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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 media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 13. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China’s Wanda Buys Film Studio Legendary for $3.5 Bln (English article)
Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Halts Commercial Tie-Ups in Disease Area of Tieba Social Service (Chinese article)
Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) Fake Ticket Scandal Exposes Gray Areas in Food Chain (Chinese article)
Bottom line: The delay in Netflix’s plans to enter China this year may be due to lobbying from domestic online video companies, and it could be several more years before it gets permission to form a China venture.
Shareholders of US entertainment giant Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) will be disappointed to learn that China wasn’t included on the company’s global road map, as it announced a major expansion for its signature online video service. Many believed that an entry to China could come as early as this year, after media reported last spring that Netflix was in talks to set up a Chinese online video joint venture with Wasu Media (Shenzhen: 000156), which is backed by e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA).
But the road into China was never going to be easy for any foreign online video company, due to Beijing’s heavy censorship of the Internet and also its inherent bias against big foreign companies. All that said, Netflix isn’t exactly writing off China completely either, but is simply saying its road into the market may take longer than it previously hoped. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Rumors that Shanghai Media Group is in talks for a strategic stake of Baidu’s iQiyi could quite possibly be true, with an investment of about $3 billion likely in exchange for half of the company.
The New Year is starting with a salient rumor from the online video space, with reports that the new media investment arm of Shanghai Media Group (SMG) may be eyeing a major stake purchase of Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi. The reports aren’t being widely circulated in the Chinese media yet, which suggests they may not be accurate. The head of SMG’s China Media Capital (CMC), which would reportedly make the investment, has also previously said he’s not interested in online video assets right now.
But such a tie-up would be quite consistent with Baidu’s recent strategy of selling major stakes in its non-core businesses to strategic partners. From SMG’s perspective, such a deal would also make sense, as it plays catch-up with both private companies and also state-owned rival Hunan Broadcasting in the fast-evolving online video space. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 1-4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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New Rumors of iQiyi Acquisition Plan by China Media Capital (CMC) (Chinese article)
Suning Invests 1.9 Bln Yuan in ZTE’s (HKEx: 763) Nubia Smartphone Unit (Chinese article)
China Southern, Hainan Air Suspend Sales Over Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) (Chinese article)
Movie Ticket Sales Jump 48 Pct in China, But Hollywood Has Reason to Worry (English article)
O2O Crowdsourced Delivery App Dada Lands $300 Mln Series D Funding – Source (English article)
Bottom line: Baidu’s new fund raising for its O2O take-out dining service is aimed at finding strategic partners and deflecting criticism from its shareholders, while Spring Airlines new fund-raising presages an aggressive expansion into Japan.
A couple of major fund-raising stories are in the headlines on this final trading day of 2015, setting the stage for what’s likely to be a busy year ahead in the take-out dining and budget air travel sectors. The larger of the 2 items has online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) reportedly near a deal to raise up to $500 million for its young and fast-growing online-to-offline (O2O) take-out dining service. The smaller has China’s oldest budget carrier Spring Airlines (Shanghai: 601021) in the process of raising nearly 1 billion yuan ($150 million) to fuel its expansion into nearby Japan.
These 2 deals cap a year that saw an explosion in private funding for start up Chinese companies in the first half of 2015, including several deals worth more than $1 billion. But the pace of funding has slowed sharply in the last few months due to concerns over China’s slowing economy, and these latest 2 deals are likely to become the new norm in terms of deal sizes we’ll see in 2016. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 30. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Takeout Delivery Seeks $300-500 Mln in Funding – Sources (English article)
European Chamber Says Still Has Concerns on China Anti-Terror Law (English article)
Bottom line: Alibaba is placing its take-out dining service bets on Ele.me with its new $1.25 billion investment, and will spend other major resources next year to try to clean up its sites of trafficking in fake goods.
