Media/Entertainment

youngchinabiz.com : latest Business news about Media – Entertainment in China by expert / journalist Doug Young : more than two decades of experience in writting about Chinese Companies

MEDIA: Mobile Data, Box Office Boom In Lunar New Year

Bottom line: Mobile data usage will grow by triple-digit amounts this year as telcos boost 4G promotions, while box office growth will start to slow and the ongoing decline in traditional SMS text messaging will accelerate.

Hongbao chatter fuels mobile data surge

The usual rush of Lunar New Year-related data is coming in, painting a mixed picture for traditional and new media. The clear winner in the mix is new media, whose surging popularity helped to fuel a 70 percent jump in mobile data traffic over the holiday period. Traditional movies also performed well, with China’s box office rising 36 percent during the period. It will also come as no surprise that the big loser over the holiday was traditional SMS text messages, whose volume plunged by 25 percent. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Ourpalm Drives Game Consolidation

Bottom line: The new purchase of 3 smaller rivals by Ourpalm could position the company as a consolidator for China’s fragmented gaming sector, and could be followed by one or more similar purchases in the next year.

Ourpalm buys 3 smaller rivals

A newly announced deal will see online game operator Ourpalm (Shenzhen: 300315) combine with 3 smaller rivals in a relatively large deal that could lay the foundation for a major new player to drive much-needed consolidation in the space. The new company looks interesting for a number of reasons, including Ourpalm’s existing connection with leading movie maker Huayi Bros, which could become an important strategic partner for the company.

Ourpalm could also become a strong platform to absorb some of the smaller Hong Kong- and New York-listed gaming companies that have struggled for investor attention due to stalling profit and revenue growth caused by their lack of scale. Potential players for future tie-ups could include recently listed Hong Kong players like Linekong (HKEx: 8267) and Forgame (HKEx: 484), or New York-listed Sungy Mobile (Nasdaq: GOMO), whose  shares have all languished since their IPOs. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Wanda Plays Up Govt Ties In Sports Buy

Bottom line: Wanda is sending a bad signal by emphasizing its government ties in its latest overseas mega-purchase, reflecting the complex relationship between major Chinese firms and Beijing.

Wanda bounces into sports marketing

If big Chinese companies are trying to show their independence from Beijing, then property giant Dalian Wanda isn’t doing a very good job with its just-announced $1.2 billion purchase of a major European sports marketing firm. The mega purchase of Swiss firm Infront Sports & Media is certainly a major feat, but Wanda has made a questionable decision in focusing on the how the deal will help Beijing’s bid to win more major sporting events, including the 2022 Winter Olympics. Of course I’m being just a tad cynical here, but this kind of talk certainly won’t help Wanda and other major private Chinese companies convince western skeptics of their independence from Beijing. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Focus Media Eyes Market Return With A-Share Plan

Bottom line: Focus Media’s plan for a backdoor listing in China stands a better than 50 percent chance of success, potentially opening a new re-listing path for Chinese firms whose shares are undervalued in New York.

Focus Media eyes China backdoor listing

Former advertising services high-flyer Focus Media is eying a plan to become listed again, with an ambitious target of tripling its value from just 2 years ago when it privatized. If the plan really works, it could create an attractive template for a return to publicly-traded status for the group of about a dozen Chinese companies that were formerly listed in New York but privatized after their shares became undervalued. The key to the plan appears to be a decision to list back at home in China, where Focus’ name is more familiar and local investors are far less sophisticated and prone to hype and overinflating values of well-known companies. Read Full Post…

LEISURE: Disney Looks Prudent In Shanghai Park Delay

Bottom line: Disney’s decision to delay the opening of its Shanghai theme park looks wise, and should help it to avoid some of the negative publicity that usually occurs with the launch of such major projects.

Disney delays Shanghai park opening

In what should come as a big surprise to no one, media are reporting that Disney (NYSE: DIS) is delaying the planned opening for its massive Shanghai theme park by up to half a year due to a number of issues. On the surface at least, this particular news isn’t completely unexpected but certainly doesn’t sound encouraging. But I would take a different view and say the decision actually looks encouraging, as it shows that Disney is willing to suffer from some negative short-term publicity now to make sure that the opening is a good one when it finally comes. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Internet Sees Messaging Surge, Microblog Retreat

Bottom line: China’s overall Internet growth will continue to slow as the market starts to become saturated, with messaging and other mobile services continuing to steal share from microblogging and video operators.

