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NetEase latest business and financial analysis ( NetEase, Inc. (NTES)) – written by Business expert on Chinese market Doug Young

News Digest: December 2, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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Hua Hong NEC, Grace Close To Merger – Sources (English article)

◙ Sina-Invested (Nasdaq: SINA) Mecox Lane (Nasdaq: MCOX) Reports $14.4 Mln Q3 Loss (Chinese article)

Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo Launches Voluntary Real Name System (English article)

NetEase’s (Nasdaq: NTES) Board Approves New Share Repurchase Program (PRNewswire)

Lenovo (HKEx: 992) To Launch Windows-Based Smartphone Next Year (Chinese article)

Govt’s Microblog Shift Looks Good for Weibo 政府口风转变或有利於新浪微博

It seems like barely a day goes by lately without state media singing the latest praises of microblogging, a development which could bode well for dominant player Weibo but which could also hold risks if Beijing decides this popular form of social networking is too important to leave to organic development in the hands of private developers. Followers of Weibo, often called the Twitter of China, will recall that the platform was the source of criticism by state media for much of the first half of the year, which blamed it for spreading rumors from users who could hide behind cloaks of anonymity. One official even came out as recently as last month and suggested that all microblog users might have to register with their real names, a development that would have sent a huge chill through networks like Weibo and other services operated by names like NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES). (previous post) Fast forward to now, when the tone in the debate has changed quite a bit, following Beijing’s latest  decision that microblogging was a great tool for the government to communicate with the people. Following that shift, major state media gush almost daily about the latest government agencies that have opened accounts on Weibo, and have also taken to reporting the other positive effects of microblogging sites. The lead story on page 1 of today’s China Daily is headlined “Micro blogs open a world of communication”, and a search on the subject on its web page reveals positive stories praising everything from microblogging’s role in fighting organized crime to helping people to find love. No mention seems to be made anymore of rumor mongering and the medium’s ability to create social unrest. Of course all that should be good for Weibo and its struggling parent, Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), whose shares have lost about half their value since June as many of its investments outside its core web portal business have stumbled. All this latest praise from Beijing seems to indicate Weibo won’t be shut down or reined in anytime soon, which should be a relief to Sina. Now it just has to find a way to make money off the platform, and also take care to keep Beijing happy by convincing it of Weibo’s important role in developing a harmonious society.

Bottom line: Beijing’s recent shift in tone marks a positive development for microblogging services like Weibo, which are now being called important communicators rather than rumor mongers.

Related postings 相关文章:

Sina Results: Not So Diversified After All 新浪仍依赖广告,突围遇阻

Weibo Still Faces Crackdown Despite Govt Tie-Up 新浪微博难改“被监管”命运

Sina’s Weibo: Growth Engine or Growing Burden? 新浪微博:动力or负担?

China Regulors Threaten E-Commerce, Group Buying 官方监管威胁到电子商务与团购业务

After standing aside and letting its online sector develop largely unhindered for the last decade, China is suddenly showing a worrisome trend of trying to regulate everything on its often unruly Internet, a move that, while needed, could also interfere with market forces. In separate developments on the same day, media are reporting Beijing is preparing to regulate both its group buying sites as well as its e-commerce sector to bring more order to these spaces that have become ultra-competitive in the last 1-2 years. (group buying article; e-commerce article) In this case the reason behind each move is unrelated. For group buying, the reason seems simply to be a desire to regulate an industry that has become ultra-competitive, with quality control virtually non-existent and many players teetering on the brink of closing. (previous post) For e-commerce, the issue is directly related to a massive fee hike last week by Alibaba’s Taobao Mall, China’s leading B2C site, that led to an uprising by smaller merchants who complained they were being targeted for elimination from the site. These two new rounds of regulation for major emerging sectors follow other recent reports that China will soon regulate the vibrant micro-blogging space, and months after it issued its first round of electronic payment licenses and as it prepares to issue online mapping licenses. There definitely seems to be a trend emerging here, which looks a bit worrisome in light of Beijing’s past record at heavy-handed interference in emerging tech sectors. In one case a few years back, Beijing’s heavy regulatory hand effectively killed a vibrant SMS industry that was once a major source of revenue for the likes of Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES). It has also attempted to regulate online games from time to time, which may be partly responsible for that industry’s unexciting growth profile of recent years after years of explosive growth. While some form of direction is certainly needed to bring order to the unruly e-commerce and online auction sectors, it’s far from clear to me that this direction needs to come from Beijing, which instead would be better advised to provide some “guidance” and let market forces do the main work.

