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 … )

IPOs: New Shanghai Board on Hold, as Qiyi, Ant Financial Wait

New Shanghai exchange on hold

A new stock exchange being planned for Shanghai ran into unexpected headwinds last week, when signals coming from Beijing hinted at delays or even a possible scrapping of the board aimed at fostering emerging industries. Observers said the setback could deal a blow to fast-growth companies like Baidu-linked (Nasdaq: BIDU) online video service Qiyi.com and Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) Ant Financial, depriving them of an important source for new funding to fuel their development.

But the truth is that China already has two major specialty boards to complement its two main boards in Shanghai and Shenzhen. One of those, the ChiNext, is a Nasdaq-style enterprise board launched in Shenzhen in 2009. The other is a 3-year-old Beijing-based over-the-counter style board, often called the Third Board. The older ChiNext specializes in more mature high-growth start-ups, many of which would have previously gone overseas to list, while the Third Board focuses on earlier stage companies that are often still losing money. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Smog, Propaganda Boss Greet Facebook’s Zuckerberg in Beijing

Bottom line: Mark Zuckerberg’s latest visit to Beijing and meeting with a top propaganda official show his hopes of bringing Facebook to China are still alive, and could result in announcement of a new joint venture by year-end.

Facebook’s Zuckerberg back in Beijing

Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) chief Mark Zuckerberg may not have much chemistry with Chinese President Xi Jinping, but he certainly seems quite capable of getting meetings with high-ranking Chinese Internet and propaganda officials. Just a couple of months after returning from paternity leave for the birth of his daughter, Zuckerberg was back in Beijing over the weekend to attend a government-sponsored forum, as he pursues his aim of bringing Facebook to the world’s biggest Internet market.

Zuckerberg is certainly no stranger to meetings with top Chinese officials as he pursues his goal. Last year he made headlines when he reportedly asked President Xi Jinping to choose an honorary Chinese name for his daughter during Xi’s state visit to Washington, even though his request was ultimately declined. And in late 2014, he hosted a tour at Facebook’s Silicon Valley campus for Lu Wei, minister of the Cyberspace Administration for China. Read Full Post…

Shanghai Street View: Over-Promotion

Ele.me blasted by CCTV
Ele.me blasted by CCTV

This week’s Street View takes us to the offices of one Shanghai’s hottest Internet companies, though take-out delivery superstar Ele.me probably would have preferred to avoid the spotlight on this year’s global Consumer Rights Day that fell on March 15. But anyone who missed that story, which saw Ele.me blasted for using unlicensed restaurants, needn’t worry about accidentally missing this particular day designed to draw attention to a specific cause.

That’s because I’ve recently become aware of Shanghai’s fondness for commemorating many of the growing number of global days designed to draw attention to just about any cause imaginable. While there’s certainly no harm in using such events to raising awareness of things like environmental protection, it does seem like Shanghai’s growing obsession with these promotional days is getting slightly out of hand and may need to become a little more selective. Read Full Post…

STOCKS: Tencent Hot, China Mobile Not in Q4 Results

Bottom line: WeChat’s growth will continue to fuel strong revenue gains for Tencent but could also create a drag on profits, while China Mobile’s profits are likely to be flat as savings from slower infrastructure spending are offset by big 4G promotions.

Transactions boom on WeChat 

High-tech leaders Tencent (HKEx: 700) and China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHA) are providing a nice contrast with their latest earnings reports, pitting one of China’s most innovative private companies against one of its biggest state-run laggards. The results cast a painful spotlight on China Mobile, China’s largest mobile carrier, whose profits sagged in the fourth quarter as it lost business to more nimble companies like Tencent. Meantime, Tencent’s profits and revenue posted healthy gains, as it provided data to generate excitement about its fast-growing but money-losing WeChat social networking service.

Shares of both companies reacted much as one would expect, continuing recent trends. China Mobile shares dipped 2.1 percent after its results came out, and are down about 15 percent over the last year. Tencent’s results came out after the market closed, but I expect they will rally in the new trading day. Over the last year they are up 5 percent, which is quite impressive when one considers the main Shanghai index is down 19 percent during that time. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Alibaba’s Ant Chases New Funds in March to IPO

Bottom line: Domestic buyers are likely to comprise most of the investors in Ant Financial’s latest fund raising, though the use of foreign advisers indicates some overseas participation may also be allowed.

Ant Financial raises new funds

Ant Financial, the financial services arm of e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), is going back to investors for a new mega fund-raising, just a year after taking money from private investors for the first time. But any foreigners hoping to buy into Ant will probably be disappointed, since it appears this new funding round will be mostly open to Chinese institutional buyers. Likewise, Ant’s IPO that could come as soon as next year is likely to happen on one of China’s domestic stock markets, again locking out foreign investors.

Perhaps it’s only fair that foreign investors stand on the sidelines in Ant’s high-growth story, since such investors already have easy access to some of China’s top private companies that are listed overseas. By comparison, domestic Chinese investors have little or no access to shares of Alibaba, Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) or Tencent (HKEx: 700), even though that trio of corporate giants derive nearly all their money from China’s booming Internet market. Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Consumer Show, Fleeing Eateries Bite Ele.me

Bottom line: Ele.me is unlikely to face long-term fall-out from an attack on CCTV’s annual Consumer Rights Day show, but will still be challenged by a business model that forces it to work with thousands of small, often problematic restaurants.

