Journalist China

Business news from China By Doug Young.
Doug Young, journalist, has lived and worked in China for 20 years, much of that as a journalist, writing about publicly listed Chinese companies.

He is based in Shanghai where, in addition to his role as editor of Young’s China Business Blog, he teaches financial journalism at Fudan University, one of China’s top journalism programs.
He contributes regularly to a wide range of publications in both China and the west, including Forbes, CNN, Seeking Alpha and Reuters, as well as Asia-based publications including the South China Morning Post, Global Times, Shanghai Daily and Shanghai Observer

Alibaba Mobile Drive Leads To AutoNavi

Alibaba chases AutoNavi

Less than 2 weeks after buying a major stake in leading Chinese microblogging site Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo, e-commerce leader Alibaba is back on the acquisition track with word that it’s on the cusp of another deal to buy a similar strategic stake in mapping services firm AutoNavi (Nasdaq: AMAP). While this newest deal would be a bit smaller than the Weibo tie-up, it marks the latest transaction in a nascent M&A wave among China tech firms that looks set to gain momentum during the rest of the year. Read Full Post…

Huawei CEO Ren Makes Media Debut

Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei makes media debut

When is a company executive talking about the importance of the New Zealand market major news? The answer is: When the executive is the press-shy Ren Zhengfei, founder and CEO of China telecoms equipment giant Huawei, having his first ever meeting with reporters. Ren founded Huawei in the 1990s as a telecoms equipment importer, and has gone on to build the company into the world’s second largest networking equipment maker and one of China’s biggest high-tech exporters. Yet despite his 2 decades in the business, Ren had never done a media interview in all that time — a fact that the company confirmed for me when I asked about his media roundtable this week with a group of New Zealand reporters. Read Full Post…

News Digest: May 10, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • New Zealand One of Huawei’s Most Strategic Markets -CEO Ren (Press release)
  • Jingdong Tests 3-Hour Delivery Service in Beijing (English article)
  • 51job (Nasdaq: JOBS) Reports Q1 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Alibaba To Buy AutoNavi (Nasdaq: AMAP) Stake, Become Top Investor (Chinese article)
  • EU Agrees On China Solar Panel Duties; Beijing Urges Dialogue (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

China Mobile Gets 4G Edge, iPhone Coming?

China Mobile gets 4G boost

The latest reports on Beijing’s plans to issue 4G mobile licenses look like good news for China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL), which could lay the groundwork for China’s largest telco to reach a highly anticipated deal to finally offer an Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone for its network. But the news isn’t completely positive for China Mobile, as the latest reports also strongly imply that the nation’s other 2 carriers will both be allowed to develop 4G networks using mature, globally developed technologies. By comparison, China Mobile has been forced to build its 4G network using a problem-plagued homegrown Chinese technology called TD-LTE, and had been lobbying hard for the regulator to require one of its rivals to use that standard also. Read Full Post…

Sohu Puts Sogou Up For Sale

Sohu looks to sell Sogou

The ongoing game of musical chairs in China’s online search space is continuing this week with word that Internet portal Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) wants to sell its Sogou unit, operator of China’s third largest search engine. While many of the previous rumors of consolidation in the search space have looked dubious to me, this one actually looks like it could be credible for a number of reasons I’ll detail shortly. If it’s true, I would also commend Sohu for making a shrewd move by getting out of a crowded market where it has limited resources and expertise compared with other players. Read Full Post…

Alibaba Tamps Down Valuation Expectations

Alibaba manages IPO expectations

Having let the markets get pumped up with huge expectations for its upcoming mega IPO, e-commerce leader Alibaba now appears to be trying to temper some of those high hopes in the run-up to an offering that is likely to be the biggest ever for a Chinese Internet firm. The reason for the sudden change of tone? Apparently the company wants to avoid following in the footsteps of social networking giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB), whose IPO was so overhyped by the time it finally occurred that it was almost bound to result in failure and major disappointment. Read Full Post…

Tencent Bets On WeChat Games

WeChat bets on games

Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) colorful but low-key Chairman Pony Ma is suddenly losing his shyness at a major Internet conference in Beijing, where he is clearly in his preferred environment mixing with lots of other Internet geeks and techies. Media have been buzzing these last few days with words from the head of China’s biggest Internet firm, with much of the talk centered on Tencent’s hot mobile instant messaging platform called WeChat or Weixin in Chinese. Ma has addressed 2 of the key questions facing WeChat, both centered on how the service can generate profits for Tencent from its base of 300 million users. Read Full Post…

More Beijing Anger On EU Solar Tariffs

Solar dispute intensifies in Europe

I’ve been trying to avoid writing about the latest punitive tariffs for Chinese solar panels that look set to come from the European Union this week, since the story has dragged on for more than a year now and the outcome was almost inevitable. But that said, it would be a bit remiss of me not to write at least something on this latest move, which is expected to see European Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht formally recommend the introduction of anti-dumping tariffs for solar panels supplied from China. (English article) Read Full Post…

Outlook Hazy For Cloudary IPO

Former Cloudary employees in Tencent tie-up

Last month’s New York IPO filing by online retailer LightInTheBox has many predicting a new stream of  Chinese listings could soon hit the market, prompting many to guess who might be next. One of the leading candidates for a near-term New York offering was Cloudary, the literature unit of online entertainment firm Shanda, though that prospect is dimming with each passing day due to recent turmoil at the company. Read Full Post…

Mutton Scandal Gives Yum New China Headache

Mutton scandal gives Yum’s Little Sheep indigestion

As if its problems weren’t bad enough in China, global fast food giant Yum (NYSE: YUM) is getting a new round of indigestion in its most profitable market from a new food safety scandal that gets my personal award for “grossest” scandal of the year. China followers will know I’m talking about the latest revelations that some unscrupulous food processors illegally treated meat from dead foxes and minks to look like mutton, and then sold the product to unsuspecting restaurants. Read Full Post…

China M&A Finance Goes Global With CNOOC, Citic Securities

Citic Securities in mega bond issue

An interesting new trend has major Chinese firms financing their global expansions with mega bond offerings, with leading brokerage Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030; Shanghai: 600030) and oil exploration giant CNOOC (HKEx: 883; NYSE: CEO) becoming the latest to tap international debt markets. This kind of overseas mega bond issue isn’t really new for Chinese firms, as many in sectors ranging from telecoms to real estate have issued similar corporate debt in the past. But what’s new now is that these latest offers are coming from companies that have made major acquisitions over the last year, and now they’re testing the markets to see if bond buyers will help to pay for those assets. Read Full Post…