Bottom line: Google is likely to soon announce that Huawei will make its next generation of Nexus smartphones, in an alliance that looks savvy for both companies for political and practical reasons.
Google, Huawei preparing Nexus partnership?
Global search giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is continuing its low-key drive back to China, with word the next model from its Nexus line of smartphones will be produced by fast-rising domestic brand Huawei. The move is unconfirmed and sourcing in the reports comes from an unnamed Huawei employee.
But such a move would certainly be consistent with Google’s other recent actions, which have seen it moving quietly behind the scenes for a more active role in China’s smartphone market, the world’s largest. Despite its lack of formal presence, Google already enjoys a huge passive role in the market due to the huge popularity of its Android operating system, which is used by nearly all of China’s homegrown smartphone makers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Uber and rival homegrown Chinese hired car services are likely to ultimately get a green light to operate throughout China, providing a much-needed shot of competition to traditional taxi fleets.
Uber plows big bucks into China
Anyone who thought that US hired car services hotshot Uber might be stalling in China might want to reconsider that view, following new reports that say the company has budgeted a cool $1 billion for its China expansion this year. The reports are all citing an internal company email, which strongly suggests that Uber deliberately leaked the message to quash any talk that it might be losing its resolve to push ahead in a China market that is quite difficult but also has huge profit potential.
At the same time, another report is saying that Uber and other providers of similar hired car services could ultimately find their business model outlawed, as a number of cities consider banning or heavily restricting the use of private cars that compete with traditional taxis. I seriously doubt that will happen, however. That’s because Beijing has shown an usual desire to accommodate these newer, high-tech services that have the potential to drive China’s economy in the future as many traditional industries lose momentum. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A record IPO by Guotai Junan and massive private fund raising by a relatively unknown website reflect the overheated state of China’s capital markets, and could reflect a cresting of the current stock market rallies.
Guotai Junan eyes mega-IPO
With China’s stock market posting 2 consecutive days of large losses, everyone is starting to guess whether the current stock market rally may have finally crested and a period of correction begun. Two of the latest fund-raising headlines show just how frothy and ambitious activity has become, led by a plan for China’s biggest IPO in 5 years from securities brokerage Guotai Junan. The other headline comes in the venture funding space, where Zhubajie, a relatively unknown company in the hot crowdsourcing sector, has just landed an impressive 2.6 billion yuan ($420 million) in new funding. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new video streaming service could presage a buyout offer for Youku Tudou, while Didi Kuaidi’s massive new fund-raising presages a bloody battle with Uber in the hired car services market.
Didi Kuaidi in big new fund-raising
Two major strategic moves are in the Internet headlines today, reflecting growing rivalries between some of the biggest names in the red-hot markets for online video and hired car services. One move has e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) disclosing its plans to launch a video streaming service that it hopes can emulate the success of US giant Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX). The second has Didi Kuaidi, which was recently formed by the merger of China’s 2 largest taxi app operators, disclosing it is raising $1.5 billion in new funding to take on the aggressive Uber. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new strategic investment in LightInTheBox by a major shoemaker is a vote of confidence in its turnaround story, while Bona Film’s buyout offer caps a week of record privatization activity for US-listed Chinese firms.
LightInTheBox gets new strategic partner
Last week’s privatization frenzy for US-listed Chinese firms saw one more company join the queue on the final day of the week, with movie maker Bona Film (Nasdaq: BONA) adding its name to the list of companies looking to end their relationship with fickle New York investors. That final offer brought the number of US-listed Chinese firms receiving buyout offers last week to 5, which must surely be a record for such bids in a single week.
Meantime, another interesting deal has seen underperforming e-commerce company LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB) receive its own big new investment from one of China’s leading shoemakers. That deal saw Aokang Shoes (Shanghai: 603001) buy about a quarter of LightInTheBox’s shares, hinting at a major new direction for the foreign-focused e-commerce company and also implying it’s unlikely to de-list from New York anytime soon. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s latest investment in an online lottery ticket seller hints that it may add Internet services to its growing list of high-tech products and services through separate tie-ups with Intel and HP.
Unigroup invests in 500.com
A previously little-known company connected with China’s leading science university has made headlines over the last year through major new tie-ups with global tech titans Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HP), which makes its latest investment just slightly puzzling. That investment is seeing Tsinghua Unigroup pour a relatively modest but still significant $124 million into 500.com (NYSE: WBAI), a New York-listed Chinese firm that sells lottery tickets over the Internet.
