Bottom line: Lenovo could make significant inroads into western smartphone markets with its newly acquired Motorola if it lets the brand remain independent and maintain its own product development and sales resources.
A tour of the Lenovo (HKEx: 9992) booth at a major trade show happening this week in Spain made me realize just how much the company is betting on its recently purchased Motorola brand to boost it into the smartphone big leagues. Motorola’s continuing attraction as a powerful brand was on full display at the Lenovo booth, with large crowds clamoring for a look at what seemed like quite a ho-hum new low-end model being rolled out at the show.
By comparison, a glitzy new Lenovo-brand model from its higher-end VIBE line was drawing far less attention, even as a Brit on the stage sang on with nonstop praises for the unique features of the new model that has many attributes of a high-end camera. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: NetEase’s new California R&D center could become an important hub for its future global growth, while Zynga’s China pull-out reflects the extreme difficulties foreign firms face in the local gaming market.
Just a day after I wrote that online gaming giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) may be planning a major new drive into the US, we’re hearing that its top rival NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) is also moving into the neighborhood with plans for a new California R&D center. NetEase’s move comes after search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent both set up US offices last year, though only Baidu actually announced a major new product development center. (previous post) All of these moves represent the Chinese companies’ efforts to tap into the Silicon Valley ethos, which has far more of the skills they will need in their quest to enter global markets outside of China. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: New online service platforms from Lenovo and Tencent could both do reasonably well, but will face challenges due to inexperience and product limitations, respectively.
The “platform” concept is becoming a hot area in China’s overcharged Internet world, as companies look for newer and better ways to deliver their products and services over a growing number of devices and online channels. That rush is behind 2 of the latest big moves in the space, one from PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and the other from Internet titan Tencent (HKEx: 700).
Lenovo’s new foray into online products and services has been in the headlines for the last few months, but I’ve finally received some clarification on what exactly is behind its plans for an online platform with the new name of ShenQi. Meantime, Tencent is aiming to boost its leading position in the online gaming space through a new tie-up with household electronics giant Hisense (Shanghai: 600060). That tie-up looks set to produce a new gaming TV that could compete with more traditional consoles from Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Sony (Tokyo: 6753). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s Meizu investment is likely to spark a round of similar buying by major Chinese Internet firms, but could jeopardize Meizu’s access to the latest Android technology from Google.
E-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is finally making a smart acquisition to revive its flailing smartphone initiative, with word that it’s investing a hefty amount in the well-respected second-tier player Meizu. This particular investment comes just 2 months after another similar deal that saw security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) form another tie-up with smartphone maker Coolpad (HKEx: 2369), and could auger a new wave of similar investments by Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Tencent (HKEx: 700) and perhaps one or two other cash-rich Internet companies.
The news could provide some new breathing room for companies like Meizu and Coolpad, since they and many of their domestic peers are probably losing big money due to intense competition in China’s overcrowded smartphone space. But this new buying spree could also mean that competition is unlikely to abate anytime soon, since wealthy companies like Alibaba and Qihoo are unlikely to give up easily on their new smartphone initiatives. Read Full Post…
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…
Two of China’s most successful tech companies, Xiaomi and Huawei, took center stage in the microblogging realm over the past week, engaging in a rare direct war of words over their competing products in the nation’s overheated smartphone market. Their online sparring aside, the pair of tech stars also engaged in their own separate globally-focused activities that emphasized attempts by each to become the nation’s first truly international smartphone brand.
Huawei’s media-shy founder Ren Zhengfei traveled to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he gave a rare public speech in which he appealed to the US to accept his company’s products, in remarks chronicled by some of his top deputies on their microblogs. Meantime, several recently recruited member of Xiaomi’s high-profile international team met at the company’s headquarters in Beijing, where they were talking strategy as the company continues its global expansion. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Motorola’s China homecoming looks well-designed conceptually, but will have trouble due to stiff competition and is unlikely to become a major player in the next 2-3 years.
I’ve written quite a bit already about Lenovo’s (HKEx: 992) big plans for its recently acquired Motorola brand, which has just made its formal return to China with the local launch of the Moto X smartphone. But what’s surprised me a bit is the magnitude of the campaign that Lenovo has given to this homecoming, which hints at the big hopes it has for the brand whose name whose cutting-edge phones were once the ultimate in “cool” and “trendy”.
It’s been a number of years now since that image was relevant, and many younger Chinese might not even remember the Motorola name at all. But Lenovo is clearly hoping that this homecoming and all the accompanying fanfare will reawaken some of those former impressions among China’s older consumers, in a certain form of “retro-cool” to counter the more recent rise of names like Xiaomi and Coolpad (HKEx: 2369). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple’s allowance of audits of its products by Chinese inspectors marks its latest compromise to address China’s national security concerns, and could mark the start of a more transparent approach on the issue by Beijing.
Global gadget leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) is deepening its uneasy embrace with Beijing security officials, with word that it has agreed to allow security audits for products that it sells in China. This latest development comes less than a year after Apple took the unusual step of moving some of the user information it collects to China-based servers, which was also aimed at placating security-conscious regulators in Beijing.
Apple’s increasingly close cooperation with Beijing contrasts sharply with Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), whose popular Internet products and services are increasingly being locked out of China as it refuses to play by Beijing’s rules. Other global tech giants are also having to deal with the delicate situation, each taking a slightly different approach to try to protect user privacy while complying with Beijing’s insistence that they make their information available to security-conscious government regulators. Read Full Post…
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.
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…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 30. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bottom line: Google is likely to get Beijing’s permission to open a China version of its app store that could launch next year, paving the way for the roll-out of its smartphones in the market.
A flurry of new reports are saying that global Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is planning to re-enter China by opening an app store there, in what would be a major strategic turnaround for the company. The real story of Google in China is quite complex, and to say it withdrew from the market in 2010 after a high profile spat with Beijing over censorship is quite an oversimplification. The more accurate story is one that’s seen Google diversify from its core desktop-based Internet services to an increasingly mobile portfolio that also includes a growing hardware component. That hardware element of its diversification could well be the focal point for a new China foray if the latest reports about Google’s plan to open a China app store are true. Read Full Post…