating back to last summer. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: 58.com’s new purchase of an online job site extends its spree of recent acquisitions and partnerships, which looks like a focused, well-conceived plan that could position it to emerge as a leading Chinese Internet advertising specialist.
The savvy online classifieds site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) is back in the headlines as we close out the week, with word that it’s signed a deal to purchase online job specialist ChinaHR. If true, the deal would mark the latest in a steady stream of acquisitions for 58.com, which looks well positioned to become a truly diversified leader in online classified advertising services.
Such a focused strategy looks much better than the more diversified M&A being practiced these days by China’s largest Internet companies, which are all venturing far beyond the core businesses that brought them their initial success. Of course it’s much easier for companies like 58.com to keep their focus due to their small size. Compared to names like Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which are each valued at around $200 billion, 58.com still has a relatively small market value of about $7 billion. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The revocation of global certification for Qihoo’s security software by 3 European bodies will undermine the company’s credibility and hamper its drive to go global, putting pressure on its stock for the next few months.
Security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is finding itself in the middle of a global scandal, with word that several European accreditation bodies have refused to certify its core security software products due to the company’s misleading business practices. The case comes as an embarrassment to Qihoo, which is used to and largely ignores such scandals when they occur in its home market where such practices are relatively common.
But as Qihoo and its peers attempt to go global, they are quickly discovering that many of the things they do at home fall well below the standards set by global bodies, especially in the west. That won’t be too helpful for Chinese tech giants like Qihoo, Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Xiaomi and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which are all trying to show the world and investors that they can compete outside their highly protected home market where standards are often a bit lower than in the west. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: 58.com’s new Ganji tie-up looks like a smart partnership that should create a clear industry leader with a strong strategic partner in Tencent, though the stock could be set for a short-term correction due to overvaulation.
China’s Internet has just gained a major new player through the combination of online classified sites 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) and Ganji, which together will have a market value approaching the $10 billion level. Few companies outside the “Big 3” of Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) can boast such valuations, and this particular deal seems to mark the emergence of a new sector leader that could even become an acquirer on the global stage.
Of course it’s easy to talk about going global, but actually doing that has been far more problematic for China’s booming field of Internet players. Still, this latest deal appears to show that 58.com may have the savvy that some of its larger rivals lack to make the global push, perhaps using this Gangji deal as a template for more strategic acquisitions in developing markets similar to China. Read Full Post…