Internet

Latest Financial Trends & News for Internet in China

INTERNET: WeChat Brings Tencent Credit, Lawsuit

Bottom line: Tencent’s inclusion in a national credit database initiative reflects the big commercial potential of WeChat, but a lawsuit over rumor spreading also highlights one of WeChat’s biggest liabilities.

Tencent joins credit card database drive

Two stories in the news are showing how WeChat is likely to become the future big bread-winner for Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700), even as the wildly popular mobile messaging service poses tricky liability risks for its parent. The first headlines spotlights WeChat’s huge potential, with reports that the central bank has invited Tencent to take part in development of a new national credit database. The latter news isn’t quite so upbeat, with a Shenzhen-listed drugmaker suing Tencent for failing to stop the spread of rumors about its products over WeChat. Read Full Post…

BANKING – Tencent’s WeBank Launches, Faces Rocky Road

Bottom line: WeBank and other newly approved private lenders are likely to struggle to find an audience due to operational limitations and competition from state-run banks and gray-market institutions.

WeBank makes first loan in Shenzhen

Some have predicted that a new group of private banks could shake up China’s stodgy financial sector, though the first loan from the group doesn’t look all that threatening. That loan came over the weekend, when WeBank, which is backed by Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700), made its first loan since receiving its license late last year. (previous post) The loan was for a modest amount and went to a truck driver in the southern boomtown of Shenzhen where WeBank is based. It carried a relatively high interest rate of 7.5 percent, which is probably suitable for that risk level. (English article) Read Full Post…

CONSUMER: Haier, Midea Crank Up Smart Device Dance

Bottom line: Chinese appliance makers and Internet companies need to focus their smart device efforts on one or two key alliances each, or risk spreading their resources too thin.

Haier in new tie-up with Evergrande

Smart devices look set to become a theme of the New Year, with new reports that domestic appliance giants Haier (HKEx: 1169) and Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) have formed major new tie-ups to develop the space. Similar alliances began accelerating in the second half of last year and are aimed at developing the “Internet of Things”, which envisions an interconnected world where devices and their owners can talk to each other at any time over a wide range of wired and wireless networks. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Perfect World Privatizes, Renren Next?

Bottom line: Perfect World’s de-listing plan is likely to succeed and could be followed by a merger with Shanda or Giant Interactive, while Renren is likely to also get bought out and de-list by the end of the year.

Perfect World gets buyout offer

Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) has become the latest US-listed online game operator to decide it’s unappreciated by shareholders, announcing a plan to privatize and de-list its shares from New York. The management-led buyout offer shouldn’t come as a surprise, as it follows a steady stream of similar moves that has seen peers like Giant Interactive and Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) also leave or prepare to leave the market.

At the same time, another headline from struggling social networking site (SNS) Renren (NYSE: RENN) is fueling speculation of a similar imminent de-listing. That news has Renren announcing the resignation of its CFO — news which should normally have a neutral to negative effect on the company’s stock. But in this case the stock has jumped on the news, indicating investors may think a buy-out offer is coming. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Linekong Flat In Banner Year Where Firsts Win Big

Bottom line: New IPOs by Chinese tech firms will slow sharply next year, with profitable, sector-leading companies the most likely to make successful offerings.

Linekong finishes flat in banner year for IPOs

On this final day of 2014, I thought I’d take a look at the scorecard for high-tech IPOs this year, including how they’ve performed since their debuts and what we might expect for next year. It seems fitting to start the discussion with the final high-tech IPO of the year, which came with a flat trading debut on Tuesday for mobile gaming company Linekong (HKEx: 8267). That may sound bad, but it’s actually quite good for gaming stocks that have become investor pariahs over the last 2 years. Read Full Post…

