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Facebook in China latest Business & Financial news from Doug Young, the Expert on Chinese High Tech Market, (former Journalist and Chief editor at Reuters)

MEDIA: Netflix Faces Tough Road Into China

Bottom line: Netflix may be in talks to enter China through a joint venture, but is unlikely to reach a deal for at least the next 1-2 years due to regulatory turbulence and tough restrictions in the rapidly changing market.

Netflix eyes China

Investors are getting excited about reports that leading US video streaming site Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) is in talks to come to China, in what would be the first such move by a major foreign video operator. The prospect of such a move would indeed be exciting, especially since it could come in partnership with a company closely tied to Chinese e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). But I would caution that this particular market is a very tricky one due to China’s strict censorship policies, and also recent resistance to private companies from traditional state-owned TV stations. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Xinhua, AP Talk Tie-Ups In Strange New Media World

Bottom line: AP’s willingness to consider new tie-ups with Xinhua is the result of economic pressures being felt by western media, but is unlikely to produce any major alliances due to the potential for negative publicity.

AP open to deeper partnership with Xinhua

Rapid changes in the traditional media realm are creating some strange bedfellows, and the situation looks even stranger in China due to the strong elements of censorship and state control. That odd combination of circumstances is creating a perfect storm that has led some western media companies to do the previously unthinkable and consider partnerships with some of China’s most centrally controlled media. Recent rumors have said that global financial news leader Bloomberg may be considering such a tie-up, and now the latest reports are saying US media giant Associated Press (AP) is also open to such partnerships. Read Full Post…

IPOs: China Internets Set For Soft Landing On Wall St

Bottom line: Chinese Internet stocks are likely to see a soft landing after a correction period in the first half of the year, with leaders and high-growth second tier players likely to experience a rebound in the second half.

China Internet stocks headed for soft landing

A new scorecard is casting a worrisome spotlight on the bumper crop of Chinese Internet firms that listed last year, pointing out that more than half are now trading below their IPO prices. The sagging prices continue a trend that I pointed out in my IPO scorecard at the end of last year. That trend has seen shares of many New York-listed Internet firms come back to their offering levels or lower as investors pocketed profits from strong post-IPO rises. (previous post) But rather than label this a reason for worry, I would argue instead this broader wave represents a rationalization of the market that will ultimately see the best-performing names rewarded and the money losers languish. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: China Mobile Tackles WeChat With New Platform

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.

New China Mobile platform to challenge WeChat

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…

WEIBO TALK: Alibaba, Tencent Draw Praise, Ire From Controversies

Rivals blast Alibaba over piracy report

Two big news stories were at the center of heated discussion in of the microblogging realm this past week, led by Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) high profile dispute with one of China’s main business regulators over accusations of being soft on piracy. At the same time, Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) roll-out of advertisements on its WeChat mobile messsaging platform also drew lots of comments, as users were suddenly greeted with unsolicited messages in the popular Moments feature that functions much like Facebook’s (Nasdaq: FB) newsfeeds.

Of course no weekly microblogging round-up would be complete without a mention of the media savvy Xiaomi, which was once again creating buzz after an embarrassing gaffe by global marketing chief Hugo Barra. That gaffe saw Barra use a politically incorrect version of a map of India in one of his presentations, showing India as the correct owner of parts of a disputed area of its long border with China. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: WeChat Draws Advertisers, Food Delivery, Youth

Bottom line: Tencent’s strong early showing for a new WeChat-based advertising service and its investment in a take-out dining service reflect building momentum in its drive to build WeChat into a major new profit center.

BMW, Coke launch ad campaigns on WeChat

A couple of media reports are shining a spotlight on Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) WeChat, and some of the new steps it is taking to monetize the hugely popular service that is rapidly expanding beyond its roots as a mobile messaging service. At the same time, another report from Tencent itself is providing some insight into who exactly uses WeChat. It should come as no surprise that the report shows WeChat’s biggest fans are young and mostly male users, which are some of the most attractive targets for the online merchants and advertisers that Tencent wants to do more business on the platform. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Tencent Adds Ads To Popular WeChat Function

Bottom line: High-spending advertisers could provide a major new revenue source for Tencent, as it rolls out new ad-based services on its popular WeChat Moments function.

