Bottom line: A current round of big fund raising for Chinese tech firms will continue through the first half of the year but then start to fade, leading to a steady drop in valuations for such companies.
The fund-raising frenzy for Chinese tech companies continues as we head into the end of January, with word of another mega funding worth $100 million for childcare website Beibei.com. At the same time, a used car specialist called 51Auto has landed a nifty $30 million in its own new funding round. But my favorite story from the fund-raising realm comes from a company that has created a PC for dogs, and has found a backer to give it 5 million yuan ($800,000) for the endeavor. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: High-spending advertisers could provide a major new revenue source for Tencent, as it rolls out new ad-based services on its popular WeChat Moments function.
Internet stalwart Tencent (HKEx: 700) is revving up its drive to monetize its popular WeChat mobile messaging platform, with word that it’s rolled out advertising services for one of the platform’s most popular functions. The move will start inserting ads into WeChat’s popular Moments function, known as pengyuouquan in Chinese, in a gamble that risks alienating many of the hundreds of millions of platform’s users. Read Full Post…
Internet executives were busy quashing a number of rumors on their microblogs this week, with smartphone sensation Xiaomi trying to stamp out reports of bitter relations with SNS giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB), and e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) quashing talk of a major new investment in South Korea. But some of the more interesting chatter focused on the concept of company valuations, and just how widely such valuations can vary for China’s dynamic tech firms.
At the same time, a coming flurry of year-end parties began to kick off in the run-up to the Chinese New Year holiday that’s just a month away. The microblogging realm saw e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) singing its own praises at the company’s annual party, taking a shot at fast-fading rival Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) in the process. At around the same time, a stumbling Sina Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) also held an annual awards ceremony for notable microbloggers, in its own attempt to remain relevant in the social networking realm. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new list of China’s top apps spotlights fast-growing names like news app Today’s Headlines, photo app Meitu and dictionary app Youdao, which could raise hundreds of millions of dollars in new funds this year.
A newly released list of China’s top 10 apps for 2014 is shining a spotlight on an up-and-coming field of lesser known names that could be companies to watch, as many are much younger than stalwarts like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700). The “BAT” trio of China’s biggest Internet firms took 4 of the top 10 spots on the list, which was compiled by Baidu. But far more interesting were some of the other names, including recently listed social networking app Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO) and news app Today’s Headlines, which made its own headlines with its meteoric rise last year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Disappointing results for fund-raising by Wanda Cinema Line and Kuaidi taxi app show a recent boom in new funding for private Chinese companies may have crested and will wane for the rest of the year.
The crest of a huge wave of new fund raising for private Chinese firms may have passed, with word that 2 major new deals that should have attracted big investor interest have instead met with weaker-than-expected response. The first of those has seen investors give a lukewarm reception to a domestic IPO for Wanda Cinema Line, the nation’s first major movie theater operator to list. The second has seen taxi app operator Kuadi raise $500 million in a private funding round, which doesn’t sound too bad. But the figure is actually quite a bit lower than Kuaidi’s earlier plan and is also lower than a similar recent fund-raising round for leading rival Didi. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The sale of a major stake in Bitauto reflects a growing alliance between buyers Tencent and JD.com, and could be followed by a similar sale of a stake in Bitauto rival Autohome.
A newly announced deal that will see Internet giants Tencent (HKEx: 700) and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) buy nearly a third of online auto specialist Bitauto (NYSE: BITA) is filled with intriguing implications for China’s consolidating online sector. The deal further cements a growing alliance between Tencent, China’s largest social networking (SNS) operator, and JD, the second largest e-commerce firm. At the same time, the tie-up with Bitauto has fueled speculation that the country’s other major listed online car specialist, Autohome (NYSE: ATHM), could become an acquisition target by one of China’s other leading Internet firms. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Ctrip’s latest M&A reflects the growing scarcity of good acquisition targets for cash-rich Chinese Internet firms, which could pressure them to issue dividends or launch share buy-backs.
A new overseas purchase by leading online travel agent Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) is drawing yawns from investors, reflecting the very real fact that Chinese Internet firms have far too much cash in their coffers and no place to spend it. This particular dilemma is one that most western companies would love to have, since excess cash can be used for not only M&A and organic expansion, but also to pay dividends or buy back shares. But in the case of Chinese companies, a big chunk of the cash has been raised in a series of massive bond and share offerings over the last 2 years, meaning it would be strange to turn around and return the money to investors through a dividend or share repurchase. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Chinese appliance makers and Internet companies need to focus their smart device efforts on one or two key alliances each, or risk spreading their resources too thin.
Smart devices look set to become a theme of the New Year, with new reports that domestic appliance giants Haier (HKEx: 1169) and Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) have formed major new tie-ups to develop the space. Similar alliances began accelerating in the second half of last year and are aimed at developing the “Internet of Things”, which envisions an interconnected world where devices and their owners can talk to each other at any time over a wide range of wired and wireless networks. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Kingfisher’s sale of control of its China home improvement chain to a local partner will produce an uneasy alliance that will ultimately see the UK retailer withdraw its B&Q name from the market.
Just weeks after US electronics retailing giant Best Buy (NYSE: BBY) made a final retreat from China, British rival Kingfisher (London: KGF) is making a similar move with word that it’s selling control of its China B&Q store operations to a local buyer. These 2 deals mark an interesting twist on a trend that has seen other global retailers like Home Depot (NYSE: HD) and Germany’s Metro (Frankfurt: MEO) also abandon the tough China market. Whereas the earlier cases saw companies simply close down their China operations and leave, this new wave of deals has firms selling their operations to eager Chinese buyers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Shares of BAIC and Dalian Wanda will be flat over the next few months after weak trading debuts, while Linekong shares will open down 5-10 percent if they debut before year-end.
The year-end flurry of IPOs happening in Hong Kong is sputtering, with the 2 biggest offerings by shopping mall operator Dalian Wanda (HKEx: 3699) and car maker BAIC Motor (HKEx: 1958) both making weak trading debuts. That doesn’t bode too well for one of the year’s final remaining IPOs for Linekong, since other companies from the highly competitive video gaming sector haven’t done very well in their similar recent listings in Hong Kong. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Dianping or Meituan is likely to mount an IPO bid next year, in a deal that could value either at around $5-10 billion and win a premium as China’s first group buying site to list.
China’s newly consolidated group buying sector could be close to making its first IPO, with word that leading operator Meituan is on the cusp of landing a massive $700 million in new funding. Such a huge amount would be the company’s fourth round of funding since 2010, and would follow not long after it reportedly raised $300 million earlier this year. That kind of funding frenzy often comes just before an IPO, which leads me to expect we could finally see Meituan become China’s first publicly listed group buying Internet company with a New York IPO perhaps in the first half of next year. Read Full Post…