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Tag Archives: China Mobile
China Mobile latest Business & Financial news from Doug Young, the Expert on Chinese Companies, (former Journalist and Chief editor at Reuters in Asia)
Bottom line: A new e-commerce joint venture by Japan’s Itochu and Thailand’s CP Group marks the latest major advance for China’s fledgling free trade zone program, whose policies should eventually expanded to the entire country.
China’s fledgling Free Trade Zone (FTZ) program got a new boost last week when a group of corporate giants from Japan, Thailand and China announced a major new retailing joint venture in the original zone in Shanghai. That news came just a week after a major expansion of the Shanghai zone, and the announcement of a plan for 3 additional FTZs in other parts of China.
This sudden expansion of the FTZ program is a welcome development for the many private companies whose growth plans have been stymied for years by China’s huge bureaucracy. That group includes not only big multinationals like Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) and HSBC (HKEx: 5; London: HSBA), but also a growing number of homegrown private giants like JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which also harbor global aspirations. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple’s new court victory in a China patent dispute shows its relations with Beijing are improving, positioning it well for growth in a country that is likely to pass the US as its largest global market in the next 1-2 years.
A couple of new reports are showing that global gadget giant Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) may have finally reversed its slumping fortunes in China, led by word that China probably overtook the US to become the world’s largest market for its iPhones in the first quarter of this year. The other report has Apple winning an important court victory against a Chinese company that accused it of illegally using its voice recognition technology.
This pair of upbeat stories come just a week after Apple scored another positive round of publicity in China, announcing it would make a relatively modest investment in 2 solar farms in southwest Sichuan province. (previous post) This sudden flurry of positive stories, and the fact that they’re being widely covered by China’s state-controlled media, shows Apple could finally be turning a corner in the country after a stormy relationship with Beijing over the last 2 years. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on April 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bottom line: ICBC is likely to ultimately get approval to buy 20 percent of Taiwan’s SinoPac Financial, while Bright Food’s newly closed purchase of Israel’s Tnuva should boost its bid to become China’s first global food group.
I got a sense of deja vu on reading the latest announcement from ICBC (HKEx: 1398), saying China’s leading lender has extended a deadline to buy 20 percent of Taiwan’s SinoPac Financial (Taipei: 2890), 2 years after the tie-up was first disclosed. That’s because this deal looks strikingly similar to another proposed tie-up between leading Chinese telco China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) and one of its Taiwan peers, which ultimately crumbled after repeated extensions. In both cases political sensitivities undermined the deals, though such sensitives could play less of a role in the ICBC-SinoPac deal.
At the same time, I’ll also admit my surprise to read that another sensitive deal has closed that will see Shanghai-based food giant Bright Food Group buy Tnuva, Israel’s largest dairy. That deal was first announced about a year ago, but concerns were quickly raised that Israel might veto it over national security concerns. But the latest reports say the purchase has finally closed, handing Bright a major victory in its quest to become China’s first global food giant. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on March 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China Mobile (HKEx: 941) Reports 2014 Profit Of 109 Bln Yuan, Down 10 Pct (Chinese article)
Coolpad (HKEx: 2369), Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) To Roll Out Own Mobile OS (Chinese article)
Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Names Gianfranco Lanci As Company President (HKEx announcement)
Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) Reports Unaudited Q4 And Full Year 2014 Results (PRNewswire)
Bottom line: The latest negative headlines on Unicom and its confusing earnings reflect its broader dysfunction and a lack of investor interest in its stock, though a major new share buyback could provide a good short-term buying opportunity.
I’ve always wondered which investors were fans of China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU), which based on media and its own earnings reports is easily the most disorganized and dysfunctional of the nation’s big 3 telcos. Now I’m finally learning the answer to that question, with Unicom’s announcement of a major plan to buy back up to 10 percent of its Hong Kong-listed shares. That would equate to a massive $3.6 billion worth of stock, based on the company’s current market value, in what would easily be one of the biggest share buybacks I’ve ever seen. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on March 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China Says Tech Firms Have Nothing To Fear From Anti-Terror Law (English article)
China’s Net Mobile Users Could Shrink This Year – Unicom (HKEx: 762) Chief (Chinese article)
Trina Solar (NYSE: TSL) Announces Q4 And Full Year 2014 Results (PRNewswire)
Phoenix SatelliteTV (HKEx: 3002) Warns Of 24-32 Pct Profit Drop For 2014 (HKEx announcement)
China Mobile (HKEx: 941) Launches 4G Roaming Services in 71 Countries And Regions (PRNewswire)
Bottom line: China Mobile’s new unnamed social networking platform based on RCS technology has a 50-50 chance of posing a serious challenge to WeChat due to the many advantages it will enjoy from its China Mobile connections.
After 2 years of standing on the sidelines as Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) WeChat rapidly stole its text messaging business, leading telco China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) is finally preparing to fight back with its own competing product offering, according to ZTE (HKEx: 763; NYSE: CHL), which is supplying networking equipment for the product. ZTE’s cloud computing chief Zhu Jinyun told me the new product will be an entire platform for social networking and other services based on rich communications suite (RCS), a technology developed by a global telecoms association.
I’m admittedly not too familiar with RCS, though some web searches showed it’s a platform that allows for a wide range of functions, from one-on-one instant messaging to group chats, file transfers, IP voice calls and location-based services (LBS). Anyone looking at that list will instantly recognize that many of those features are already present on WeChat, whose popularity has rapidly siphoned texting business from China Mobile and the nation’s other telcos. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Mobile data usage will grow by triple-digit amounts this year as telcos boost 4G promotions, while box office growth will start to slow and the ongoing decline in traditional SMS text messaging will accelerate.
The usual rush of Lunar New Year-related data is coming in, painting a mixed picture for traditional and new media. The clear winner in the mix is new media, whose surging popularity helped to fuel a 70 percent jump in mobile data traffic over the holiday period. Traditional movies also performed well, with China’s box office rising 36 percent during the period. It will also come as no surprise that the big loser over the holiday was traditional SMS text messages, whose volume plunged by 25 percent. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China Telecom and Unicom are likely to launch aggressive 4G promotions over the Lunar New Year holiday, sparking a recruiting war that could see up to a third of China’s mobile users on 4G service by the end of 2015.
A flurry of telecoms stories are buzzing through the airwaves on this last trading day of the Lunar Year in China, setting the stage for a turbocharged Year of the Sheep that should see the nation’s 3 telcos embark on a massive free-for-all to sign up subscribers for their new 4G networks. That certainly doesn’t sound too good for profits, since all 3 telcos will be spending heavily on both promotions and infrastructure to build their new networks. But investors could still get excited about these 3 telcos if they can get users to boost their spending, reversing a years-old trend that has seen average user spending steadily decrease. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Rumors of a China Telecom-Unicom merger are probably false since they would leave just 2 big players in the market, though the talk could reflect the regulator’s frustration at the continued dominance of China Mobile.
Everyone else is buzzing today about rumors that the smaller of China’s 3 telcos would merge, so I feel obliged to add my 2 cents to the discussion, even though the deal has been denied by one of the companies and the industry regulator. Of course this kind of denial isn’t very meaningful in China, where companies will vehemently deny a rumor one day and then the next day announce a deal that showed the talk was indeed correct. But in this case, a merger of China Telecom (HKEx: 728; NYSE: CHA) and China Unicom (HKEx: 763; NYSE: CHU) really doesn’t make much sense for a number of reasons. Read Full Post…