Bottom line: New campaigns by Beijing to regulate e-commerce and online auctions are misguided efforts that will ultimately severely hamper growth in both sectors.

Related postings 相关文章:

Taobao Mall’s IPO March Collides With Merchant Uprising 淘宝商城IPO或因商户“起义”被推迟

Group Buying Turmoil Grows With 55tuan Layoffs 窝窝团撤站裁员 团购业整合在即

Investors Punish Sina for Slow Weibo Progress

Securities Regulator Seizes on US Confidence Crisis 中国证监会或介入企业海外上市

The ongoing confidence crisis in the accounting practices of US-listed China stocks continues, with word that China’s securities regulator may be trying to squash the most commonly used route for Chinese firms to list overseas. Media are quoting industry sources saying the Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission has submitted a plan to the nation’s Cabinet asking it to shut down the route, known in the industry as use of Variable Interest Entities or VIEs, or at the very least require all companies that use this gray-area road to overseas listings to vet their financials through the Chinese regulator. (English article; Chinese article) There are clearly some alarming implications here, especially if the Cabinet takes the more extreme route and shuts down the VIE listing route that has been in effect for more than a decade now, staring with listings of Web names like Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) as early as the late 1990s, and which has expanded since then to include other areas like media and microchips. While one can never exclude a more drastic action, the CSRC’s move looks more opportunistic, aimed at giving it more control over Chinese companies that go overseas to list by drawing on the ongoing confidence crisis over the accounting practices of some overseas-listed China companies. My own sources confirm that something is happening, but share a similar view that any concrete action is probably a year or more away and is highly unlikely to include an outright shut-down of the current VIE process, which has had tacit approval of the central government for more than a decade now. What finally emerges may be a route to overseas listing that will include an added stop through the securities regulator, which could somewhat slow the process and would probably have the added effect of weeding out many more questionable companies like the ones that created the current crisis. In the meantime, we could see a mini-rush of companies making IPOs over the next year if the market improves, as they race to get there before any new policies take effect.

Bottom line: The securities regulators’ attempt to insert itself into the overseas listing process for Chinese firms could lenthen the process, but will also weed out many more questionable companies.

中国赴美上市企业会计丑闻引发的信任危机仍在继续,有传闻称中国证券行业监管机构可能正建议取缔中国企业海外上市过程中最常用的VIE结构。媒体援引行业消息人士报导,中国证监会已经向国务院递交申请,建议国务院取缔业可变利益实体(VIE)这种有争议的公司结构,或是至少要求所有使用这种方式赴海外上市的公司将财务报告提交中国证监会进行审核。显然,这将产生重大影响,特别是如果国务院采取更严格做法,取缔VIE上市途径。VIE做法已经存在十多年,最早开始于上世纪90年代末期新浪(SINA.O)和网易(NTES.O)等互联网公司的海外上市,随後扩大到媒体和芯片等其他行业。尽管无法排除采取更严厉行动的可能性,证监会的行动看似更具机会主义性质,目的在于利用部分海外上市的中国公司因会计问题面临持续信心危机的机会,对海外上市企业加强管控。我的消息人士证实将有事情发生,但是也持有类似观点,即任何具体行动可能要等一年或更长时间才会开始,基本上没有可能全面取缔现有VIE程序,中央政府在过去十多年来始终对此做法采取默许态度。最终结果可能是,计划海外上市的公司必须增加在中国证监会接受审查的程序,这可能会在某种程度上延缓整个上市进程,也可能有效排除更多有问题的公司,就像引发当前危机的这些企业。同时,如果市场大势改善,未来一年很可能出现一波上市小高潮,争相赶在新政出台前完成上市。

一句话:证券监管机构试图介入中国公司赴海外上市进程,可能令上市进程延长,但也将清除更多有问题的公司。

Related postings 相关文章:

