Bottom line: CICC and Jiuxian are benefiting from a growing number of domestic listing options for private Chinese companies, but both will still need to show they can be profitable industry leaders for investors to take them seriously.
Jiuxian finally debuts on China OTC
A couple of new IPOs are highlighting the growing allure of China’s increasingly diverse stock markets for domestic companies that used to flock to New York. Leading the headlines is a very respectable performance in the long-awaited Hong Kong trading debut for CICC (HKEx: 3908), China’s oldest investment bank. The strong debut came even after CICC had to scale back the offering due to weak demand, and market watchers are attributing the performance to separate news that China will resume domestic IPOs by year-end after a pause of several months.
In the other headline, online wine seller Jiuxian has become the latest Chinese Internet firm to list on the country’s 2-year-old over the counter (OTC) market. The loss-making Jiuxian had initially aimed to list in New York, but abandoned that plan for a simpler offering at home. It joined other money-losing startups making similar listings over the last week, including online classified ad site Baixing and Alibaba-backed (NYSE: BABA) soccer club Evergrande Taobao. (previous post) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lenovo’s focus on PCs for its latest product launch is designed to divert attention from its struggling smartphones, which are likely to show more losses and weak performance in the company’s upcoming quarterly results.
Lenovo targets bargain hunters
It was just 2 years ago that Chinese tech titan Lenovo (HKEx: 992) was on top of the world, having just gained the title as the world’s biggest PC brand from Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) and declaring that Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung (Seoul: 005930) were its next targets. But you don’t hear the company’s chatty chief Yang Yuanqing talking about Apple, Samsung or even smartphones that much these days, most likely because all of its efforts in that space have struggled to find an audience.
Instead, Yang was falling back on his company’s older PC business in the latest headlines, showing off a few new models from its Yoga line that can function as both laptop and tablet PCs. The only problem is that both of these types of computer are in rapid decline, as consumers increasingly flock to large-screen smartphones for simple functions like reading news and e-commerce shopping that they used to do on their PCs. Read Full Post…
Shanghai lost a bit of bureaucracy and also a slice of history this week when the northern Zhabei District officially got swallowed up by its smaller but sleeker Jing’an District cousin, continuing an ongoing drive to improve our city’s administrative efficiency. More broadly speaking this particular marriage is part of a national trend that has seen China try to streamline a massive bureaucracy established over centuries.
That bureaucracy certainly may have worked well when China was a simpler agricultural society and things like tax collection and new policy implementation were more easily done in smaller areas by officials who were highly familiar with individual farmers and landowners. But it certainly seems a bit outdated and even counterproductive in the current climate of advanced communications and mobility, where there’s really no need for micro-management techniques of the past. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China’s Oldest Investment Bank CICC (HKEx: 3908) Jumps in HK Trading Debut (English article)
Online Wine Seller Jiuxian Lists on China OTC, Eyes Main Board Next Year (Chinese article)
Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) ‘On the Move’ to Buy Stake in SCMP (HKEx: 583) – Market Talk (English article)
Shenzhen Probes Meituan, Ele.me for Using Unauthorized Restaurants (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Alibaba’s Youku Tudou purchase, its investment in a US online grocery store and its spat with JD mark a return to the headlines for the company following a quiet period, as it regains confidence following a piracy scandal early this year.
Alibaba invests in US online grocer
E-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) may have briefly gone into headline hibernation over the summer when its stock was in free-fall, but it’s quickly returning to a more familiar hyperactive mode as its Singles Day shopping extravaganza approaches this week. The company is in at least 2 M&A headlines as we head into the new week, announcing its signing of a formal deal to buy leading online video site Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) and reportedly nearing a deal to make a relatively big investment in a US online grocery site called Boxed.
Meantime, a recent spat between Alibaba and archrival JD.com(Nasdaq: JD) continues to make headlines just 2 days before Singles Day, which falls on November 11 and has rapidly grown to become the world’s busiest online shopping day. That spat burst into headlines last week and revolves around anti-competitive accusations made by JD, which has now also sued Alibaba for allegedly making inflated claims about its delivery service. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Two new China OTC listings for companies that may have previously chosen New York, and slow progress for Giant Interactive’s backdoor listing, reflect fading offshore interest in these companies, as more options emerge for them in China.
Money-losing soccer team plays on China’s OTC
A trio of IPO stories are in the headlines as we head into the new week, led by new listings for online classified ad site Baixing and a soccer club co-owned by Alibaba(NYSE: BABA). But unlike earlier days when these 2 IPO stories might have both surfaced in New York, both are happening on China’s recently launched modest over-the-counter (OTC) board, reflecting shifting capital raising patterns.
