Bottom line: Xiaomi’s new Mi 5 model is likely to get a tepid reception due to its lateness to market and a fading corporate image, and the company’s valuation is likely to shrink when it returns to market later this year for new funding.
If faltering smartphone sensation Xiaomi is still in business a decade from now, 2015 could well go down as a “lost year” when the company’s sales slowed sharply as its image for making cool, affordable products took a beating. A major factor behind the sudden stall was Xiaomi’s failure last year to release a new fifth generation of smartphones, which were supposed to power sales in the second half. (previous post)
Now Xiaomi is trying to play catch-up with the unveiling of its Mi 5 more than half a year after its originally intended launch date. (English article; Chinese article) It’s probably far too early to say if the Mi 5, along with another new model called the 4S, will be enough to revive Xiaomi’s fading fortunes. But I suspect the damage has already been done, and this new model will ultimately fail to find a big audience due to its late arrival to a fast-moving smartphone market where half a year is really equal to an eternity. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A strong reception for Apple Pay from consumers, banks and merchants bodes well for the service, which should attract a major audience among iPhone users but won’t pose a major threat to rival services from Alipay and WeChat.
The launch of Apple Pay in China is buzzing through the local headlines a day after the roll-out, in a move that looks certain to shake up a stodgy industry dominated by homegrown names like Alipay. The most revealing headlines report on the rush by everyone, from consumers to banks and merchants to jump onto the Apple Pay bandwagon. That reflects the buzz that any major move by Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) can create in the world’s largest smartphone market.
Local consumers are undoubtedly pleased that Apple chose China for the Asia launch of Apple Pay, selecting their market over more traditional candidates like Japan and South Korea. China is only the fifth global market for Apple Pay, following launches in the US, Canada, Britain and Australia. The pride element at being first in Asia, combined with Apple’s existing premium image here, will draw a big majority of Chinese iPhone and iPad users to try out Apple Pay on their devices. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lenovo’s longtime CEO Yang Yuanqing should resign or be replaced to make way for new leadership to turn around the company’s struggling mobile unit that will be critical to its future.
The global smartphone spotlight is in Barcelona this week, as industry giants including China’s Huawei and ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) unveil their latest new models at the world’s biggest telecoms show. But one company that’s unlikely to generate much buzz is PC stalwart Lenovo (HKEx: 992), which has disappointed for the last 2 years by failing to gain traction in a smartphone business that will be critical to its future.
To the contrary, Lenovo saw its smartphone sales tumble last year in its home China market, which accounts for about half of its total revenue. The dramatic plunge is all the more worrisome since Lenovo was hoping for a surge last year after its purchase of Motorola, which once enjoyed a reputation as a global leader but later fell onto hard times. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Huawei’s smartphone prices should continue to rise this year as it rolls out more higher-end models, while Xiaomi’s new drone product looks like a publicity ploy to draw attention back to its sputtering smartphones.
Just days after new data showed Huawei finishing 2015 as China’s smartphone leader, different new data is revealing the company was the market’s only domestic brand that was able to raise prices for its products during the year. That boosts the growing perception that Huawei is emerging as China’s first solid mid-range smartphone brand, as it tries to climb the value ladder to someday challenge global leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL).
Meantime, domestic rival Xiaomi, which once also liked to compare itself to Apple, is diverging from its former US role model by preparing to roll out a drone product, according to media reports. If the reports are true, this would look like a somewhat desperate move by the fast-fading Xiaomi, which is unable to generate much positive buzz these days for news related to its struggling smartphone division. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 19. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Major Banks in Rush to Support Apple Pay (Nasdaq: AAPL) After China Launch (Chinese article)
Uber Losing $1 Bln a Year to Compete in China (English article)
Xiaomi to Release Consumer Drone – Reports (English article)
Average Huawei Smartphone Price in China Rose in 2015 to $213, As Others Fall (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Apple Pay’s upcoming China launch and WeChat’s roll-out of fees for its cash-providing service reflect growing competition in the e-payments market, which will result in a long and costly battle among major players for market share.
The rapidly heating China market for electronic payments is in a couple of top headlines today, led by highly anticipated news that Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) will launch its Apple Pay service in China later this week. At the same time, separate media reports say that Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) is taking a major step towards monetizing the e-payments service attached to its wildly popular WeChat instant messaging service.
