Tag Archives: Google

Latest News of Google in China, overview of the Business expert on Chinese market Doug Young

COMPUTERS: Wintel CEOs Look For Relevance At Lenovo Beijing Bash

Bottom line: The presence of the CEOs of Microsoft and Intel at a Lenovo tech fest in Beijing represent the struggles that all 3 former PC giants are facing, and how each is looking to China in a bid to reverse its slide.

Lenovo, Microsoft, Intel CEOs share stage in Beijing

It’s not often that anyone uses the term Wintel anymore, which refers to the duopoly of Microsoft’s (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows operating system (OS) and central microprocessing chips from Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) that dominated the computing world for decades. But Wintel was center stage this week in Beijing, in a rare case where the CEOs of both Microsoft and Intel shared the stage with the CEO of Lenovo (HKEx: 992), the world’s largest PC maker, which was holding a bash to launch a wide range of new products.

Lenovo has been steadily hyping this event that finally took place on Thursday, where it unveiled a wide range of new products like a dual-screen smart watch and laser projector smartphone, all of which looked interesting but not too exceptional. I wasn’t planning on writing about the event at all for that reason, until I spotted the photo featuring Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing taking a selfie of himself with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Intel CEO Brian Krzanich at the Lenovo Tech World event in Beijing. Read Full Post…

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…

INTERNET: Baidu Ends Search For Japan, Hangs Out Egyptian Shingle

Bottom line: Baidu’s new go-slow global expansion strategy focused on emerging markets like Brazil and Egypt looks smart, but will provide limited contributions due to the small size of those markets.

Chinese online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is making some major strategic adjustments in its global expansion, turning to developing markets and away from more lucrative but also extremely competitive western ones. That’s my main conclusion, following reports that Baidu has finally pulled the plug on its struggling Japan search service 8 years after choosing the market for its first foray abroad. At the same time, the company is making initial moves into Egypt with its first Arabic-language website, following earlier moves into Brazil and more recently into Thailand. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Major Hospital Group Takes On Baidu

Bottom line: A rebellion by a major hospital group against Baidu could reflect growing discontent towards the search engine among Chinese advertisers, which could force it to lower prices and make its business practices more transparent.

Medical group takes on Baidu

Local media are swarming to a story that has seen a major hospital association advise its members to yank their advertisements from Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), cutting off a top cash cow for China’s leading search engine. The Putian Healthcare Industry Chamber of Commerce is saying the grievances that led to its action are related to the high prices that Baidu charges for its services. But Baidu has weighed in with its own view, calling the move retaliatory for its own refusal to accept ads containing false and exaggerated claims from many Putian members. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Chinese Fire Wall Slams Down On Reuters

Bottom line: The latest blockage of Reuters sites in China is probably temporary and related to coverage during the recent National People’s Congress, but still reflects the very real risk of doing business in the tightly controlled media market.

Reuters websites blocked in China

China’s latest crackdown on foreign media has just netted global news giant Reuters (Toronto: RTR), in a potentially worrisome trend that has seen Chinese censors block a growing number of websites operated by big multinationals. Despite longer-term crackdowns on big names like Bloomberg and the New York Times, Reuters had managed to largely steer clear of China’s censors and its websites have remained largely accessible in China for most of the last 2 years.

But I couldn’t access any of Reuters sites in Shanghai starting last Thursday, and later reports confirmed the company’s Chinese- and English-language websites have been blocked throughout the country since then. (English article) Before I go any further, I should disclose that I previously worked at Reuters for a decade, and maintain contact with many of my former colleagues 4 years after leaving the company. Reuters Chinese site also is a regular user of my work, though apparently none of that has been viewable in China for the last few days. 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…

INTERNET: Tencent Joins Baidu, LeTV In Smart Car Race

Bottom line: New smart car initiatives from Tencent, LeTV and Baidu are all likely to struggle, with Baidu most likely to be first to drop out of this race to copy Internet giant Google.

LeTV car to debut at Shanghai Auto Show

China is quickly living up to its copycat reputation in the smart car space, with the latest word that Tencent (HKEx: 700) will enter the business in a tie-up with Taiwanese contract manufacturing giant Foxconn (HKEx: 2038). That pair are following Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) into the area, but they certainly aren’t the first Chinese to mimic the world’s largest Internet company.

That distinction would probably go to Chinese Internet search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which last year announced its own smart car initiative that was also back in the headlines this week as CEO Robin Li discussed the plan. Yet another similar initiative is also in the headlines today, as online video sensation LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) discussed its own plans to show off its first smart car at the Shanghai auto show next month. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Yahoo China Divorce Nears End With Beijing Pull-Out

Bottom line: Yahoo’s closure of its Beijing R&D center marks its final withdrawal from China, in a shift mostly related to internal issues but also reflecting the difficulties foreign Internet firms face in the tightly controlled market.

Yahoo closes Beijing R&D center

Nearly 2 years after shuttering its Chinese email service, faded US search giant Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) looks finally set to completely leave the China market, with word that it’s preparing to close up its sizable R&D shop in Beijing. I’m not intimately familiar with Yahoo’s current China assets, but it does appear that this move represents the shuttering of the company’s last major Chinese operation. The move also comes as Yahoo prepares to spin off its sizable stake in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) into a separate company, bringing an end to the company’s decade-long marriage with China. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Links Maps, Browsers With Executive Move

Bottom line: Alibaba’s combining of its mapping and web browser units under a single leader marks the start of a necessary rationalization of its many acquisitions over the last 2 years, which could produce some odd pairings. 

Alibaba combines UCWeb, AutoNavi units

After nearly 2 years of making billions of dollars in strategic acquisitions, we’re finally seeing an attempt by e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) to integrate and rationalize some of those purchases through new tie-ups and other pooling of assets. In this case the integration is coming in an executive move, which is seeing the founder of its AutoNavi online mapping division leave the company. His former position will be taken over by the founder and head of Alibaba’s UCWeb browser division, combining the 2 units under the leadership of a well-respected tech leader named Yu Yongfu. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Baidu Puts Brakes On Mobile OS, Who’s Next?

Bottom line: Baidu’s temporary halting of updates for its mobile operating system is likely to become permanent, and looks like a smart move as it focuses on more efficient ways to boost its mobile market share.

Baidu stops supporting Yun OS

In a move that seemed inevitable, Internet search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) has put the brakes on its 3-year-old mobile operating system (OS) that was sapping big resources with little or no chance for long-term success. The move comes just a month after Baidu trumpeted the growing contribution of mobile revenue to its overall business, surpassing traditional desktop PC search revenue for the first time in December. There’s no mention in Baidu’s latest quarterly report of how much of its mobile search revenue came from smartphones equipped with its self-developed mobile operating system, Yun OS, but I suspect the answer was “very little”. 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…