Accounting Scandal Claims AutoChina As Second Big Victim

Deloitte, SEC Clash in New Confidence Crisis Chapter

Sharks Come Out in China Stock Crisis 信任危机冲击在美上市中资股

 

 

Perfect World: Trouble Brewing in Online Games? 完美世界调降财测释放行业预警信号

With all the buzz out there about a looming China Internet bubble, new downwardly revised guidance from Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD), one of China’s more innovative and outward looking online game operators, looks like a potentially worrisome warning flag. According to its newly released latest estimate, the company expects to earn around 720 million yuan in revenue for the third quarter, or about $110 million, down by a sizeable 8 percent from its previous forecast given out just 3 weeks ago for about 780 million yuan. (English announcement) The company cites a new “take it slower” strategy to lengthen the lifecycle of its games, but that didn’t help its shares which tumbled 20 percent on the Nasdaq after it made the announcement. Reaction on Wall Street was mixed for other Chinese online game sites, with Sohu’s (Nasdaq: SOHU) Changyou (Nasdaq: CYOU) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) both down around 5 percent or more, while Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) was down by a more modest 1.1 percent. Up until now I haven’t really discussed whether online games would be affected by China’s looming Internet bubble, as this category gets most of its money from young gamers who are a different set of customers from the more mainstream online shoppers whose overhyped potential is fueling the current bubble in e-commerce and group buying sites. Recent growth in the online game market has been much more reasonable than e-commerce, and the sector has attracted far fewer new investment dollars in the last year, so I think it’s probably a bit too early to say this group is set for a correction based only on this one downward revision. But one or more similar announcements from other big players will definitely cast a chill over this sector, which, despite its more reasonable growth rates, is still highly competitive with a large cast of companies fighting for a relatively small pool of gamers’ spending.

Bottom line: Perfect World’s downward revision for its Q3 revenue is a worrisome signal for the online game sector, though it’s too early to say if a broader shake-up is looming.

就在中国互联网泡沫即将破灭的议论不断之时,极具创新性和外向型的在线游戏运行商–完美世界(PWRD.O)最近下调财测,看似是对互联网泡沫忧虑的印证。该公司最近公布的预测显示,第三季度营收预计为7.2亿元人民币左右,较三周前预测的7.8亿元下降近8%。完美世界称新制定了“放缓”战略以延长游戏产品的生命周期,但这没有对股价形成支撑,声明发布之後该公司股票在Nasdaq市场下跌了20%。华尔街对其他中国在线游戏公司股票的反应好坏参半,搜狐畅游网易的股价都下跌了5%以上。盛大游戏下跌1.1%,跌幅相对较小。到目前为止,我没有真正谈起中国的互联网泡沫是否会影响到在线游戏公司。这个行业的大部分营收来自年轻的游戏玩家,他们与更加主流的在线购物网站的客户不同,後者易于接受天花乱坠的宣传,可能加速电子商务和团购网站的泡沫化。与电子商务市场相比,最近在线游戏市场增长则更加理性,在过去一年里吸引的投资也远小得多,因此,我认为仅仅根据这一次财测下调尚不足以说明,在线游戏行业发展将出现修正。但是,其他大型公司若发布一两个类似声明,将无疑说明这个行业的危机临近,尽管在线游戏行业增长率更加合理,由于大量公司争夺相对较小的在线游戏收入,业界也充满竞争压力。

一句话:完美世界调降三季度营收预测,发出在线游戏行业令人忧虑的信号,不过要说更大范围的变动即将来临也还为时尚早。

Related postings 相关文章:

Boring Games, Video Drain Drag Down Shanda

Giant Fires CFO, Offers Dividend to Placate Investors 巨人网络CFO辞职 高额分红以安抚投资者

Lenovo’s Game Console — Yet Another Plan 联想:新推游戏机,这次能行吗?