I’m being just slightly whimsical in tying Unigroup’s latest purchase to its much larger recent tie-ups with Intel and HP, which I’ll recap shortly. But that said, Unigroup has rapidly emerged as a player to watch in a China’s underperforming domestic microchip and IT services sectors, and most of its high-profile investments since it first moved into the spotlight have been centered on efforts to assemble a homegrown Chinese giant in those spaces. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Twitter’s new CEO is likely to re-think the company’s decision to stay out of China due to Beijing’s strict self-censorship policies, and could ultimately make a play for the market in the next 2-3 years.
Twitter to re-think China under new CEO?
It seems that Weibo (Nasdaq: WB), often called China’s equivalent of Twitter (Nasdaq: TWTR), isn’t the only one struggling these days in the social networking (SNS) realm. The original Twitter has just announced that its own CEO Dick Costolo has succumbed to calls for his resignation due to stagnating growth, meaning his replacement will come under intense pressure to jump-start the company’s prospects. One of the fastest ways to do that would be going to China, leading to the intriguing prospect that Twitter’s road map could bring it to China sooner than many expected under its yet-to-be-named new leader. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new management-led privatization bid for Homeinns and many other similar recent plans could stand a 50-50 chance of failing if they don’t complete the process before China’s stock market rally ends.
Homeinns joins privatization queue
Leading budget hotel chain Homeinns (Nasdaq: HMIN) has become the latest US-listed Chinese company to receive a buyout offer, capping a record week that has seen at least 4 such bids. In the past, 4 privatizations in a 6-month period would be considered big, even though such bids have been coming at a slow trickle over the last 3 years for Chinese companies whose shares have languished on Wall Street. But that tickle has turned into a flood these last 2 months, fueled mostly by greed, as company owners look enviously at China’s rallying stock markets that have more than doubled over the last year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: An ongoing wave of buyout offers for US-listed Chinese firms is being funded by speculative money that will quickly evaporate when China’s stock market rally fizzles, causing some deals to collapse when that happens.
Gamblers fund privatization wave
It’s a new day, which means it’s time to take a look at the latest US-listed Chinese companies receiving privatization offers from opportunistic investors looking for bargains. Today it’s data center operator 21Vianet (Nasdaq: VNET) and beleaguered social networking site (SNS) operator Renren (NYSE: RENN) that are headed for the exit door.
I’ve been writing about this recent flurry of privatizations for the last few months, which is quickly turning into a flood as investors scramble to assemble deals to buy companies whose shares have languished on Wall Street. The idea is that these companies would be far more appreciated, and therefore get much higher valuations, from investors in their home China market, where an ongoing stock market rally has seen the main Shanghai index more than double over the last year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeTV will embark on an aggressive content-acquisition and hiring spree in Hong Kong in the second half of this year, as it aims to become the city’s second largest premium video service by the end of 2016.
LeTV challenges PCCW
As Hong Kong’s establishment fights over traditional TV broadcast licenses, mainland high-flyer LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) is quietly taking aim at the market with a rapid but stealthy entree over the Internet. After a low-key start for a Hong Kong version of its Internet-based video service last fall, China’s leading online video company is rapidly turning up the volume of its local campaign, with plans to spend HK$6 billion ($770 million) to build up its library of local content for the small but lucrative market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Beijing’s latest online video clean-up is part of its drive to guide a bigger transition from a traditional TV to an Internet-based broadcasting landscape, with more similar moves likely over the next 1-2 years.
Beijing cracks down on cartoons
It’s been at least a month or two since Beijing’s latest crackdown on unhealthy Internet content, so it should come as no surprise that the morality police have launched yet another campaign, this time targeting cartoons. The latest dragnet has snared video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), Baidu-backed (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi and most other top industry players, who are among 29 companies being investigated in this latest web clampdown.
China’s broader Internet clean-up campaign is now actually entering its second year, and dates back to April last year when leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) had its video license revoked for hosting pornographic content. (previous post) Since then, nearly ever major video site has been investigated and punished at one point or another, and social networking sites (SNS) like Tencent (HKEx: 700) WeChat have also embarked on clean-ups of controversial content. Read Full Post…