E-commerce juggernaut Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is back in the M&A market, gobbling up a headline-grabbing 28 percent of leading online-to-offline (O2O) take-out dining service Ele.me for a tidy $1.25 billion. Alibaba has yet to confirm the deal, which would become the latest in a growing string of investments worth $1 billion or more for the company. A deal of this size would have been major news just 3 years ago before a wave of M&A began sweeping China’s Internet, though now such transactions have become far more common.
Meantime, Alibaba is in another set of headlines in its battle against piracy, with word that it’s adding 200 people to the team charged with ridding its huge online marketplaces of trafficking in pirated goods. This particular move comes less than 2 weeks after Alibaba managed to avoid seeing its name reappear in an annual US list of the world’s most notorious marketplaces for trafficking in pirated goods. Having dodged that bullet, Alibaba is now showing it plans to get far more serious in tackling the problem next year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The new alliance between Tencent and Zhejiang TV reflects the growing strength of China’s big Internet companies in online video, and will benefit but also challenge both sides.
By Lin Nanwei
Last week’s World Internet Conference in the scenic water town of Wuzhen attracted media attention due to attendance by most of the sector’s top leaders, even though few said anything substantial. But Tencent(HKEx: 700) Chairman and CEO Pony did a little homework before he came.
The day before the curtain came down on the big event, Ma appeared at another event in nearby Hangzhou to announce a strategic partnership between Tencent and Zhejiang Television & Radio Group, the province’s largest state-owned TV broadcaster. According to reports, the 2 sides will focus on cooperation in development of content, channels and promotional activities. (Chinese article) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China’s global Internet conference this week was mostly empty pageantry, but it did reveal that Baidu might like to privatize from New York one day, and attracted a handful of China-friendly global executives.
China’s big Internet pow-wow this week in the picturesque town of Wuzhen hasn’t produced much news despite its big aspirations, reflecting Beijing’s tight control over cyberspace and companies that do business there. But the globally-minded event did produce at least one interesting tidbit on the recent privatization wave by US-listed Chinese companies, and also an entertaining photo of 2 top executives that went viral online.
The news item came from Robin Li, founder of leading Chinese search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), who hinted that he hopes to someday join the recent wave of Chinese companies now privatizing from New York due to undervaluation. The photo that went viral captured a humorous moment involving a catnap during the conference by Zhou Hongyi, the controversial and more often outspoken CEO of security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qihoo is likely to complete its $9 billion privatization in the next few months at its original bid price, while Jiayuan’s buyer may have to raise its price again to placate unhappy shareholders.
The year of the buyout for US-listed Chinese firms is ending on a loud note, with announcement of a formal privatization offer for security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU), the largest of the deals among the 3 dozen announced in 2015. But while Qihoo’s plan moves ahead, another older deal to buy out online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE) is running into trouble due to complaints about its low valuation. In the latest development on that front, a major third-party advisory service has recommended that shareholders reject the offer because it’s too low.
Last but not least, I’ll end this buy-out round-up with some whimsical speculation that Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) may be next to receive a privatization offer. My speculation isn’t based on any insider information, but rather the simple fact that the company’s stock jumped 14 percent on Friday for no apparent reason. The company also looks similar to many of the others that have already received similar offers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The lack of news or attendance by major worldwide executives at China’s global Internet conference this week shows the country’s Internet remains relatively closed and under strict government control.
I had big hopes for the second edition of China’s World Internet Conference happening this week in the picturesque town of Wuzhen, as all of the country’s top executives are in attendance at an event intended to showcase the country’s online prowess. The list of domestic executives in attendance certainly hasn’t disappointed, and many are undoubtedly there to network with China’s top Internet bureaucrats and President Xi Jinping, who gave this year’s opening speech.
But a look at some of the comments from names like Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder Jack Ma and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) founder Robin Li turns up mostly empty talk, mixed with the expected self-promotion. What’s more, I also find the near-absence of any major foreign names from the conference somewhat puzzling, since China is trying to bill this as a global conference. Read Full Post…