 

Renren Discovers Microblogging Too Late

Leading Chinese social networking site Renren (NYSE: RENN) has finally discovered microblogging, with the launch of a new service, called Xiaozhan, designed to emulate Twitter to complement its traditional SNS site that looks and feels more like Facebook. (company announcement) The only problem is, China already has a company called Weibo, a unit of leading Web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), which looks unstoppable as it signs up millions of new users each month and whose name has become interchangeable with microblogging in China. Rival microblogging sites operated by such big names as NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) have struggled to compete with Weibo, and Chinese search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) even shuttered its own microblogging site earlier this year, acknowledging it was unable to play in the space. (previous post) In fact, Weibo, whose Chinese name actually means “microblog” in Chinese, launched its own traditional SNS site, called Qing, last month, in a bid to leverage its huge popularity to steal business from Renren and other traditional SNS sites like Kaixin. (previous post) Some  might argue that Renren needs to fight back with its own microblogging service to offer a more complete social networking experience, and that it can leverage its traditional SNS platform to lure many of its subscribers to this new Xiaozhan service. I agree to some extent that Renren needs to find related services to leverage its user base to grow. But unless it can offer something revolutionary in microblogging, which I seriously doubt, I would advise the company to look for other new opportunities and leave this space for Weibo. Barring anything unusual, I would expect this new Xiaozhan service to struggle for its entire existence, and could see Renren quietly shuttering the service in the next 1 to 2 years.

Bottom line: Renren’s newly launched microblogging service is destined for failure in the face of  insurmountable competition from Sina’s Weibo.

Related postings 相关文章:

Renren Results: A Mixed Bag for Everyone 人人网业绩:苦乐参半

Sina Gets Serious on SNS With New “Blogging Light” 新浪推出轻博客 大力进军社交网络业务

New Weibo Makes First M&A Move 新浪微博并购忙

Advertising Squeeze Continues, Slowdown Looms 广告支出初显放缓迹象

Ad spending looks strong in the latest quarterly results of Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), Phoenix New Media (Nasdaq: FENG) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES), but big questions remain about the future as the portals continue to squeeze their advertisers for more and more money. Thursday saw a flood of earnings come out for major US-listed China firms, providing the perfect time to take a broader look at ad spending that is so crucial to many of these companies’ top and bottom lines. Leading Web portal Sina saw its ad revenues rise 26 percent, while NetEase saw a 16 percent gain and Phoenix ad revenues jumped a whopping 150 percent. (Sina results; NetEase results; Phoenix results) Sina and Phoenix both also said they expect advertising revenue growth to continue at a similar rate in the third quarter. But what’s interesting here is that Phoenix, the only company to provide more color on its ad revenues, said a major portion of its big ad revenue jump came from increased spending by existing advertisers who spent 82 percent more in this year’s second quarter on average versus a year earlier. Leading search site Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which derives nearly all its revenue from advertisers, made similar comments last month, saying its customers spent 50 percent more in this year’s second quarter versus a year earlier. (previous post) This kind of sharp spending increase by individual customers reflects stiff competition as companies battle for market share, and a growing number of executives who are seeing their costs soar have said the trend is unsustainable. Barring a sudden collapse, which looks unlikely based on forecasts from Sina and Phoenix, the boosted ad spending looks set to continue at least into the third quarter. But I would expect to see a slowdown by the end of the year as fatigue starts to infect spent-out advertisers, followed by an accelerating downturn into 2012.

Bottom line: Results from Sina, NetEase and Phoenix New Media show healthy ad spending will continue through the third quarter, but advertiser fatigue will lead to a slowdown by year end.

新浪<SINA.O>、凤凰新媒体<FENG.N>和网易<NTES.O>最新季度财报显示,广告支出大幅增长,但由於各门户网站为了增加收入,继续努力从广告商身上赚取更多费用,未来仍将面临较大问题。赴美上市的大型中国企业周四纷纷发布财报,为更广泛地审视广告支出创造完美时机。广告支出对许多公司的营收和利润至关重要。今年第二季度,新浪广告收入增长26%,网易和凤凰分别增长16%和150%。新浪和凤凰均称,预计第三季度广告收入将有类似增幅。但有意思的是,凤凰称其广告收入大幅增长,主要归功于现有广告商提高支出,第二季度同比平均增加82%。中国搜索引擎巨头百度<BIDU.O>几乎所有收入均来自广告投放,上月也发表过类似评论,称其客户在今年第二季度广告支出同比增加50%。个人客户广告支出大幅增加表明,各公司正加紧争夺市场份额,竞争日益激烈。越来越多的高管注意到成本大幅上涨,称这一势头不可持续。除非出现意外情况,广告支出增长料将持续至第三季度。但我认为,这一增势年底将放缓,广告商支出将初显疲态,2012年广告支出将加速放缓。

