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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 … )
Bottom line: Uber’s 2016 China expansion plan looks aggressive but typical for the company, while Didi Kuaidi should invest its big cash pot on expansion and becoming profitable rather than unrelated services like O2O take-out dining.
Private car service leaders Uber and Didi Kuaidi are both in the headlines as we race towards the end of 2015, a year that will go down as a watershed for this fast-rising sector both in China and globally. The first news comes from Uber, which is detailing an aggressive expansion plan for 2016 as China surpasses the US to become its largest global market. The second headline has Didi Kuaidi confirming a major new investment in online take-out dining site Ele.me, just days after separate reports said that e-commerce giant Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) also wants to invest in the company.
This year has certainly been a watershed for both Uber and Didi Kuadi in China, reflecting the rapid rise of their private car services that use location-based (LBS) GPS technology to challenge traditional taxi operators. Uber has said repeatedly that China is its top priority outside its home US market. Reflecting that position, Uber took the unusual step of spinning off its China unit into a separate company earlier this year, and also said it would spend $1 billion in 2015 to build up its service in the market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new landscape in China’s O2O restaurant services market is taking shape around the “big 3” firms of Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent, with a Tencent-backed Meituan-Dianping the most likely to succeed.
We’re seeing more signs of a major shuffle in the China market for online-to-offline (O2O) dining services, with e-commerce leader Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) at the center of 2 major new developments in the space. One would see Alibaba invest $1.5 billion for about a third of Ele.me, the leader in O2O takeout dining services. The other has media reporting that Alibaba is looking to sell its 7 percent stake in Meituan-Dianping, China’s recently formed leading group buying site that operates a rival takeout dining service.
The big driver behind both of these stories is a major consolidation taking place in the O2O marketplace, where money-losing companies are suddenly scrambling to find wealthy backers after being cut off by their more traditional funding sources. Many of those companies have found a receptive audience from China’s cash-rich “big 3” Internet titans of Alibaba, Tencent(HKEx: 700) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi’s newest product launch focused on cheap smartphones and LeTV’s scrapping of an IPO for its film-making unit reflect fading prospects for these former superstars due to stiff competition.
Former Chinese superstars Xiaomiand LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) are in the headlines with new setbacks, reflecting the meteoric rises and equally fast falls that China is producing in its own version of the dot-com bubble. But this bubble has distinctly Chinese characteristics, and is coming in a more mature Internet where rampant competition and copycatting make it very difficult to make profits.
The first headline has Xiaomi rolling out 3 of its newest smartphones that are decidedly low-end, representing a big setback for the company’s drive to produce higher-end models that have fatter profit margins. The second headline has LeTV scrapping a plan to make a separate listing for its filmed entertainment unit, a year after hyping a new IPO that it hoped could mimic the meteoric rise in its own stock earlier this year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new alliance between some of China’s largest hotel operators is the latest reaction to Ctrip’s growing clout in the travel services sector, and could lead the anti-trust regulator to take remedial action next year.
An increasingly powerful Ctrip(Nasdaq: CTRP) is in the headlines as the new week begins, with word that some of China’s top hotel operators are banding together to protest what they see as unreasonable demands by the online travel services giant. News of this action is once again spotlighting Ctrip’s recent purchase of big stakes in nearly all of its major rivals, in a bid to reduce the rampant competition that has plagued the industry over the last 2 years.
I wrote about this issue just last week, when media reported that Ctrip was in talks to take a stake in travel package site operator Tuniu (Nasdaq: TOUR), one of the few major players that doesn’t have an equity alliance with Ctrip. (previous post) I observed that such a tie-up would help Ctrip by neutering one of its last major domestic rivals. That could ultimately draw the attention of China’s anti-trust regulator, which until now hasn’t taken any action to break-up near monopolies in many of the country’s Internet spaces. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Chinese video- and entertainment-related companies will continue to attract big investments and valuations over the next year due to their strong growth potential, even as sentiment cools towards other new media companies.
Investor sentiment may be rapidly cooling towards many Internet areas in China, but entertainment is one that still remains quite popular. That’s my latest read on the markets, following news of major new financing for 2 companies and a new Sino-foreign co-production deal in the hot video and movie-making sectors.
