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Tag Archives: Baidu
Baidu Company News Baidu 百度, Inc. incorporated on January 2000, is classifed as web services company established by Robin Li and Eric Xu.
Overview of the Chinese high Tech Market by former Chief Editor of Reuters (Doug Young).
Baidu offers many services, including a search engine for websites, audio files and images.
Baidu in Figures
– Ranked 4th overall in the Alexa rankings
– In 2015, Baidu had over 1 billion visits / month
– Baidu offers 57 community services (Chinese encyclopedia, questions/Answers , forums … )
The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on May 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on May 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Tencent (HKEx: 700) in Talks to Buy Supercell Stake From SoftBank, WSJ Says (English article)
Huawei Sues Samsung (Seoul: 005930), Demands Royalties on Phone and Tablet Tech (English article)
Chinese Billionaire Chen’s Shanda Buys 11.7 Pct of LendingClub (NYSE: LC) (English article)
Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA) May Push Back Plan for China Manufacturing (Chinese article)
Baidu-Affiliated (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi Plans Backdoor A-Share Listing Next Year (Chinese article)
Bottom line: New revelations about Baidu’s fees for endorsing certain companies and including them in special zones on its website are the result of a business dispute and are unlikely to attract major attention from China’s Internet regulators.
Just as Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) starts to recover from a major scandal involving misleading online search results, the Internet giant is coming under attack for similar tactics from a major online real estate services firm called Sofang.com. In this case Sofang’s move looks somewhat opportunistic, taking advantage of the earlier recent scandal to draw attention to another one of Baidu’s less-than-transparent practices involving fees for special treatment on its various websites. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: CEO Lei Jun’s decision to directly oversee Xiaomi’s product development could help to revive the company by addressing a key problem area, but its new set-top box is unlikely to gain much traction in the US due to stiff competition.
Amid growing signs of stagnating sales for its core smartphones, the stumbling Xiaomi is taking a couple of big new steps to try and reinvigorate its business, led by a shuffle that will see charismatic CEO Lei Jun take direct control of product development. In a separate but also significant move, the company has just announced a highly-anticipated first big step into the lucrative but ultra-competitive US market, with plans to launch a local version of its online video service.
Among these 2 big new moves, the management shuffle is the most significant and also most reflects Xiaomi’s problems. The company rose to prominence on an extremely successful marketing campaign that used online buzz, artificial product shortages and strategically leaked information. But Xiaomi’s actual smartphones couldn’t meet the high expectations created by Lei’s brilliant marketing campaigns, and instead are seen as largely the same as many of the other many models now on the market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China Mobile’s retirement of its Internet-based texting and video services reflect its inability to compete with private providers of such services, and underscores its growing position as a slow-growth network operator.
In a move that was long overdue, leading wireless carrier China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) has thrown up the white flag with a symbolic surrender to WeChat, Youku and the many other private companies that have steadily stolen its new business opportunities. In this case the surrender comes in the form of formal retirements for China Mobile’s Internet-based Fetion texting service, and also its lesser known mobile video product.
Fetion was once hugely popular in China, allowing users to send SMS text messages for free by routing them over the Internet. China Mobile was an early innovator in creating that kind of “over the top” (OTT) service that took advantage of the mobile Internet. But more recently it has rapidly lost that position to more nimble private companies like Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Youku. Read Full Post…
A scandal involving leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) has been making national headlines for much of the last 2 weeks, but a smaller similar story this week in Shanghai showed just how bad the problem of false and misleading advertising claims has become in China. Both cases had their roots in the ultra-competitive medical industry, where hospitals, drug and device makers are constantly boasting of miracle cures and spectacular results for anyone who will listen.
In many ways this particular landscape is reminiscent of the US in the early 20th century, when similar “snake oil salesmen” peddled all kinds of dubious drugs and elixirs that claimed they could cure everything from common colds to digestive ailments. Now it seems that China is going through similar growing pains due to its relatively late arrival into a competitive environment where people have many choices for medical products and services. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Baidu’s new policy of greater transparency in its search results is long overdue, and is unlikely to have a major impact on its business due to lack of other choices for advertisers in the China search market.
What a difference a week makes. After coming under unprecedented assault for putting profits above everything else, leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) has just done a major overhaul of its core search service to make it more transparent and useful. The overhaul was long overdue but was hardly voluntary, and only came after the company faced the biggest crisis since its founding in 2000.
It’s somewhat ironic that this particular crisis took so long to come, since the kinds of misleading practices at the center of the controversy are widely known and central to Baidu’s huge profitability. Those practices include selling preferred positions on search results pages to advertisers who pay the highest prices, even though that fact was never clearly conveyed to Internet users. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on May 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bottom line: Baidu’s shares could see more downside of 5-10 percent as a scandal involving its core search service plays out, but its dominant position means its business is unlikely to suffer a major longer term impact from the crisis.
It seems that I was wrong when I predicted that a scandal surrounding search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) would quickly blow over and not much would change in the company’s misleading ways for displaying search results. The company is still at the center of major headlines In the second week since the scandal broke, this time getting ordered to change the way it displays search results.
That order was part of a broader set of government directives telling Baidu to change its ways, and other reports indicated the company has already taken down ads from thousands of medical companies. Such moves could theoretically have a major impact on Baidu’s lucrative search business, since hospitals, drug companies and medical device makers reportedly account for a very large part of its advertising revenue. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on May 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China Going-Private Targets Extend Selloff on Deal Scrutiny (English article)
Regulator Tells Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) to Change Ad Auctioning System (English article)
JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Announces First Quarter 2016 Results (GlobeNewswire)
Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) Beverages Won’t Be a Thing in China After Rare Trademark Win (English article)
Meituan Cuts Off E-Commerce to Focus on O2O Businesses (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Tiger Brokers could see strong growth by banking on Chinese demand for US and Hong Kong stocks, but also faces some risk if Beijing decides to regulate the company as a financial firm.
I’m kicking off my new series on noteworthy venture-backed companies with the fast-growing Tiger Brokers, which is feeding off a Chinese love of stocks and growing demand for access to overseas markets. In the current climate where China’s own stock markets have become quite volatile and prone to big sell-offs, Tiger’s gateway to the US and Hong Kong stock markets could prove a potent draw to Chinese traders looking to diversify their portfolios with international stocks from more mature markets.
In a small but highly symbolic footnote to this story, Tiger is also finally giving Chinese investors access to many of China’s hottest companies that are traded overseas, including the Internet “big 3” of Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700). That could ultimately provide some upside for many of those stocks over the longer term, since Chinese investors are likely to boost trading volumes for many of these homegrown companies whose shares previously languished due to lack of familiarity among western investors. Read Full Post…