The pair of headlines underscore just how much potential both domestic and foreign companies see in the China electronic payments market, which is growing rapidly as consumers and companies do more of their buying online. Some new data nicely summarizes the market, with leading e-payments firm UnionPay reporting that transactions processed over its network soared 30 percent to 312 billion yuan ($48 billion) over the week-long Lunar New Year holiday last week. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Huawei is likely to consolidate its position as China’s top smartphone brand this year, while Lenovo and Samsung could regain some market share as each mounts aggressive turnaround campaigns.
A year is almost like an eternity in the fast-moving smartphone world, and nowhere is that reality more on display than in the latest quarterly data on China’s cut-throat market. In the smartphone history books, 2015 will go down as the year that saw Huawei surge to become China’s largest player, with smaller homegrown brands Vivo and Oppo also making impressive gains. On the other side of the aisle, the year is one that former high-flyers Samsung(Seoul: 005930) and especially Lenovo (HKEx: 992) would rather forget, as both plunged out of the nation’s top 5 brands.
Smartphones are an extremely big business due to their high prices, a fact that has drawn numerous companies to the space and created intense competition in China. But constant changes to technology, combined with increasing commoditization due to the dominance of the free Android operating system, means that unknown companies can quickly rise to become major players. Similarly, a winner one year can quickly stumble to become a loser the next. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 16. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China Smartphone Market Sees Its Highest Shipment Ever of 117.3 Mln in Q4 – IDC (Press Release)
Apple Pay (Nasdaq: AAPL) to Launch in China in 3 Days – Source (Chinese article)
E-Payment Firm Lakala to Backdoor List in Shanghai via ‘Tibet Tourism’ Shell (English article)
LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) Sports Raises $1 Bln in Series B Funding (Chinese article)
Yingli (NYSE: YGE) Said to Get 3.3 Bln Yuan in Loans Amid Restructuring (English article)
Bottom line: A new equity alliance between Qihoo and Norway’s Opera web browser is a smart move that could see initial turbulence due to differing management styles, but should ultimately benefit both sides.
Security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is taking an important step towards its ambitions of becoming a global Internet brand, with word that it’s part of a group set to buy Norway-based Opera (Oslo: OPERA), maker of the world’s fourth most popular mobile Internet browser. Qihoo is already the maker of one of China’s most popular homegrown web browsers, and is also posing one of the first serious challenges in years to online search leader Baidu(Nasdaq: BIDU) with its Haosou.com engine. It’s also making a big push to move its highly popular security software products into the global marketplace.
Against that backdrop, this new deal looks quite intriguing and also like a smart step for Qihoo to complement its current strengths. But I would also caution that Qihoo is famous for its business tactics, which many might describe as highly aggressive and even unethical. Those include designing products that make big changes to computer and smartphone configurations without their users’ knowledge, most often to favor Qihoo at the expense of rival products. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lenovo chief Yang Yuanqing is likely to resign or get replaced as company head by the end of this year as sales continue to stumble, possibly by recently named President Gianfranco Lanci from its European operations.
If there’s a single word to summarize the latest quarterly results from struggling PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), it’s “down”. Just about every major metric in its just-released results was down, though the company did manage to boost its net profit for the quarter thanks to recent aggressive cost cutting. But lowering costs isn’t a long-term formula for success, and investors are clearly worried about the prospects for Lenovo’s shriveling core PC business and a sputtering mobile device unit that is supposed to be its new growth driver.
Investors were clearly most spooked by Lenovo’s top line revenue, which shrank 8 percent to $12.9 billion in its latest quarter. That was the first time Lenovo has posted such a revenue decline in more than 6 years, and nicely summarizes the company’s struggles in just about all of its major product areas. Lenovo did achieve one notable milestone as its mobile device unit finally climbed from the loss column to break even. But even that is hardly an accomplishment since cost cutting was most likely the main driver behind that movement. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) VP Questioned by Police for Illegal Activity (Chinese article)
New Oriental Proposes China IPO for Xun Cheng, After Tencent Investment (PRNewswire)
Blackstone Shops China Software Firm Pactera to Potential Buyers (English article)
Sinovac (Nasdaq: SVA) Announces Receipt of Proposal to Buy the Company (PRNewswire)
OPPO, Vivo Snap at Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) Heels in China Mobile Market (English article)