一句话:新浪、网易和凤凰新媒体的财报显示,良性广告支出将持续至第三季度,但广告商疲态将导致广告支出年底放缓。

Related postings 相关文章:

Gaopeng Lay-Offs Auger Ad Spending Downturn 1高朋裁员预示网络广告支出或大幅下降

Trouble Lurks in China Group Buying, as Gaopeng Drops Baidu 高朋停止百度的广告投放 团购行业初露窘相

Baidu’s One-Dimensional Growth Story Continues 百度亮丽财报难掩前景不确定性

 

 

Sina, Tencent Pose Threat in SNS, E-Commerce 新浪腾讯攻城掠地

Despite their late arrival to the game, Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) could soon become potent forces in their newly chosen fields of SNS and e-commerce, respectively. Sina looks the sharpest in this latecomer strategy, reporting that its Boke Qing social networking site, which held its beta launch last month (previous post) has already registered its 1 millionth user. (English article) Sina has achieved the breakneck growth by packaging Qing as a more substantial complement to its wildly popular Weibo microblogging service, considered the Twitter of China. Qing, which links seamlessly with Weibo, is likely to grow exponentially over the next few months, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it reach 10 million users by year end. If it achieves that kind of growth, it could easily challenge industry leader Renren (NYSE: RENN), which reported 31 million users in the first quarter of this year. If Qing really achieves such fast take-up and Weibo starts generating some profits, I could see Sina packaging these two units together and making a US public listing for the pair as soon as the end of 2012. Meantime, Tencent has detailed plans to develop a mega-platform for both B2C and C2C called Paipai, and will put 500 million yuan, or about $80 million, behind the effort. Like Sina, Tencent has proved to be very adept at leveraging a huge user base for its wildly popular QQ instant messaging service into other areas, overtaking Shanda (Nasdaq: SNDA) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) in just a few years to become China’s biggest online game operator. Of course, it will face stiffer competition in e-commerce, going up against sector giant Taobao, along with other names like Dang Dang (NYSE: DANG), 360Buy and Wal-Mart-invested (NYSE: WMT) Yihaodian. Despite that, I’d still give Tencent’s e-commerce initiative a fair shot at success due to its unique position as China’s Internet leader, while Qing’s success looks almost 100 percent guaranteed due to its links to Sina and Weibo.

Bottom line: Sina’s new Qing SNS service could become a major player by year-end, while Tencent’s new e-commerce initiative also stands a good chance of success.

新浪(SINA.O)在社交网络服务领域、腾讯(0700.HK: 行情)在电子商务领域,都算是後来者,但可能迅速崛起。新浪势头凌厉,上月启动轻博客公测版後,其注册用户已突破100万。新浪以轻博客作为微博的补充,两款产品实现相互联通,实现用户数量迅猛增长。新浪轻博客在未来几个月可能呈飞速成长,若到今年底用户达到1,000万,我一点都不会惊讶。若这成为现实,则可挑战该领域领头羊–人人网(RENN.N),今年第一季人人网注册用户已达到了3,100万人。如果轻博客果真发展神速,微博也开始盈利,我认为,最快到明年底,新浪就可能将轻博客与微博整合到一起,在美国上市。与此同时,腾讯也制定详细计划,打造B2C和C2C商务平台拍拍网,将为此投入5亿元资源。与新浪相似,腾讯也善于利用其庞大的QQ用户群,将服务拓展至新领域,短短几年时间就取代盛大(SNDA.O)和网易(NTES.O),成为中国最大的网络游戏运营商。当然,腾讯在电子商务领域面临的竞争会更激烈一些,需要面对当当网(DANG.N)、京东商城、和沃尔玛(WMT.N)投资的1号店等强劲对手。但鉴于腾讯在中国互联网领域的地位,我还是对其在电子商务领域的尝试寄予厚望。至于新浪的轻博客,其成功几乎没有悬念。

