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

AgBank: Looking Good As Rivals Struggle? 中国农行或受不良贷款危机影响最小

I’ll be the first to admit I’m far from an expert on China’s banks, but the latest signs coming from the sector lead me to wonder if perhaps Agricultural Bank of China (HKEx: 1288; Shanghai: 601288), the least respected of the country’s big 4 lenders, may be best positioned to weather the bad loan crisis sowing chaos in the industry. China’s broader banking sector is facing one of the worst crises since many of the nation’s banks started going public in the mid-2000s, as lenders are unable to collect billions of dollars in loans made for questionable infrastructure projects during the global financial crisis. The problems is being compounded by the nation’s current economic slowdown, fueled in large part by anemic exports and foreign investment as the rest of the world grapples with lingering effects of the global recession.

Read Full Post…

Home Depot Packs Up China Toolkit 家得宝关闭在华所有大卖场

Just 6 years after coming to China, US home improvement giant Home Depot (NYSE: HD) is shuttering most of its China shops, becoming the latest major foreign retailer to discover that China’s 1.3 billion consumers aren’t quite the same as their peers in the West. Home Depot’s departure follows the equally high-profile closure of US electronics retailing giant Best Buy (NYSE: BBY) stores last year (previous post), and I suspect that the reasons for both companies’ failures are similar. Put simply, both Best Buy and now Home Depot discovered that price is by far the most important factor for Chinese consumers, who are always looking for the best bargains. Brand loyalty and customer service — 2 important elements that attract consumers to Best Buy and Home Depot stores in the West — are far less important to the Chinese.

Read Full Post…

Unicom Fumbles Another iPhone Launch iPhone 5开售在即 中国联通再次不给力

China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU) should be ashamed of itself for its recurrent ineptitude that has once again resulted in China’s exclusion from the list of countries where the newest iPhone 5 will make its global debut. That’s my major conclusion from an increasingly recurrent theme that has seen Apple launch major new products in the US and in numerous countries globally, only to delay their launch in China for months for unexplained reasons.

Read Full Post…

Lee Kai-Fu, Huawei Turn Up the Offense 李开复“军团”和华为开始反击

I lauded a group of Chinese Internet leaders earlier this week for finally taking a more offense-oriented approach to a prolonged series of short seller attacks against them, saying Chinese firms needed to be more aggressive when they found themselves being bullied by foreigners on the global stage. Now it seems that same group is turning up its attack a notch by demanding an apology from the short sellers; and in a similarly aggressive and offense-oriented move, telecoms equipment maker Huawei is indirectly expressing outrage and frustration at a steady stream of US allegations that its equipment contains deliberate security lapses designed for to enable spying by Beijing.

Read Full Post…

Alibaba Catches Baidu, Trails Tencent 阿里巴巴追上百度,落后于腾讯

The headlines have been buzzing this week with word that e-commerce giant Alibaba will soon announce the sale of 20 percent of its shares held by Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) to a new investor group for $7.6 billion, in the first step of a slow-motion divorce between these 2 Internet giants. (English article; Chinese article) From my perspective, the most interesting elements of the announcement will be the latest valuation Alibaba gets as a result of the deal, and also the names of the new investors in this massive new stake sale. Both will hint at what the future holds for Alibaba in terms of growth as it moves towards an IPO as soon as 2014.

Read Full Post…

Tencent Wechat Wows Mobile IM 腾讯微信主导移动即时通讯

The fight for dominance in of China’s mobile Internet is producing some interesting global shifts, with big names like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Alibaba facing aggressive, younger competitors as they try to translate their dominance of the older desktop Internet to the mobile space that will become a key growth driver in the next decade. But one company that seems on track to maintain its dominance is Tecent (HKEx: 700), China’s largest Internet company by market value, which rose to prominence a decade ago with its highly popular QQ instant messaging product. Now it seems that Tencent’s mobile instant messaging product Wechat, better known by its Chinese name of weixin, is facing little or no opposition in its rapid rise to become China’s dominant mobile IM product. (previous post)

Read Full Post…

Samsung NAND Plant: Ode to China Market 三星NAND工厂落户西安 看好中国市场

There’s lots of interesting news on smaller company developments today, but I want to take a step back from some of those to write about a much bigger development that will probably get much less attention, namely a massive new memory chip being built by Samsung (Seoul: 005930) in the interior city of Xi’an. This plant, which was first announced in April, will manufacture NAND memory chips used in smartphones and USB computer memory drives. The plant is in the news once again because construction has just officially begun in Xi’an, with top officials from Samsung, South Korea and Shaanxi province all in attendance at a ground-breaking event. (company announcement)

Read Full Post…

Haier Breaks China Pattern of Sickly M&A 海尔打破中国并购旧模式

I have to admit that my first reaction was one of skepticism when I read earlier this week that Chinese home appliance giant Haier (HKEx: 1169) was weighing a bid for New Zealand’s Fisher & Paykel (NZ: FPA), as the bid appeared to follow a familiar and largely unsuccessful pattern for Chinese companies making overseas M&A. But a closer inspection of the financials reveals that after previously falling on hard time, F&P may actually be a company on an upward trajectory, giving this potential acquisition a much better chance of success.

Read Full Post…

Jingdong Mall Tries Gaming 京东商城有意进军网游业

When future historians look at the early days of the China Internet, Jingdong Mall will probably be remembered as a sort of hyperactive organism that had too much money and tried to do too many things, wreaking havoc on the entire web community in the process. That’s my latest assessment of this hyperactive e-commerce giant, which also calls itself 360Buy, following the latest reports that Jingdong now plans to get into the online games business. (English article; Chinese article)

Read Full Post…

55tuan: More Distress in Group Buying 窝窝团:中国团购行业再现危机

We’re seeing the latest signs of distress from the beleaguered group buying space, with word that 55tuan, one of the industry’s biggest players, is failing to pay some of its merchants. This kind of news isn’t really new anymore, as similar talk that many of the country’s money-losing group buying sites are rapidly running out of cash has been circulating for months now. This latest distress sign just shows that the end is fast approaching for many of these companies, though I’ll admit I’m a bit surprised that we haven’t seen any bigger failures yet.

Read Full Post…

China Welcomes More 2nd-Tier Financiers 中国欢迎更多二级金融机构

What I like to call the “second wave” of overseas financial institutions coming to China is picking up momentum, with announcements of new expansions in the market by relatively unknown players CIT Group (NYSE: CIT) and MoneyGram (NYSE: MGI). I’ll discuss what each of these companies does shortly, as neither enjoys the widespread recognition of much bigger names like Citigroup (NYSE: C) and HSBC (HKEx: 5; London: HSBA) that have been active in China for more than a decade now despite making only limited inroads during that time.

Read Full Post…