Bottom line: Haitong’s purchase of a Portuguese investment bank marks the start of a new wave of cross-border tie-ups in the financial services sector, which could fuel a rally in stocks of Chinese brokerages.
Haitong eyes Portuguese investment bank
A new wave of Sino-foreign tie-ups in the financial services arena could be taking shape, with word that China’s Haitong Securities (HKEx: 6837; Shanghai: 600837) is in talks to buy a Portuguese investment bank. I predicted just a couple of weeks ago that such a wave of tie-ups could be coming, following the launch of a historic Hong Kong-Shanghai financial link that will give average western and Chinese investors access to each other’s stock markets for the first time. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Intel’s new Chengdu investment is the latest step in its bid to find a market for its mobile chips, by working with China to create a major domestic designer of mobile device chips.
Intel in major upgrade of Chengdu plant
Global tech leader Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) is showing growing signs of placing its bets on China, with word that it’s planning a major upgrade at one of its 2 Chinese chip plants in the interior city of Chengdu. This latest move comes just 2 months after Intel announced another similar-sized investment aimed at consolidating China’s wireless chip sector, leading me to suspect that these 2 moves could be related. When the final picture becomes clearer, I expect we could see similar upgrades also occur at Intel’s newer plant in the northeast city of Dalian, with China poised to become a major center for the company’s belated push into wireless chips. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wal-Mart’s new layoffs underscore the intense competition in China’s retail market, which could cause it to miss its new store target, while Heinz’s expansion reflects the big potential for big global food brands.
Heinz opens major new China plant
Two new stories are casting a spotlight on diverging trends in the retail and consumer space for major multinationals, with retailing giant Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) making big new cuts in its China operations even as US food maker Heinz launches a massive new China factory. Wal-Mart’s move highlights the intense competition that has gripped China’s retail sector over the last 3 years, forcing several major players to leave the market or consider doing so. At the same time, there’s still huge opportunity for makers of quality food and other consumer products, especially from major foreign brands that are generally more trusted by Chinese buyers than domestic names. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A tax evasion probe against Microsoft is likely to end in a settlement with Beijing, and will be followed by similar probes against other major multinationals that use their complex structures to avoid taxes.
Beijing seeks back taxes from Microsoft
After a period of relative quiet, a recent Chinese wave of probes against major multinationals is jumping back into the headlines with news of yet another investigation against beleaguered software giant Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT). This time the world’s largest software company is being investigated for tax evasion, as Beijing looks set to open a new front in its recent series of probes against major multinationals. Whereas the early investigations focused on anti-competitive behavior, this new wave is more likely to be less controversial since it involves tax evasion and dovetails with similar campaigns in the west. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The record-breaking purchase of an Australian trophy hotel by a China buyer is part of a growing Chinese foreign real estate buying binge, which could ultimately produce a global bubble.
Chinese insurer buys Sydney Sheraton
China’s nascent but rapidly growing appetite for foreign hotels continues to grow, with word that another previously unknown Chinese insurer has snapped up a trophy property in Australia for a record price. In this case it’s China’s Sunshine Insurance Group that’s buying a major Sheraton property in Sydney from global giant Starwood Hotels (NYSE: HOT) for an inflated price of A$463 million, or about $400 million. This sale is the third of a major western hotel asset to a Chinese buyer in just the last 2 months, and looks a lot like similar waves from the past 30 years that saw Asian buyers purchase trophy western real estate at inflated prices. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Google is likely to get Beijing’s permission to open a China version of its app store that could launch next year, paving the way for the roll-out of its smartphones in the market.