Up-and-coming online video operator Mango TV is at the center of the biggest news in terms of value, with media reporting it’s aiming to raise a hefty 20 billion yuan ($3.2 billion) in just its second funding round. Movie ticket booking app Weiying Shidai is in a smaller but still sizable fund-raising headline, with reports that it has just raised 1.5 billion yuan in its third funding round. Last but not least is word of a film co-production deal between local studio Huace (Shenzhen: 300133) and global giant Twenty-First Century Fox (Nasdaq: FOX). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Baidu’s new joint venture bank with Citic could help it catch up to stumbling private banks backed by Tencent and Alibaba, which are struggling due to restrictions on their operations by Beijing.
Two headlines are highlighting the opportunities and challenges that private banking is presenting for China’s Internet giants. The larger of the news items has online search leader Baidu(Nasdaq: BIDU) forming a joint venture with traditional banking giant Citic Bank (HKEx: 998), as it plays catch-up with Internet rivals Tencent(HKEx: 700) and Alibaba(NYSE: BABA). The second headline involves Tencent’s recently formed WeBank online bank, which is reportedly looking to raise $1 billion nearly a year after its official launch.
China’s Internet companies have rushed into financial services over the last 2 years, as Beijing tries to breathe new life into a stodgy sector previously dominated by big state-run firms. Both Tencent and Alibaba have been at the forefront of the movement, with each getting licenses to open private banks earlier this year under a new pilot scheme. But the transition has been filled with obstacles, partly due to lack of regulation but also because of resistance from the traditional banks. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Ctrip’s recent series of equity tie-ups, including a new rumored deal with Tuniu, could prompt the anti-monopoly regulator to take action to preserve competition in China’s online travel market.
A strong earnings report from online travel titan Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) and word of a potential new business alliance with a major rival has ignited the company’s shares, which soared 14 percent after it released its latest financials. Ctrip has become a master at the strategic tie-up, buying stakes in most of its rivals over the last 2 years without actually acquiring any of them.
That strategy seems designed to make sure its rivals act more friendly and aren’t competitors, which will help support its profits by reducing the constant price wars that have plagued the industry for much of the last 2 years. The only problem is that such actions have distinctively anti-competitive overtones, and could well draw the attention of China’s anti-monopoly regulator. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The MSCI’s inclusion of US-listed Chinese stocks like Baidu and Alibaba in some of its emerging market indexes will support the shares by attracting more long-term investors.
Investors who previously looked enviously at Chinese Internet stocks but were too afraid to buy due to their volatility have new reason for confidence, with word that one of the world’s top index compilers will include the country’s top names in some of its indexes. The move by MSCI has been long overdue, and comes just months after the global index compiler disappointed China boosters by declining to allow Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed A-shares into its emerging markets indexes.
This particular move will also come as a welcome development to people who argue that China’s best companies are better served by listing their shares in overseas markets like the US and Hong Kong rather than at home. Many Chinese Internet companies that previously listed in New York have been abandoning the market recently by launching privatization bids, with an aim of eventually re-listing in China to try for better valuations. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 18. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Former Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) China Chief Plans to Take Startup Incubator Public (English article)
Fox International Inks Production Deal With China’s Huace (Shenzhen: 300133) (English article)
Movie Ticket Booking Platform Weiying Shidai Wins 1.5 Bln Yuan Series C Funding (English article)
Bottom line: Alibaba and Baidu’s inclusion in MSCI indexes and SouFun’s new dual listing in China highlight reasons why overseas markets are still an attractive place for leading private Chinese companies to list.
Two new developments last week highlighted why overseas listings are still beneficial and even desirable for some Chinese companies, even as a flood of New York-listed firms move ahead with plans to leave New York and re-list in China.
The first development saw MSCI, one of the world’s top index compilers, say it would include Chinese companies in its products for the first time by choosing several US-listed firms, including Internet titans Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). The second saw investors applaud a plan by leading online real estate services firm SouFun (NYSE: SFUN) to take control of a Shanghai-listed company, a move designed to gain access to Chinese capital markets while maintaining its New York listing. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 17. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Tsinghua Unigroup to Invest $47 Bln to Build Chip Empire (English article)