Bottom line: Uber’s latest mega funding from a Chinese investor demonstrates its determination to stay in China, while Yidao’s marginalization could force it to sell itself to an Uber-Baidu alliance at a bargain price.
Hillhouse eyes Uber investment
The race for supremacy in China’s hired car services market is taking several new twists, with reports that US giant Uber is close to landing a major new funding from a Chinese backer as it shows no signs of leaving the market. At the same time, intense competition could be close to claiming its first big victim, with separate reports saying Yidao Yongche has made major layoffs as it struggles to keep up with Uber and homegrown Chinese giant Didi Kuaidi.
The hired car services story in China has been a noisy one, upsetting a stodgy industry that was mostly dominated for years by traditional taxis. But a new generation of companies are taking advantage of global positioning technology to offer location based services (LBS) that allow customers to easily find and book hired private cars that are nearby and also cheaper than taxis. That potent combination has resulted in a “democratization” of hired car services, which were usually considered a semi-luxury but are now increasingly used by people as an affordable substitute for public transportation. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China’s opening of the electronic payment services market could see PayPal and other foreign providers finally receive long-awaited licenses to operate in the market by year-end.
PayPal may finally get China green light
Foreign financial companies came a step closer to realizing a long-awaited goal last week, when Beijing announced it would allow them to open fully-owned electronic transaction processing ventures for e-commerce services in the year-old Shanghai free trade zone. The move comes after years of lobbying by foreign companies like PayPal, MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V), which have watched enviously at the rapid growth of a domestic financial system that China committed to open when it joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. Read Full Post…
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: HNA’s purchase of a stake in a small US hotel chain could presage a larger buyout bid for the company in partnership with a Chinese operator looking to expand abroad.
HNA checks in to Red Lion
We’ll take a break today from all the recent mega-deals involving Chinese firms, and focus our attention on a much smaller hotel purchase by private equity high flyer HNA Group. Frankly speaking, I find this new investment in US hotelier Red Lion Hotels (NYSE: RLH) a bit puzzling, as the actual size of the deal is very small and hardly worthwhile for a leading Chinese private equity investor like HNA. But that said, global real estate and hotels in particular have emerged as a hot commodity for big Chinese investors over the last year, meaning this particular deal could presage a larger purchase in the sector by HNA as it tests out the market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Cisco’s dismissal of several top China executives reflects its struggles in the market, and the situation will only improve if it takes a more conciliatory approach to address Beijing’s national security concerns.
Cisco lays off China execs
Beijing’s ongoing clampdown on foreign tech companies over national security concerns is taking a toll on Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO), with word that the US networking equipment giant is laying off several of its top local executives due to falling China sales. This particular development doesn’t come as a huge surprise due to Beijing’s recent obsession with national security and suspicion of foreign tech companies. But Cisco’s struggles do contrast sharply with that of Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), which appears to be faring better in China due to its more conciliatory approach to address Beijing’s concerns.
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: 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: Shanda’s participation in a bid for a US financial firm marks the start of the company’s move into finance, and reflects the broader rise of a new group of major private equity investors in Shanghai.
Shanda joins bid for US investment firm
Following its failed bid to become a major online entertainment company, the Shanghai-based Shanda is trying its hand at deal-making, with word that it’s part of a group making a bid for major US financial firm Russell Investments. Shanda’s entry to the private equity realm marks a growing trend that is seeing Shanghai-based companies emerge as some of China’s most aggressive homegrown private equity investors.
That trend is being led by Fosun International (HKEx: 656), which has been one of China’s biggest international buyers these last 2 years with a number of high-profile investments in Europe and North America. More recently Fosun has been joined by the aggressive China Media Group, which is connected to Shanghai’s leading media company SMG, and whose name is also showing up on a growing number of high profile investments. And then there’s the recently formed China Minsheng Investment Corp, an offshoot of the entrepreneurial China Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), which is also being quite aggressive. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Citic Securities’ new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund should bring it major new business, while CCB’s Indonesian tie-up talks reflect its approach of moving slowly into emerging markets for its nascent global expansion.
Citic Securities ties with Social Security Fund
Two big finance stories are casting a spotlight on different trends in China’s rapidly transforming financial services sector as Beijing tries to create an industry that can compete with the big global players. The larger news is domestically focused, with leading stock brokerage Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030; Shanghai: 600030) in a major new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund that will see the pair cooperate in a wide array of financial services areas. The other news is outward looking, and has China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939; Shanghai: 601939) in talks to form a relatively modest new tie-up with a local bank in Indonesia. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Google could open a Chinese version of its app store by the end of this year and spend aggressively to quickly gain market share, but would face negative backlash from western critics for its U-turn back into the sensitive market.
Google lobbies China smartphone makers to include Play Store
Global Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is reportedly eying a return to China, with plans to launch a Chinese version of its flagship Google Play app store. The move, if true, would mark a major flip-flop for Google, which withdrew its core search engine from China in 2010 after a high-profile spat over Beijing’s strict censorship policies. But as many similarly principled companies quickly discover, China is a market that is simply too big to ignore.
That quandary led top business networking site LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD) to enter China last year, despite expressing its own reservations about censorship, and top social networking (SNS) site Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) is also lobbying strongly for such a move. Google’s latest campaign comes in a the slightly less sensitive area of app store operation, though even that business would involve some self-censorship to eliminate apps that Beijing might consider sensitive for political or other reasons. Read Full Post…