Just 2 weeks after reporting that web portal Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) had broken off talks to buy PPTV, a sudden flurry of new reports have appeared saying several other companies are bidding for the online video company, including leading e-commerce firms Alibaba and Suning (Shenzhen: 002024). Rather than reflecting PPTV’s attractiveness, I suspect this sudden flurry of talks is being driven by a impatience among its shareholders who have pumped big money into the money-losing company but have received little returns so far. If that’s the case, I would expect to see PPTV acquired most likely by the end of this month, though perhaps at a far lower price than the investors were originally seeking. Read Full Post…
Search Results for: sina alibaba million
M&A Heats Up With Sohu, PPTV Talk
I’ve written too much recently about neglected web portal Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU), but the latest rumors of a potential tie-up between the company and PPTV, operator of one of China’s leading video websites, are just too irresistible for me to ignore. Those rumors say Sohu is in talks to combine its own online video business with PPTV to create one of the nation’s top 3 players. News of such talks comes just a couple of weeks after leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) purchased another top video site, PPS, for $370 million, and indicates a new wave of consolidation in China’s Internet space may be gaining momentum. Read Full Post…
After Years of Waiting, Internet Consolidation Starts
After years of inactivity, China’s Internet sector has seen a sudden flurry of M&A deals with potential to consolidate the fragmented space and create some truly world class companies that could one day compete with the likes of Amazon and Google. While commercial factors are mostly behind this sudden M&A spring, Beijing could also play a limited role by encouraging more consolidation, helping to lay the foundation for a vibrant and sustainable Internet sector that could become a global leader. Read Full Post…
Sohu Puts Sogou Up For Sale
The ongoing game of musical chairs in China’s online search space is continuing this week with word that Internet portal Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) wants to sell its Sogou unit, operator of China’s third largest search engine. While many of the previous rumors of consolidation in the search space have looked dubious to me, this one actually looks like it could be credible for a number of reasons I’ll detail shortly. If it’s true, I would also commend Sohu for making a shrewd move by getting out of a crowded market where it has limited resources and expertise compared with other players. Read Full Post…
Tencent Bets On WeChat Games
Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) colorful but low-key Chairman Pony Ma is suddenly losing his shyness at a major Internet conference in Beijing, where he is clearly in his preferred environment mixing with lots of other Internet geeks and techies. Media have been buzzing these last few days with words from the head of China’s biggest Internet firm, with much of the talk centered on Tencent’s hot mobile instant messaging platform called WeChat or Weixin in Chinese. Ma has addressed 2 of the key questions facing WeChat, both centered on how the service can generate profits for Tencent from its base of 300 million users. Read Full Post…
Lenovo-IBM Deal: Still Life Left
Media are buzzing today with word that talks have broken down in a landmark deal that would see PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) buy the low-end server business from IBM (NYSE: IBM), in a multibillion dollar deal that would have been Lenovo’s largest purchase ever. But my observation from years of reporting this kind of deal is that the story isn’t over yet, and this disagreement is just a negotiating ploy by both sides before they resume their talks and reach a deal. The reason is simple: both sides want to see this deal happen, because it makes too much strategic sense for either to abandon.
Games Drive Mobile Apps
A new media report is underscoring the importance of games for the future of China’s mobile app developers, who are desperately looking for ways to monetize the big sums of money they spend developing such applications. Social networking sites Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo, Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Renren (NYSE: RENN) are all good examples of companies that have quickly built up communities of tens and even hundreds of millions of users by developing popular desktop and mobile apps. But earning money from those huge communities has proven much more difficult, as all of these companies are quickly discovering. In that environment, games have emerged as one of the few things that users of these popular apps are actually willing to pay for. Read Full Post…
Taxi Apps Drive Onto Investor Map
The rapid rise of location-based services (LBS) on the Internet is spawning a new generation of start-up companies, with taxi finders one of the latest to join the trend. Such apps use GPS technology to create services that rely on a person’s location, such as helping that person to find nearby restaurants or shops. Just this week a friend was telling me about one such new LBS to help frustrated consumers find taxis, and now we’re reading about 2 other companies that are moving onto the investor radar with their own new tie-ups. Read Full Post…
Baidu’s Qunar Hit By Merchant Revolt
Former high-flyer Qunar is quickly discovering the risks of using third-party agents to provide many of its travel services, as many of those agents are suddenly leaving the platform in a mass uprising. The revolt in many ways looks similar to what happened 2 years ago to e-commerce leader Alibaba, which saw a similar uprising of smaller third-party merchants on one of its B2C e-commerce platforms after changing some of its pricing policies. Read Full Post…
E-Commerce Trips Up Li Ning
Former gymnastics star Li Ning (HKEx: 2331) may have won Olympic gold, but he’s quickly finding a formidable rival in China’s e-commerce revolution that is rapidly stealing business from his sportswear empire. That’s my major takeaway from Li Ning’s latest abysmal results, which include a massive 1.98 billion yuan ($318 million) loss for 2012, the company’s first annual loss since going public in 2004. (English article) Read Full Post…
Camelot Joins Privatization Queue 柯莱特加入私有化队伍
Just a day after drug maker Simcere Pharmaceutical (NYSE: SCR) announced a privatization offer and rumors surfaced of a similar bid by online game operator The9 (Nasdaq: NCTY), yet another US-listed China firm has announced a new privatization bid. This time information technology services company Camelot Information Systems (NYSE: CIS) has announced the latest bid to go private, as a recent wave of de-listings suddenly accelerates with the impending arrival of spring.