The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China Auto Market Growth Slows Sharply In January (English article)
Cosmetics Retailer Jumei.com Hires Banks For $600 Mln US IPO (English article)
China Telecom (HKEx: 728), Unicom (HKEx: 762) Plan Q1 4G Launch – Source (English article)
Liu Qiangdong To Be Worth 7 Bln Yuan After JD.com IPO (Chinese article)
Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Projects End to Motorola Losses With China Phone (English article)
China was closed for much of last week, but that didn’t some of its top tech executives from emitting a steady stream of tweets on their microblogs regaling followers with tales of their travels over the Lunar New Year holiday. The US emerged as the travel destination of choice for many who favored a destination that has been quite generous towards their sector over the last few months.
Regular tech readers will know I’m talking about the huge success of 5 major Chinese Internet IPOs in New York, many of which have nearly doubled in value since their trading debuts in the last 2 months of 2013. Executives at JD.com, China’s second largest e-commerce company, are hoping to ride that wave of positive sentiment with another New York IPO this year. That pending deal saw one JD.com executive complain of having to take part in a late-night teleconference during the Lunar New Year holiday that I suspect was connected to that upcoming listing. Read Full Post…
Media have been buzzing these last few days about a Hong Kong stock exchange filing revealing that Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) has acquired 6 percent of Chinese PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), implying the deal represents a vote of confidence by the world’s biggest Internet company in the world’s top PC seller. But anyone with any memory will recall that the transaction is just part of Lenovo’s payment for its recent purchase of Google’s Motorola cellphone division. What’s more, Google is almost certain to dump the stock once a lock-up period ends, putting pressure on Lenovo’s stock until that date arrives. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 8-10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Alcatel (Paris: ALUA) In Talks To Sell Phone Unit To Chinese Investment Firm Huaxin (English article)
MIIT Says New VNOs Banned From Building Telecoms Infrastructure (Chinese article)
Update: Shortly after writing this post, Sony has announced it will sell its Vaio unit to investment firm Japan Industrial Partners (JIP). I still believe that JIP could ultimately bring in Lenovo to help it operate the unit in a new joint venture or other tie-up.
Let’s begin my first post in the Year of the Horse with a look at PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), which has suddenly gone into M&A overdrive with the latest word that it may be in talks to acquire Sony’s (Tokyo: 6753) PC business. I wrote just before the holiday that Lenovo might already be taking on too much with its $2.9 billion purchase of cellphone maker Motorola, which came late last month just a week after its $2.3 billion purchase of IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) low-end server business. (previous post) Individually each of these 3 deals actually look relatively smart, as all complement Lenovo’s existing businesses. But a single major acquisition is always tricky even in the best circumstances, and handling 3 such deals at the same time looks to me like a recipe for trouble. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 2-7. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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I commented last week that Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Chairman Yang Yuanqing didn’t seem extremely enthusiastic about his landmark deal to buy IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) low-end server business, and now perhaps we know why. It seems that as Yang was discussing that deal, the largest ever for Lenovo at the time, he was close to finalizing an even bigger purchase of Motorola, the faded former cellphone titan that was purchased by Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) in 2012. Lenovo is paying $2.9 billion for Motorola, a lofty price but still much less than the $12.5 billion Google paid just 2 years ago. That indicates to me that the company Lenovo is buying is probably just a shell of the Motorola that Google purchased, making the deal look somewhat questionable. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 30. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Lenovo (HKEx: (992) To Buy Google’s Motorola In China’s Largest Tech Deal (English article)
ICBC (HKEx: 1398) To Buy Control Of Standard Bank Unit For $765 Mln (English article)
500.com (NYSE: WBAI), China Mobile (HKEx: 941) In Strategic Partnership (PRNewswire)
MIIT Gives 2nd Round Of VNO Licenses, Winners Include Suning, Gome (Chinese article)
Buffett-Backed Chinese Automaker BYD (HKEx: 1211) Settles US Wage Dispute (English article)
I wasn’t too impressed on reading about one of the first promotions in the United States by Tencent (HKEx: 700), following reports last year that it planned to take its popular WeChat mobile instant messaging service to the lucrative but highly competitive market. I realize it will be difficult for WeChat to find an audience in the US, where its name is unknown and it will face stiff competition from local players like Whatsapp and even Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). But the company will have to do a bit more to raise its profile if it really hopes to win over demanding US consumers. Read Full Post…
While reading reports about Lenovo’s (HKEx: 992) new blockbuster deal to buy IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) low-end server business for $2.3 billion, I felt a strange and unusual lack of enthusiasm from Lenovo’s usually upbeat Chairman Yang Yuanqing. Yang never met a reporter he didn’t like, and he loves to talk about Lenovo’s big hopes and dreams at every opportunity he can get. Yet in the reports I read, this talkative chief executive was decidedly low-key and not extremely bullish on this new mega-deal, his company’s largest and the biggest ever tech acquisition by a Chinese firm. Perhaps that’s because he senses trouble ahead as his company tries to integrate and promote a business whose slowing growth was the main reason IBM desperately wanted to sell the unit. Read Full Post…
After more than a half year of silence, Lenovo’s (HKEx: 992) dream to buy the low-end server business of IBM (NYSE: IBM) is suddenly back in the headlines, in a development that I predicted quite a while ago based on the fact that both sides really want to do this deal. The first time around saw the talks founder and ultimately stall due to disagreement on price. But such a deal makes so much sense for both sides that it’s almost inevitable that it will happen, which leads me to believe that we could see announcement of a preliminary agreement sometime in the first or second quarter. Meantime, Lenovo is also seeing a positive development on the Japan front, where its 3-year-old PC joint venture with local partner NEC (Tokyo: 6701) is doing better than expected. Read Full Post…