The third of these new IPO stories involves Giant Interactive, which was formerly listed in New York but privatized 2 years ago and is trying to return to China through a backdoor listing in Shenzhen. That story has the Shenzhen stock exchange requesting more information from Giant as it seeks to list via a company called New Century Cruises (Shenzhen: 002258). While such a request isn’t too worrisome, it does signal that the return to Chinese stock markets could be a bumpy ride for the many US-listed companies now leaving New York. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Larry Page’s latest remarks are the newest signal that Google is working to return to China with a local version of its Play store and Nexus phones, as it tries to open a new chapter in its tense relationship with Beijing.
Larry Page hands off Google China strategy to new CEO
Observers are putting the latest China comments from one of Google’s(Nasdaq: GOOG) co-founders under the microscope, trying to figure out the company’s intentions towards a market that it both loves and hates. The bottom line seems to be that Larry Page wants to personally distance himself from China, following his company’s high profile spat with Beijing over censorship that saw Google withdraw from the Chinese search market in 2010.
But at the same time, Page wants to let others take Google back into China, in a nod to the importance of a market that has become the world’s largest for both smartphones and Internet use. That’s probably quite a prudent approach in face-conscious China, where personal relationships are a key element to doing business. That same principle also means that meetings between people with strained relationships should also be avoided, which is what Page appears to be doing by personally distancing himself from Google’s future operations in China. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 7. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Tencent (HKEx: 700) in Talks to Borrow up to $1.5 Bln in Syndicated Loan (English article)
JD (Nasdaq: JD) Sues Alibaba for Misleading Users on Speedy Delivery (English article)
Bottom line: China’s commerce regulator is putting growing pressure on Alibaba to play by its rules governing piracy and fair competition, but is likely to keep dialogue private to avoid public spats like one early this year.
SAIC accepts JD’s Alibaba complaint
E-commerce juggernaut Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is coming uncomfortably under the microscope just days before its important Singles Day shopping extravaganza, with 2 new developments reflecting growing scrutiny from the nation’s top commerce regulator. The first has the powerful State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) formally accepting a complaint from rival JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), which accuses Alibaba of strong-arm tactics aimed at stifling competition during Singles Day promotions set for November 11.
The second headline looks a bit more benign, and simply says that SAIC Minister Zhang Mao visited Alibaba’s headquarters in the city of Hangzhou in coastal Zhejiang province this week. Headlines from that meeting look designed to show a facade of harmony, with Zhang praising Alibaba for its innovation in e-commerce. But I do suspect that Zhang is strongly pushing Alibaba behind the scenes to clean up its sites of traffic in pirated and substandard products, and also to avoid abusing its market dominance that led to the JD.com complaint. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: New York IPO plans by a Canadian Solar unit and Solar Power Inc could auger a new wave of similar listings by Chinese new energy power plant builders, offering investors a higher growth alternative to traditional utilities.
Solar Power Inc banks on solar plant construction
Just a day after solar panel maker Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) announced it has spun off its fast-growing solar power plant-building unit for a US listing, another China-based peer is discussing plans for a similar IPO. This time a company called Solar Power Inc is the one disclosing plans for a New York listing to raise up to $300 million, in an emerging trend that’s seeing the rise of a new generation of specialty solar energy plant builders and operators.
A secondary trend in this sudden spurt of new activity also looks encouraging for New York, which has become a pariah these days among Chinese companies that feel US investors are undervaluing their stocks. These 2 new listing plans by Canadian Solar and now Solar Power acknowledge that New York is still an attractive option for certain kinds of Chinese companies, which I’ll address towards the end of this post. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Unigroup’s aim of building a telecoms and memory chip giant through strategic tie-ups and plant construction could provide challenges for global leaders like Qualcomm and Samsung.
Unigroup affiliate eyes new chip factory
Tsinghua Unigroup has leaped from obscurity to become a major headline grabber over the last 2 years, by snapping up a series of global and domestic assets aimed at building a Chinese chip maker that could someday rival the likes of Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) and Intel (Nasdaq: INTC). That spending binge continues this week with 2 new headlines, led by comments from Unigroup’s top executive saying he would consider a bid for Taiwan’s MediaTek (Taipei: 2454), one of world’s top makers of chips used in smartphones. In the other headline, a China-listed Unigroup affiliate has just said it plans to raise up to 80 billion yuan ($12.7 billion) to build new chip plants.
All of this comes just a week after Unigroup announced another $600 million deal to purchase a quarter of Taiwan’s Powertech (Taipei: 6239), which engages in the relatively low-end business of test and assembly services for microchips. (previous post) These latest headlines are the clearest indication yet that Unigroup and its affiliates have strong backing from Beijing. I say that because most of the funds being raised in a newly announced private placement by Tongfang Guoxin Electronics (Shenzhen: 002049) are coming from state-run sources. Read Full Post…