E-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) has formally ended its IPO process with a solid trading debut, capping a surprisingly strong performance despite signs that investors were rapidly losing interest in Chinese Internet stocks. But in a much lower profile move, smaller IPO candidate Chunkong Technology has quietly delayed its own New York offering plan, becoming the first formal casualty of fading sentiment. Chukong’s decision looks particularly significant because the company operates in the mobile gaming space, which is supposed to be one of the fastest-growth areas in China’s tech world. Read Full Post…
Tag Archives: e-commerce
JD Gets Strong Demand For IPO Shares
It seems that e-commerce giant JD.com’s decision to move slowly with its massive IPO was a good one, with word that the company’s shares have priced quite strongly in their long march to market . JD made its first public filing for a New York IPO back in early February, meaning the process of listing will have taken more than 3 months when its shares start trading on Thursday. That’s a long time in any market, and especially long for the current one where investor sentiment towards Chinese Internet IPOs was rapidly fading. Read Full Post…
E-commerce: JD In Russia, Vipshop In Lending
Two of China’s most dynamic e-commerce firms are in the headlines today with new strategic moves, including JD.com’s purchase of a Russian rival and Vipshop’s (NYSE: VIPS) plans to open a small loan operation. Both of these moves look well conceived, taking their respective companies into new but related areas with big growth potential. The 2 moves come as JD prepares to launch a $1 billion-plus IPO in New York as soon as this week, and as Vipshop looks for acquisitions following a big fund raising exercise earlier this year. Read Full Post…
Weibo: JD Shuffles Staff, Prepares VNO Launch
Rising e-commerce giant JD.com has been all over the blogosphere this past week, trumpeting some major adjustments in its core e-commerce unit as it also prepares to become one of the first companies to challenge China’s 3 major telcos under a new plan to open up that sector. Of course all of this comes against the backdrop of JD.com’s own upcoming New York IPO, which could raise up to $1.5 billion.
If I was being cynical, I might say that much of this buzz is aimed at keeping JD in the headlines as it prepares to list, especially since last week saw early signs that the red-hot New York market for Chinese IPOs may be starting to cool. But in this case, I do think that much of the buzz coming from JD seems genuine and isn’t just hype, as the company tries to position itself to pose a major challenge to e-commerce leader Alibaba. Read Full Post…
Alibaba Makes Bad Buy With Dept Store
E-commerce leader Alibaba clearly has far too much cash and doesn’t know what to do with it. That’s my best explanation for its purchase of a stake in department store operator Intime Retail (HKEx: 1833), the latest acquisition in a supercharged buying spree over the last year. I’m personally quite puzzled by this latest deal, as it seems to contradict Alibaba’s mantra that it’s different from all of its rivals because it doesn’t own any actual retail businesses. Instead, the company has risen to prominence by operating online shopping malls that are populated by other retailers, which pay rent and other fees to Alibaba. Read Full Post…
Wumart Joins List Of Ailing Retailers
The list of traditional retailers suffering from the e-commerce challenge has gained a new member, with domestic giant Wumart (HKEx: 1025) reporting its profit for 2013 fell for the first time in 5 years. It’s noteworthy to point out the last time Wumart’s profit fell was at the height of the global financial crisis in 2008, when the reasons for the downturn were sudden and severe but also relatively short-term. This time the reasons are much more gradual and signal a longer term decline for traditional retailers like Wumart, which are facing an unprecedented challenge from big e-commerce names like Alibaba, JD.com and Amazon China (Nasdaq: AMZN). Read Full Post…
Tencent-JD Tie-Up Takes Aim At Alibaba
The new week is just beginning, but it could well go down as a pivotal moment in Chinese Internet history with Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) new announcement of an e-commerce alliance with JD.com that could threaten the dominance of sector leader Alibaba. The tie-up, which was first rumored last month, will see Tencent pay $215 million for 15 percent of JD.com, which will also receive some of Tencent’s e-commerce assets including a minority stake of its flagship Yixun.com B2C service. (company announcement) The companies will merge their e-commerce businesses, creating a new player with nearly a quarter of China’s B2C e-commerce market. Read Full Post…
Dangdang Disappoints With New Yhd Tie-Up
If I was a shareholder in e-commerce firm Dangdang (NYSE: DANG), I would definitely sell my stock after hearing about the company’s latest announcement of a tie-up with Walmart-backed (NYSE: WMT) Yhd.com. I personally wasn’t surprised by the nature of the tie-up, which will see the pair cross-promote each others’ services, even though I was a bit disappointed that there was no equity exchange. Dangdang had previously confirmed it would announce a tie-up after rumors of an alliance first appeared a few weeks ago. This kind of hype followed by disappointment is quite typical of Dangdang’s co-founder and CEO Li Guoqing, whose fierce independence could ultimately lead to the marginalization or even death of his company. Read Full Post…
Tencent/JD, Yihaodian/Dangdang Tie-Ups Advance
I don’t usually write about the same news twice in a single week, but in this case reports with new details on looming tie-ups involving 4 of China’s top e-commerce firms seem to justify an update. In the larger of the deals, the latest reports say top Internet firm Tencent (HKEx: 700) is nearing a deal that would see it buy 6-20 percent of JD.com, forging a partnership that would create a major new e-commerce contender to rival industry leader Alibaba. In the second update, 2 smaller e-commerce firms, Yihaodian and Dangdang (NYSE: DANG), have confirmed earlier reports that they will announce a major alliance early next month. Read Full Post…
E-Commerce Tie-Ups: Tencent-Jingdong, Dangdang-Yihaodian
It’s a new day on the Chinese Internet, which is as good an excuse as any to talk about rumors of the latest tie-ups in the overheated e-commerce space. One of the latest pieces of gossip has a partnership taking shape between JD.com and Tencent (HKEx: 700), China’s second and third largest e-commerce operators. The other has an alliance forming between Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and Yihaodian, 2 smaller players at the bottom of the list of the country’s top 10 e-commerce firms. I’ll offer my own guess that there’s a 50-50 chance the first rumor is true, while chances of Dangdang-Yihaodian tie-up look much smaller, perhaps around 20 percent. Read Full Post…
Jingdong Rushes IPO As Alibaba Valuation Flies
I previously predicted that e-commerce giant Jingdong would try to make a IPO in the first half of this year, and now we’re hearing that the company has come out galloping in the Year of the Horse by filing a plan for a major New York listing. Word of the plan comes after a year-end boom for Chinese Internet IPOs in New York, most of which have soared since theirdebuts. Jingdong undoubtedly wants to try to seize some of that momentum, but equally important is keen to make its offering before the highly anticipated IPO of its much larger rival Alibaba expected later this year. Alibaba itself was also in the headlines over the Lunar New Year holiday, with the latest financials on the company adding further froth to its soaring valuation. Read Full Post…