Chatter in the microblogging realm this past week was squarely focused on the Double Eleven shopping binge that saw e-commerce sites and smartphone makers log impressive sales on the date also known as Singles Day. But not everyone was boasting about huge sales, as executives from early e-commerce leader Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and smartphone aspirant Smartisan were both uncharacteristically quiet on their microblogs, hinting at mediocre results on the shopping holiday.
The situation was just the opposite at e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which single-handedly commercialized a day that now generates more sales than even Black Friday or Cyber Monday in the US. That rapid success in such a short time was putting a strain on Alibaba’s Alipay electronic payments arm, which reportedly was restricted to processing payments from Alibaba’s own e-commerce sites. That meant other companies’ sites often couldn’t accept Alipay for payments on their sites during the day.
Bottom line: Apple’s new UnionPay tie-up is aimed at an eventual roll-out of its Apple Pay in China, while Baidu’s reported purchase of 99Pay marks a late but needed bid to boost its electronic payments capabilities.
A couple of electronic payments stories reflect the rapid changes taking place in China’s banking market, where such payments are quickly making cash and even traditional credit cards obsolete. The higher-profile of the 2 deals has global gadget leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) in a deal to accept payments for its China app store in partnership with leading electronic payments firm UnionPay. The second deal has leading Internet search Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) reportedly looking to boost its presence in the space with plans to buy existing player 99Bill for 2 billion yuan ($325 million). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: JD’s quarterly results look typical for recently listed Chinese Internet firms, showing fast-growing revenues and soaring costs, which will pressure company stocks in 2015 as short-term investors leave the space.
Reality is finally coming to Wall Street, as investors dumped shares of e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) after it reported earnings that looked strong but not quite good enough to justify the company’s meteoric valuation. The bigger question now is whether the 7 percent drop in JD’s shares marks the beginning of a much-needed correction in their price. Regular readers will know that my answer to that question is a definitive “yes”, and that the coming correction won’t just be limited to JD but will also hit leading e-commerce firm Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and many other recently listed Chinese Internet stocks. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The new connection between the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges will make China tech stocks accessible to Chinese investors, and could prompt more companies to abandon New York for Hong Kong IPOs
The newly launched link between the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock markets should breathe new life and stability into China’s volatile stock markets by making shares of mainland-listed firms accessible to sophisticated Western buyers with billions of dollars to invest. But equally exciting is a bumper crop of new investment opportunities that will soon become available to Chinese investors, who will finally gain access to wide range of top domestic high-tech firms that for years were beyond their reach. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A year-end rush of Chinese IPOs will include mostly second-tier firms seeking to capitalize on positive market sentiment, leading to weak pricing and delayed trading debuts.
The year-end rush of IPOs that I’ve been predicting has hit a speed bump, with word that one offering set to debut last week has been delayed and a second has been scaled back dramatically. The first piece of news saw car rental specialist eHi (NYSE: EHIC) unexpectedly delay its offering at the last minute, reportedly after the company came under suspicion of submitting false information in some of its earlier IPO filings. Meantime, Sky Solar Holdings (Nasdaq: SKYS) had to dramatically scale back its planned US listing after meeting with lukewarm demand, as it became the first solar panel-linked company to make a US listing in 4 years. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new mega bond will pressure it to find good uses for its huge cash pile, while Tencent’s Warner Music tie-up is part of a new wave of deals to monetize its SNS platforms.
Leading Internet companies Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) are both in the headlines today with major new deals, spotlighting their growing need to stay in the news to remind investors why they are valued so high. The larger of the 2 news bits has Alibaba planning to raise a hefty $8 billion through a bond offer, while the other has Tencent in a major new tie-up with Warner Music, one of the world’s top record labels.
I was mostly impressed by the sheer size of Alibaba’s bond offer plan, which is easily the largest I’ve seen by a Chinese Internet company. Tencent launched its own $5 billion bond program earlier this year, but has had to offer the notes in several tranches due to the huge size. (previous post) Baidu raised its own $1.5 billion in a bond offer 2 years ago, and in June announced plans for another major offering without specifying any specific fund-raising targets. (previous post) Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 15-17. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Major Hedge Funds Piled Into Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) In Third Quarter (Chinese article)
eHi Car Services (NYSE: EHIC) IPO Delayed By False Information Claims (Chinese article)
Bailian Group Takes 10 Pct Of Shanghai Disneyland (NYSE: DIS) Operator (Chinese article)
China Mobile’s (HKEx: 941) TD-LTE Subs Reach 50 Mln (English article)
Home Inns (Nasdaq: HMIN Removes All Listings From Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Shares of Sina and Youku Tudou will continue to be laggards due to their cloudy outlooks, and Youku Tudou could face even greater pressure if it doesn’t sell itself to a larger buyer like Alibaba.
Today marks the high point of the third-quarter earnings season for Internet companies, with leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) and top online video site Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) posting results that didn’t impress investors too much. Both companies reported operating losses for the quarter, even though each managed to pare those losses from previous periods. But the bottom line for Sina was anemic growth in its core advertising revenue, while Youku Tudou’s biggest trouble sign came from ballooning costs. Youku Tudou isn’t being helped either by an ongoing government crackdown against online video operators. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Seeking $8 Bln in First US Bond Sale (English article)
China’s Tencent (HKEx: 700), Warner Music Partner For Music Streaming (English article)
Shanghai Jin Jiang (Shanghai: 600754) To Buy Louvre Hotels Group For $1.5 Bln (English article)
Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Reports Q3 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
China’s Banks To Raise $10 Bln In Year-End Preference Share Bonanza (English article)
Bottom line: Alibaba will to focus on globalization to maintain momentum for its overvalued stock, but the shares are likely to pull back in the first half of next year due to overvaluation.
This year’s November 11 shopping day belonged to e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), even though I’m just slightly reluctant to write too much about this overhyped company. But I would be remiss if I didn’t mention some of the impressive numbers that Alibaba logged during this year’s Double-Eleven Singles Day event, led by its headline total sales of 57.1 billion yuan ($9.3 billion), up 63 percent from last year. The market didn’t seem too impressed with the growth, with Alibaba’s shares tumbling 3.9 percent in the US trading day after the end of the Chinese shopping binge. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 12. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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