Bottom line: A merger between Youku Tudou and iQiyi looks like a strong possibility because it would greatly benefit both companies, creating a clear market leader to rival LeTV and traditional broadcasters.
Rumors that former online video leader Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) is in talks to merge with rival iQiyi have reignited interest in the former’s beleaguered stock, as investors get excited about another landmark deal in the space. Youku Tudou’s shares soared 17 percent in the latest trading session, and have now nearly doubled since the beginning of April.
The sourcing is quite vague on the reported talks for a merger with iQiyi, which is owned by online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). But I would give the reports a strong chance of being true, as this kind of a move seems consistent with past behavior of Youku Tudou’s CEO Victor Koo, who is highly practical and thus would seriously consider selling his company if such a move made financial sense. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The latest sporting deals by LeTV, Wanda and Alibaba reflect a growing scramble to secure broadcast rights and develop sports channels in China, with more such deals likely in the year ahead.
A nascent but growing move by China’s top private companies into global sports is in 2 separate headlines, with word of significant new deals involving e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104). The stories also involve the entertainment ambitions of real estate magnate Wang Jianlin, one of China’s richest men, whose Wanda Group has been at the center of 2 major global sports deals over the past year.
The first of the newest deals will see Alibaba bring US college basketball to China through a deal with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the main governing body for US college sports. The other deal has seen LeTV, China’s most valuable provider of Internet video services, raise 800 million yuan ($130 million) for its young sports division. One of the main backers in that new funding round was Wang Jianlin’s son, Wang Shicong. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Chinese Vice Premier Meets Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO (English article)
Bottom line: 3 new $100 million fundings reflect the recent popularity for Chinese tech and media start-ups among investors, pushing valuations up to unrealistic levels for these young companies that operate in mostly niche areas.
I can remember a time not long ago when $100 million seemed like a huge figure for start-ups raising new funds, and such amounts were quite infrequent. But in today’s overheated Chinese tech world, that figure is in 3 separate headlines this week, including 2 involving the hot area of location-based services (LBS). That pair of items has ride-sharing app Dida Pinche and mobile chauffeur app E Daijia each reaching the coveted $100 million mark in their third and fourth funding rounds, respectively. Meantime, the new sports unit of fast-rising video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) has also just won its own $100 million in new funding, reportedly from one of China’s richest men. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeTV’s new smartphones should generate major buzz when they go on sale this weekend and could easily sell 1 million units in their first 3-4 months, challenging domestic “cool” incumbent Xiaomi.
Smartphone sensation Xiaomi has emerged as one of China’s hottest tech names in the last few years with its cool and trendy image, focusing its sights largely on global leaders Samsung (Seoul: 005930) and especially Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) as it looks for a place on the global stage. But this globally-minded company could soon have to watch its back as well, with the recent meteoric rise of LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) as the newest hipster in town.
LeTV went largely unnoticed for the first part of its life, when it was mostly an Internet-based provider of video content similar to YouTube. But it has zipped into the spotlight over the last year, first as it posed a serious challenge to China’s traditional broadcasters and now as it rolls out its own new line of smartphones. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The hugely successful ChiNext IPO for video player maker Baofeng could draw more Chinese tech start-ups to consider listings at home, even though doing so will make their shares subject to huge volatility.
A video player maker called Baofeng (Shenzhen: 300431) is creating a storm on China’s Nasdaq-style ChiNext enterprise board, with a record-breaking meteoric rise for its shares following a late March IPO. The listing marks the end of a long path to market for Baofeng, which originally envisioned an IPO in New York but later abandoned that plan for a listing at home. The company’s hugely successful reception on the ChiNext also charts a potential major new path to market for Chinese tech start-ups, providing an attractive alternative to New York listings that have been the preferred path up until now. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: TVB’s choice of a Shanghai-based traditional broadcaster as its mainland partner looks like a bad selection to ensure its future, as such traditional media rapidly get overtaken by more nimble Internet-based players.
Hong Kong has been buzzing this past week over the latest mainland encroachment on its media sector, which is seeing leading broadcaster TVB (HKEx: 511) sell a stake in itself to a Chinese investor. But few have gone past the headlines to see what’s really behind this deal, and whether it can help to ensure the longer term survival of a company that has long dominated Hong Kong’s broadcasting scene. In a nutshell, TVB is placing its bets on a group of Chinese media high-flyers that I like to call the “Shanghai Gang”, because they are rooted in China’s largest media market and have strong ties to the city’s monopoly broadcaster, Shanghai Media Group (SMG). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: More Chinese online video companies could soon follow LeTV onto the global stage as their home market soars, providing competition in smaller markets to locally entrenched players like Hong Kong’s PCCW and TVB.
China is generally considered a technology follower rather than a leader, but new data are showing an exciting trend that could see it finally emerge as a global innovator in Internet-connected video services. The factors behind this movement are uniquely Chinese, and stem from a huge pent-up demand in China for quality video services. Such services are finally starting to come from a growing range of private companies led by names like LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), Xiaomi and Youku Tudou (Nasdaq: YOKU), which are far more innovative and nimble than the stodgy state-run firms that dominate the traditional broadcasting sector.
Those newer companies are showing early signs of trying to go global, using Hong Kong and other Southeast Asian markets as their stepping stones onto the world stage. Such markets are relatively small and rely heavily on western content, making them particularly fertile ground for some of these Chinese firms that can create and distribute content more suitable for Asian audiences. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeTV’s smartphone gamble, based on relatively cheap phones tied to its video services, could succeed despite tough competition if its newly launched models get positive reviews.
Online video sensation LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) is all over the tech headlines this morning, with the formal launch of the first 3 models for its previously announced foray into smartphones. The company is taking a page from its successful business model with smart TVs, once again selling what it’s billing as a relatively high-end product for low prices in a bid to attract customers to its core paid video services.
LeTV’s biggest problem will be finding an audience for these models, as it’s quite late to the smartphone game. That fact is being underscored by new industry data that shows China’s cellphone market contracted 5 percent in March, amid growing signs of saturation due to stiff competition. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on April 15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Ganji, 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) To Merge – Report (Chinese article)
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.
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…