Microblogging decline bites Weibo

A newly released annual government report on China’s Internet is full of good news for the online business community, with most sectors posting double-digit growth as overall penetration neared the 50 percent mark. But a few sectors stood out as distinctive losers in the report from the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), led by the microblogging space that saw a sharp decline in users.

That’s not too surprising due to departures or pull-backs in the space last year by big names like NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) and Tencent (HKEx: 700), though it certainly doesn’t bode too well for sector giant Sina Weibo (Nasdaq: WB). Another relative loser was online video, which posted only tiny growth last year as the sector came under regulatory assault aimed at reining in companies like Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) and Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Tencent NBA Win Sets Up CCTV Showdown

Bottom line: The broadcasting regulator needs to rethink the way it treats online video companies and create a uniform set of standards that apply to both to them and traditional TV stations.

Tencent ties up with NBA

Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) made headlines last week with an exclusive deal to broadcast live NBA games over the Internet in China, literally scoring a major victory over its rivals in the hotly contested online video space. But having won that victory over its Internet peers, it’s probably only a matter of time before China’s traditional TV broadcasters call foul and complain that Tencent’s deal will compete with their own live broadcasts of hugely popular NBA basketball games. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: WeChat Draws Advertisers, Food Delivery, Youth

Bottom line: Tencent’s strong early showing for a new WeChat-based advertising service and its investment in a take-out dining service reflect building momentum in its drive to build WeChat into a major new profit center.

BMW, Coke launch ad campaigns on WeChat

A couple of media reports are shining a spotlight on Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) WeChat, and some of the new steps it is taking to monetize the hugely popular service that is rapidly expanding beyond its roots as a mobile messaging service. At the same time, another report from Tencent itself is providing some insight into who exactly uses WeChat. It should come as no surprise that the report shows WeChat’s biggest fans are young and mostly male users, which are some of the most attractive targets for the online merchants and advertisers that Tencent wants to do more business on the platform. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Spring, Wanda Cinema Leap In Debuts

Bottom line: Wanda Cinema and Spring Airlines represent a new generation of major private companies to list in China, and should enjoy strong share gains over the short to medium terms following their IPOs.

Spring Air leaps on first 2 trading days

There was plenty of spring in the stocks of 2 hot companies that listed in China this week, with budget carrier Spring Airlines (Shanghai: 601021) and theater operator Wanda Cinema Line (Shenzhen: 002739) jumping 44 percent in their trading debuts. The pair are part of a new generation of privately owned companies starting to list on China’s main stock markets, stealing the spotlight from an older group of state-run firms that still dominate the country’s 2 main stock exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen.

Obviously profits and broader performance will be the biggest determiner of whether these companies’ stocks continue to rise after the euphoria of their IPOs starts to fade. But from the perspective of a western buyer like myself, Wanda Cinema and Spring Air are 2 of the first Chinese-listed firms that I’ve seen whose stocks I would personally consider buying. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Sogou Chases News, Hollywood Sues Xunlei

Bottom line: Sougou could gain some momentum in the search market this year following some innovative new tie-ups with WeChat, while Xunlei’s stock will remain under pressure as it gets dogged by more piracy issues.

Sogou launches news feature on WeChat

More than a year after emerging as China’s third-largest search engine with the merger of 2 second-tier players, Sogou is finally making an interesting move by launching a news app that takes advantages of its ties to Internet titan Tencent (HKEx: 700). The move looks particularly promising, since the rapid rise of another similar app called Today’s Headlines shows that this is clearly an area with strong demand. The move could pose a serious challenge to the high-flying Today’s Headlines, which earlier this week was named as one of China’s top 10 mobile apps for 2014. (previous post) Read Full Post…

IPOs: Funding Slows For Wanda Cinema, Kuaidi

Bottom line: Disappointing results for fund-raising by Wanda Cinema Line and Kuaidi taxi app show a recent boom in new funding for private Chinese companies may have crested and will wane for the rest of the year.

Kuaidi fund-raising diappoints

The crest of a huge wave of new fund raising for private Chinese firms may have passed, with word that 2 major new deals that should have attracted big investor interest have instead met with weaker-than-expected response. The first of those has seen investors give a lukewarm reception to a domestic IPO for Wanda Cinema Line, the nation’s first major movie theater operator to list. The second has seen taxi app operator Kuadi raise $500 million in a private funding round, which doesn’t sound too bad. But the figure is actually quite a bit lower than Kuaidi’s earlier plan and is also lower than a similar recent fund-raising round for leading rival Didi. Read Full Post…