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

SMIC: Forging a Better Future?

SMIC… What can you say about this company, which launched with such fanfare a decade ago and then went on to flounder for much of its short life before white knight David Wang came in to turn it around? The turnaround story has reached an important milestone, with SMIC posting its third consecutive quarterly profit and first profitable year in quite some time. But let’s not forget the entire industry has been riding high these days, and Wang has warned on several occasions that SMIC’s own fortunes  could slumpl if the notoriously cyclical sector falls  back on slow times, which is inevitable. First quarter guidance hardly looked encouraging, with margins and revenue both forecast to slip. And yet Wang said he wants to boost revenue for the year by 20 percent. Something is out of whack here, though I suspect the company is growing conservative in case things start to head south, which isn’t at all clear yet. Given the company’s decent track record in Wang’s first year in office, I’d say it’s too early to write off SMIC’s comeback, and these guys deserve a chance to show they’ve got what it takes to compete with the big boys.

Sorry, Sinopec. Beijing’s more concerned wtih inflation, social stability

Recent reports that Sinopec (HKEx: 386; NYSE: SNP) got its employees to make Internet postings in support of fuel price hikes should come as no surprise to anyone, as the company tries desperately to boost its margins and profits by hook or by crook. Market-set fuel prices may be the ultimate goal for everyone involved, but given China’s rampant inflation at the moment I’d be surprised to see any major fuel price hikes anytime soon. The only thing that scares China more than losing money is social instability, which is exactly what Beijing fears if inflation gets too out of hand. Heaven forbid all those consumers who dropped thousands of dollars on new cars over the last couple of year should suddenly find themselves unable to drive them due to high fuel costs!

Lenovo — Back in the Hunt?

After years of struggling following its misguided purchase of IBM’s PC business, Lenovo (HKEx: 992) seems to be finally back in the global PC hunt, at least based on its latest results (Lenovo results). But is the company that still dominates its home China market really ready for the big leagues just yet? The numbers seem to say yes: in its latest results, it boosted its already dominant market share at home, made huge gains in emerging markets and did all that while keeping margins respectable. But I’m still not convinced this company is ready for prime time. Its NEC joint venture shows signs of its wannabe status, and bears eerie resemblance to its foolish IBM purchase. Its mobile venture seems to lack focus, and bears more of a me-too mark as well, much like its netbook strategy of a few years back. In short, this company still lacks focus in my view, relies way too much on its home China market, and is too much of a me-too company in its product development strategy. Let’s see how the numbers grow, but my guess is that the boom times won’t last too much longer.

ZTE Runs Out of Wind in Bid for Sprint Contract — Uh, did anyone NOT see this coming?

I have to say that anyone who didn’t see this coming must have been asleep at the trading table, as signs from Sprint (NYSE: S) had been pretty strong that ZTE (HKEX: 763) wasn’t going to get any business in helping to build Sprint’s 4G network. You’ve got to give credit to ZTE for trying, even when the odds were very stacked against it. Truth be told, it’s probably just a matter of time before ZTE scores its first big networking equipment contract in the US. China has already shown that it’s willing to go to bat for its network equipment makers in India, and, while it hardly has the same leverage with the US government, there’s every indication that it wants its star companies like ZTE to prove they’ve really arrived on the global stage with some major US sales. Security concerns will continue to be an issue for American politicians, but now that the mid-term elections are over and the next big election is nearly two years off, I wouldn’t be surprised to see ZTE or maybe even Huawei sneak in their first major US deal sometime in the next 12 months.

Shanda Interactive (Nasdaq:SNDA)

Shanda Interactive (Nasdaq:SNDA) game subsidiary Shanda Games (Nasdaq:GAME) plans to start unlimited testing of its 3D racing casual game Free Ride on November 3, and will not delete player data after the round of testing is completed, according to a posting on the game’s official site on October 27.

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Shanghai-based multi-platform clothing retailer Mecox Lane International

Shanghai-based multi-platform clothing retailer Mecox Lane International has set its share price at $8-10 per ADS in its Nasdaq IPO and expects to generate net proceeds of $75.5 million, the company announced October 25. The company plans to spend $15 million of the proceeds on enhancing its e-commerce infrastructure, $29.5 million on building a logistics center and warehouse and $6.5 million for store network expansion and renovation, the company said.

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