WeChat rolls out new ad services

Internet stalwart Tencent (HKEx: 700) is revving up its drive to monetize its popular WeChat mobile messaging platform, with word that it’s rolled out advertising services for one of the platform’s most popular functions. The move will start inserting ads into WeChat’s popular Moments function, known as pengyuouquan in Chinese, in a gamble that risks alienating many of the hundreds of millions of platform’s users. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Tumblr Eyes China As Censors Watch

Bottom line: SNS operator Tumblr could quickly find its site blocked in China if it rolls out a Chinese-language edition targeting mainland users without taking formal steps to enter the country.

Tumblr eyes China

News that US social networking site (SNS) Tumblr is eying the China market looks intriguing, as it would come not long after professional networking site LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD) entered the market and as industry titan Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) lobbies hard for its own Chinese presence. But what most caught my attention about this latest development was the somewhat humorous headline in one report noting that Tumblr is “still not blocked in China”.

Of course the implication is that once Tumblr formally launches a Chinese language edition of its popular blogging and SNS service, it could very easily find its site blocked by China’s Internet police. Read Full Post…

WEIBO TALK: TCL’s Valuation Envy, JD Looks Back At Dangdang

Valuations in focus as Lunar year closes

Internet executives were busy quashing a number of rumors on their microblogs this week, with smartphone sensation Xiaomi trying to stamp out reports of bitter relations with SNS giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB), and e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) quashing talk of a major new investment in South Korea. But some of the more interesting chatter focused on the concept of company valuations, and just how widely such valuations can vary for China’s dynamic tech firms.

At the same time, a coming flurry of year-end parties began to kick off in the run-up to the Chinese New Year holiday that’s just a month away. The microblogging realm saw e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) singing its own praises at the company’s annual party, taking a shot at fast-fading rival Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) in the process. At around the same time, a stumbling Sina Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) also held an annual awards ceremony for notable microbloggers, in its own attempt to remain relevant in the social networking realm. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: UCWeb Ties With Facebook, Qihoo With Microsoft

Bottom line: UCWeb’s new India tie-up with Facebook looks like a good step that will help its global expansion, while Qihoo’s new Microsoft alliance looks mostly like inconsequential hype.

UCWeb ties with Facebook in India

A couple of new corporate tie-ups are in the headlines today, led by word of a potentially major new alliance between Alibaba-owned (NYSE: BABA) web browser UCWeb and global social networking giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB). The other tie-up, which looks far less interesting but still potentially significant, and will see security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) work with Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) in advertising services. This second alliance is just the latest in a long recent string for Qihoo, and seems aimed at breathing life into its struggling stock that is being rapidly abandoned by impatient and disappointed investors. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Xiaomi Sued In Shanghai, Wooed By Facebook

Bottom line: A new lawsuit against Xiaomi spotlights the lack of premium quality behind its trendy brand, though it could succeed in the shorter term as the leading maker of “fast fashion” smartphones.

Xiaomi sued in Shanghai court

I had to smile on reading about the latest scandal surrounding Xiaomi, which came in a media report on a new lawsuit accusing the smartphone sensation of false advertising claims. This kind of overinflated claim has become a symbol of Xiaomi, reflecting the kinds of hype it regularly generates even as its actual products are described as quite ordinary and even sub-par.

Xiaomi’s hype contrasts sharply with its primary role model, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), which has built a hugely loyal following based on products that most users agree are superior to those from its rivals and worth the big premiums that Apple charges. A separate news item shows the hype factor is still enough to attract big-name investors, with word that social networking (SNS) giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) previously sought to invest in Xiaomi. Read Full Post…