Google eyes China app store
A flurry of new reports are saying that global Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is planning to re-enter China by opening an app store there, in what would be a major strategic turnaround for the company. The real story of Google in China is quite complex, and to say it withdrew from the market in 2010 after a high profile spat with Beijing over censorship is quite an oversimplification. The more accurate story is one that’s seen Google diversify from its core desktop-based Internet services to an increasingly mobile portfolio that also includes a growing hardware component. That hardware element of its diversification could well be the focal point for a new China foray if the latest reports about Google’s plan to open a China app store are true. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Telefonica’s sell-down of its Unicom stake presages an exit from the investment next year, ending a decade of failed tie-ups by foreign telcos looking to tap the Chinese telecoms services market.
Telefonica halves Unicom stake
Chinese telco shares may look like a good bet for small investors hoping to profit from company stock gains, but they’re a clear dud for foreign carriers hoping to profit from China’s huge but highly protected telecoms market. That’s my latest assessment following word that Spain’s Telefonica (Madrid: TELF) is further selling down its stake in China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU), in what looks like a prelude to a complete exit from this problematic investment.
If Telefonica does indeed completely dump Unicom, it would mark the end of a decade-long courtship that saw some of the world’s top telcos invest heavily in their Chinese counterparts. All of those investments ended in divorce, with the foreign carriers selling their shares when they failed to get any strategic benefits from the tie-ups. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi’s new $1.5 billion funding is smaller than expected but gives it a strong valuation, as its small investments in Youku Tudou and iQiyi look like a smart way to quickly build up its product ecosystem.
Xiaomi gets rich valuation from new funding
There’s no shortage of news this week on hyperactive smartphone sensation Xiaomi, which is showing up at least 3 major headlines as it lands major new funding and explores potential tie-ups with China’s top 2 online video sites as well as faded smartphone pioneer BlackBerry (Toronto: BB). I almost have to catch my breath after writing all of that, as any one of these 3 stories would normally qualify as major news. The fact that all 3 are coming at the same time testifies to Xiaomi’s ability to do big deals, and its charismatic CEO Lei Jun may soon take the title for China’s most hyperactive tech leader from the current holder of that title, Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder Jack Ma. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Bright Food’s overseas IPO plans for its British Weetabix and Australian Manassen brands could get lukewarm response due to investor skepticism about their growth prospects.
Bright eyes offshore IPOs for Weetabix, Manassen
I’ve watched with interest over the last 2 years as Shanghai-based Bright Food has quietly gobbled up a stream of high-profile global investments, positioning the company to potentially become one of China’s first international consumer brands to rival giants like Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) and Kraft Foods (Nasdaq: KRFT). Now we’re getting further details of Bright’s growing global aspirations, with word that it’s planning a series of international IPOs including potential major listings in Hong Kong and London. Read Full Post…
There’s a bit of buzz in the travel space today, with word of major new initiatives in the hotel and airline sectors for global hotelier Hilton Worldwide (NYSE: HLT) and domestic real estate titan Wanda Group. The former will see Hilton roll out the welcome mat for one of its main low-cost brands in China, taking aim at names like Home Inns (Nasdaq: HMIN) and China Lodging Group (Nasdaq: HTHT). The latter move has Wanda’s talkative founder Wang Jianlin discussing a potential new airline launch, as his company also makes a big push into the travel and leisure sector. Read Full Post…
Chinese tech executives have been buzzing for much of the past week over Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) founder Mark Zuckerberg, who was working hard to charm many of China’s high-tech elite on a semi-official visit to Beijing. Zuckerberg was in town to attend an event at the prestigious Tsinghua University, often called the MIT of China. But he also found time to visit smartphone sensation Xiaomi, where he received abundant praise from company officials led by the increasingly influential and high-profile CEO Lei Jun.
Separately, 2 homegrown Chinese tech legends also received widespread praise and admiration, as Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) veteran Chen Tong and Zhang Xiangdong, president of recently listed mobile game maker Sungy Mobile (Nasdaq: GOMO), both announced they would leave their longtime employers. The departures of this pair also drew a certain degree of reflection and nostalgia, as many noted the passing of the Internet from an earlier generation of technology enthusiasts to a new, younger group of more marketing-savvy, seasoned business people. Read Full Post…