一句话:新浪轻博客到今年底将成为社交网络服务领域重要力量,而腾讯在电子商务领域新尝试也很有希望取得成功。

Related postings 相关文章:

Sina Gets Serious on SNS With New “Blogging Light” 新浪推出轻博客 大力进军社交网络业务

Wal-Mart Buys Into China E-Commerce 沃尔玛进军中国电子商务

Belle, Baidu See Beauty in Online Shoe Store 百度和百丽投资优购网或为明智之举

News Digest: August 5, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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Tudou Sets $28-$30 Per Share Range For IPO To Raise $1.6 Bln (Chinese article)

◙ Online Game Developer Kylin Lands USD 20 Mln in New Funding – Source (English article)

Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) Agrees to Sell Its Film Business (PRNewswire)

Trina Solar (NYSE: TSL) to Supply 30 MW of PV Modules for Qinghai Solar Projects (PRNewswire)

NetEase.com (Nasdaq: NTES) to Report Q2 Financial Results on August 17 (PRNewswire)

NetEase Sharpens Up Messaging in Run-Up to Portal Spin-Off 网易剥离门户网站 再度磨砺电邮服务

Internet stalwart NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) is prettying up its popular e-mail and other messaging services as it prepares to spin off its older portal business into a separate company, bringing focus back to these services that were once its bread and butter but later became neglected as it moved its attention to online games. Chinese media are reporting that just weeks after telling the world of its plans to spin off its portal business, most likely into a separate unit that will become publicly listed (previous post), NetEase is releasing some figures for its e-mail service, once a leader in China, that still look relatively impressive. The company says it now has more than 400 million registered e-mail users, whose accounts will be integrated with its mobile, instant messaging and other platforms. (English article) It goes on to add that the e-mail business, banking on advertising and income from other value added services, is already profitable. Old timers will remember that NetEase’s 163.com and 126.com were among China’s earliest e-mail services, and at one point were nearly synonymous with e-mail in China. Of course the same can be said of AOL, which is now a shadow of its former self. But in NetEase’s case, I think these portal and messaging products never really fell from grace quite as badly as AOL and were rather just neglected. That said, I’m quite confident NetEase can revive these products without too much effort if  it tries and, if it does, create a nice “new” product to compete with old rivals Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) and Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) in an IPO that should be fairly profitable and attractive.

Bottom line: NetEase’s renewed attention to its e-mail is the latest step as it prepares its portal business for an IPO that should be quite attractive.

互联网公司网易<NTES.O>在筹备剥离门户网站、成立单独公司之际,正在装扮网易电邮与其他信息传送功能。昔日相关服务曾是网易的核心业务,但因网易後来把重点放在了网游上,这些业务被冷落。几周前网易刚刚对外公布要分拆门户业务,很可能要成立一家单独的公司,将来还可能会上市。中国媒体报导网易正公布其电邮服务相关数据,曾经电邮领域的领头羊现在表现仍算不错。公司称网易目前拥有注册电邮用户4亿人,用户的账户将与其他平台整合。而且网易还表示得益於广告与其他增值服务,电邮业务已开始盈利。老客户应该还记得,网易的163.com和126.com属中国最早的一批电邮服务,甚至一度是中国电邮的代名词。当然你也可以说美国在线(AOL)也发生过类似的事。但就网易而言,我认为,网易的门户和讯息类产品从来都没有像AOL那样跌得那麽惨,它们充其量只是被忽视了而已。可以这麽说,如果网易尝试,我相信其可以不费吹灰之力地重振这些产品,并在IPO中创建一个可以抗衡新浪<SINA.O>和搜狐<SOHU.O>的新产品。

一句话:网易重新关注其电邮服务是准备为其门户业务上市所迈出的最新一步。

Related postings 相关文章:

NetEase Looks to Reinvigorate Portal 网易似要重振门户

Sohu: New Media Fox or Just Another Game Player? 搜狐:新媒体巨头还是一个网游公司?

Sina Gets Serious on SNS With New “Blogging Light” 新浪推出轻博客 大力进军社交网络业务