WEIBO TALK: Alibaba, TCL Chiefs Reflect; Qihoo Blasts Baidu

TCL’s Li, Alibaba’s Ma get reflective online

The final week of the year has seen 2 of China’s top technology leaders looking inward, with Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder Jack Ma and TCL (Shenzhen: 000100) chief Li Dongsheng both taking the occasion to reflect on some of the people and events that put them on their paths to success. In one of his occasional posts since recently resuming microblogging, Ma reflects on an impressionable meal with a friend more than 20 years when China was a far different place from now and he was a universe away from his current status as China’s richest man. Meantime, Li reflected in a series of posts on the recent passing of his mother, and the huge influence she had on his life. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Tries Domestic Credit, Global Platform

Bottom line: Alibaba’s new online credit product and global shopping mall look like smart new initiatives that could help maintain its strong growth to justify its high valuation.

Alibaba financial unit trials credit product

It’s been quite a while since I’ve written about the actual business of e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which has captured global headlines for much of the last 4 months for mostly financial reasons after its record-breaking IPO in September. So on that note, I was quite happy to finally read new headlines on some smart-looking moves the company is making to justify its sky-high valuation, which is built on expectation for continuing super-charged growth.

One of those initiatives has Alibaba’s finance unit rolling out a product that looks like a variation of traditional cards, and is aimed at getting shoppers to spend even more on its popular e-commerce platforms. The other is an update on its new global e-commerce initiative that looks like it’s gaining some strong early momentum, at least according to the company’s own telling of the story. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Dianping Follows Meituan With New Funding

Bottom line: Dianping’s major new fund raising is likely to be its last before a New York IPO, which could come as soon as the first half of next year and raise up to $800 million.

Dianping in major new fund raising

I’m having a slight feeling of deja vu today, after reading the latest reports that restaurant ratings and group buying site Dianping has just won a major new funding round worth nearly $800 million. This particular news comes just a week after similar reports came out saying that rival group buying site Meituan was on the cusp of closing a new funding round totaling $700 million, in one of the biggest such private investments for China’s Internet sector this year. Internet watchers will recall that the last time we saw this kind of fund-raising flurry around a single industry came nearly 4 years ago, when investors poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the very same group buying space. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: UnionPay Zooms In Korea, Wanda Buys Into 99Bill

Bottom line: Wanda will face a steep uphill climb in electronic payments following its purchase of 99Bill, while UnionPay will continue to grow rapidly overseas as more Chinese travelers and businesses go abroad.

Wanda buys control of 99Bill

Two big news bits from the electronic payments space are in the headlines as we round out 2014, led by news of a major new acquisition by property giant Wanda Group just days after a Hong Kong IPO for its core shopping mall unit. The other new revolves around industry giant UnionPay, which has feasted on outbound Chinese tourist and business spending to pass larger global rivals MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V) for issuing credit cards in nearby South Korea. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Ctrip Joins Open Platform Crowd, Oversight Needed

Bottom line: China is positioned to become a global leader in development of open platforms as an Internet business model, but regulators should take a more active role in overseeing these marketplaces.

Ctrip joins open platform rush

China is quickly becoming a global leader in a type of online business that uses an open platform model at its core, with travel stalwart Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) becoming the latest entrant into the space after years of operating a more traditional closed platform service. While traditional closed platforms see website operators sell products directly to consumers, open platforms let operators simply manage online marketplaces where consumers can shop for products from a wide range of third-party merchants. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Meituan Gets New Funds, 2015 IPO Looming?

Bottom line: Dianping or Meituan is likely to mount an IPO bid next year, in a deal that could value either at around $5-10 billion and win a premium as China’s first group buying site to list.

Meituan gets new mega-funding

China’s newly consolidated group buying sector could be close to making its first IPO, with word that leading operator Meituan is on the cusp of landing a massive $700 million in new funding. Such a huge amount would be the company’s fourth round of funding since 2010, and would follow not long after it reportedly raised $300 million earlier this year. That kind of funding frenzy often comes just before an IPO, which leads me to expect we could finally see Meituan become China’s first publicly listed group buying Internet company with a New York IPO perhaps in the first half of next year. Read Full Post…