Ele.me attacked on CCTV Consumer Rights Day show

Online take-out dining pioneer Ele.me is taking a double-hit this week, led by an attack on the company for working with improper licensed restaurant partners during a high-profile TV show broadcast each year on Consumer Rights Day. At the same time, the company is reportedly suffering as droves of those same restaurant partners shun its B2B service due to high fees and slow delivery times.

Both of these stories reflect just how rapidly Ele.me has risen over the last year, and also the usual cut-throat competition that has sprung up in China’s online-to-offline (O2O) take-out dining sector. Ele.me was the earliest major arrival to that space, where online companies offer take-out delivery service for diners from a wide range of local and chain restaurants. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Xunlei Swings to Loss, Where’s Xiaomi?

Bottom line: Xunlei’s performance and stock price could come under pressure over the next year due to stiff competition in China’s consolidating online video market and lack of support from struggling strategic partner Xiaomi.

Xunlei swings to quarterly loss

As rumors swirl of a potential merger between the online video services of Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU), smaller rival Xunlei (Nasdaq: XNET) has just announced its latest quarterly results that show why it may be difficult for the company to remain independent in the rapidly consolidating sector. Xunlei swung to a loss in the quarter and saw its revenue contract — hardly encouraging signs for a company that’s already quite a small player in China’s fiercely competitive online video market.

The big “elephant in the room” in this instance is struggling former smartphone sensation Xiaomi, which purchased 30 percent of Xunlei around the time of its 2014 IPO for a reported price of about $200 million. Xiaomi went on to form a content distribution service with Xunlei last summer, leading me to predict that it could make an offer to buy the company outright. (previous post) Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Sohu Playing Video with Tencent?

Bottom line: Sohu is likely to combine its online video service with Tencent’s in an ongoing consolidation of the Chinese sector, and the tie-up could presage a Tencent-backed privatization bid for Sohu later this year.

Sohu, Tencent in video merger?

More consolidation could be coming in China’s online video sector, with word that web portal Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) may soon sell a major stake in its video service to social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700). The move would follow a similar tie-up between this pair in the online search space, and might lead some to wonder if Tencent may even be preparing an eventual bid for Sohu itself. I’ll end the suspense on that matter by saying such a sale seems unlikely, for reasons I’ll explain later. But the pair could still ultimately do more deals together

This particular tie-up would mean that China’s online video sector is firmly consolidating around the country’s 3 biggest Internet companies and a handful of others. Leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is closely associated with Qiyi.com, a leading player, while Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) last year purchased Youku Tudou, another leader. The other major player is LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104), formerly known as LeTV, and state-owned broadcasters in Shanghai and Hunan are also making big pushes into the space. Read Full Post…

IPOs: MediTech Eyes NY, BOC Aviation Flies Into HK

Bottom line: A New York IPO by drug maker MediTech and Hong Kong listing by BOC Aviation will both meet with tepid reception and weak debuts, the former due to its small size and latter due to lack of big growth potential. 

Drug maker China MediTech registers for NY IPO

A couple of IPOs are in the headlines as we head into the new week, led by a relatively sizable listing plan by drug maker China MediTech that could be the first significant new offering in New York this year by a Chinese firm. Meantime, Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) is also announcing plans to spin off and list its airline leasing unit, marking its latest asset sale as China’s banks scramble to raise cash to cushion their rapidly crumbling balance sheets.

Each of these listing stories is a bit different, reflecting the big differences between MediTech, a private company controlled by Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing, and Bank of China, one of China’s big 4 state-run banks. MediTech’s choice of New York over Hong Kong probably reflects Li Ka-shing’s recent bearish stance on China, and also highlights the relative stability that New York offers over Hong Kong and China. Bank of China’s choice of Hong Kong reflects the preference by big state-run companies to make overseas listings in the former British colony, and Bank of China is itself also listed there. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Fosun’s Guo Shows Up at Annual Beijing Political Bash

Bottom line: Guo Guangchang’s appearance at this year’s meeting of China’s legislature is a positive signal for Fosun investors, designed to ease their concerns that he might be in danger of arrest as part of an anti-corruption probe. 

Fosun chief Guo attends annual Beijing political pow-wow

Local media are buzzing today with the latest thoughts from some of China’s biggest corporate leaders, many of whom are attending a big meeting in Beijing connected to the annual meeting of China’s legislature. But among all the chatter taking place on the pow-wow’s sidelines, the most interesting tidbit among companies I follow is the mere presence of Guo Guangchang, head of the massive Fosun conglomerate.

Guo’s appearance at the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) would normally be a non-event, since he’s an official member of this group that provides advice to Chinese lawmakers. But Guo was in far more sinister headlines back in December, when he disappeared for a few days under murky circumstances and later said he was assisting in an unspecified government investigation. (previous post) Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Alibaba Raises More Cash, Yahoo Stake in Sight?

Bottom line: Alibaba’s latest $4 billion fund-raising could signal a potential deal to buy its shares currently held by Yahoo, as both companies look to remove a distracting issue that is affecting both of their stock prices.

Alibaba eyeing Yahoo stake?

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) just can’t seem to get enough money. Despite having more than $18 billion in its coffers at the end of last year and access to billions more in credit, the company is reportedly back in talks with a group of banks to raise another $4 billion. That raises the question of why exactly it needs all this money.

Alibaba has certainly been an aggressive acquirer over the last 2 years, spending billions on a wide range of companies in industries from entertainment, to hired car and social networking services and many others. Two weeks ago the company was in yet another major M&A headline, when it disclosed it had quietly purchased more than 5 percent of faded group buying giant Groupon (Nasdaq: GRPN) in the open market. (previous post) Read Full Post…