News Digest: September 26-28, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 26-28. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • iPhone 6s China Launch Pits Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) vs. Analysts (English article)
  • Online Medical Platform Guahao Raises $394 Mln in New Funding (English article)
  • Postal Savings Bank to Sell 15 Pct, Possible Buyers Include Ant Financial, Tencent (Chinese article)
  • Everbright Bank (HKEx: 6818) to Raise $2.5 Bln Selling Shares to Parent (English article)
  • Huawei Reportedly Set to Cut 20,000 Jobs, Company Cites Internal “Adjustment” (Chinese article)

RETAIL: Disney Advances in Shanghai with Uniqlo Tie-Up

Bottom line: Disney’s Uniqlo tie-up highlights its new focus on China retailing as the opening of its Shanghai Disneyland draws near, and could be followed by a major film-production tie-up in the next 1-2 years.

Disney in new China retailing tie-up

Entertainment and retailing juggernaut Disney (NYSE: DIS) is turning up the volume of its advance into China, with Shanghai emerging at the epicenter of its campaign. In the latest move on that front, the company has just announced it will launch a new concept store in China’s commercial capital in partnership with Japanese fast-fashion retailing juggernaut Uniqlo. That particular move comes just 4 months after Disney opened its first China Disney store in the heart of Shanghai’s financial district. That store was also Disney’s largest in the world.

This sudden retailing push comes as Disney prepares for the main event in the first half of next year, which will see it open its first mainland Chinese Disneyland, also in Shanghai. That opening will cap years of lobbying and planning, and will be the first new Disneyland since the last one opened in Hong Kong a decade ago. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: Mega Merger Coming for China Telcos?

Bottom line: The MIIT is quite possibly weighing a merger between China Telecom and Unicom, but any final decision might take at least a year due to the regulator’s cautious and slow-moving nature.

Marriage on tap for China Telecom, Unicom?

A new research note is raising the intriguing possibility that a merger could be coming for the smaller of China’s 3 big telcos, saying China Unicom (HKEx: 763; NYSE: CHU) and China Telecom (HKEx: 728; NYSE: CHA) may soon be forced into marriage. The reasons for such a marriage are certainly compelling, and a recent leadership shuffle among the nation’s 3 big telcos could point to such a move.

Some might argue that such a marriage would be anti-competitive, reducing China’s mobile space from 3 carriers to just 2. But the fact of the matter is that China’s telecoms regulator has become quite frustrated with this trio, who constantly fight among each other for market share but do very little to innovate despite controlling the world’s largest mobile market. Rather than focus its efforts on reforming this laggard bunch of state-run behemoths, the regulator has taken a number of other recent steps to bring more innovative, private investment into the sector. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Fox, Warner Eye New China Film Tie-Ups

Bottom line: Rupert Murdoch could soon announce a new China film tie-up after meeting with President Xi Jinping, while Warner Bros’ new China production venture could see mixed results due to the market’s challenging nature.

Warner, Murdoch salivate at China film market

Media heavyweights Rupert Murdoch and Warner Bros are both in the headlines, each snooping around the fringes of China’s film market in search of ways to exploit the nation’s booming box office. In the latest sign that Murdoch may be set to re-enter the market after an earlier withdrawal, the aging head of Twenty-First Century Fox (Nasdaq: FOX) was in Beijing late last week where he got a rare private meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping. That meeting was chronicled in an upbeat report by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party.

Meantime, Warner Bros was doing its own dance with China’s state establishment, announcing a film-making joint venture with a private equity fund owned by the nation’s second largest traditional media company. That deal saw Warner and China Media Capital (CMC) announce the formation of Flagship Entertainment Group, which will produce films in China for both the domestic box office and also overseas markets. Read Full Post…

News Digest: September 25, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • China Telecom (HKEx: 728), Unicom (HKEx: 762) May Merge – Deutsche Bank (Chinese article)
  • Didi Kuaidi in Strategic Partnership with LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD) (Chinese article)
  • Toshiba in White Goods Deal with China’s Skyworth (HKEx: 751) (English article)
  • Huishang Bank Turns to HK for Share Sale After China Rout (English article)
  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Boosts Asia Reach With HK Office, Logistics Tie-Up (GlobeNewswire)

INTERNET: Alibaba Finds New Home in Beijing

Bottom line: Alibaba’s establishment of a dual headquarters in Beijing for its Tmall unit looks like a smart move to improve relations with government regulators, and should help to avoid future clashes over issues like piracy.

Alibaba’ss Tmall opens second HQ in Beijing

Embattled e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is finally realizing that only the passage of time will the ease the weight of negative sentiment dogging the company, and is moving on to the important business of laying a more solid foundation for its future development. That’s my interpretation based on the company’s latest major move, which has Alibaba’s Tmall online marketplace set to establish a second headquarters in Beijing.

Media have been buzzing with rumors about the move for much of this week, with some saying Tmall might be preparing to relocate its headquarters completely to Beijing from Alibaba’s hometown of Hangzhou. But the reputable China Business Network (CBN) says it has finally gotten to the bottom of the story, and that Alibaba’s intent is to have Tmall co-headquartered in both Beijing and Hangzhou. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Baidu Eyes Sale of Piracy-Plagued Music Unit

Bottom line: Baidu’s reported plan to sell its online music unit looks like a smart way to rid itself of a controversial piracy-plagued business that holds little value for its main strategic focuses going forward.

Baidu set to dump music unit?

In what could be a move that’s long overdue, leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is reportedly eyeing a sale of a music division that was once one of its major attractions but in recent years has become more a liability due to frequent accusations of copyright violations. Baidu wasn’t commenting on the reports, but such a move would be consistent with its recent diversification into a range of new areas, none of which include music as part of their core business.

Such a deal, if it’s really in the works, probably wouldn’t be worth too much, perhaps in the $100-$500 million range at the very most. More significantly would be the disposal of a unit that in the past has come under fire for allowing rampant piracy through illegal peer-to-peer (P2P) trading of copyrighted music. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Thrifty Xiaomi in New Switcharoo Scandal

Bottom line: Xiaomi will lower its profile after a recent spate of negative publicity and intensifying competition, but could still stand a 50-50 chance of becoming a major smartphone brand if it executes well in its globalization strategy.

Xiaomi in new switcharoo scandal

Former smartphone high-flyer Xiaomi is quickly learning that a high profile is a double-edged sword, with word that it’s landed in the middle of a fresh new false advertising scandal. Xiaomi certainly isn’t the only company learning this lesson, as its recent downfall tracks a much louder crash at former e-commerce high-flyer Alibaba (NYSE: BABA).

No one is predicting Xiaomi’s demise just yet, and I’ve often said that co-founder Lei Jun is largely to blame for the recent fall due to the huge expectations he set for his company. But this latest news involving false claims for one of the newest models from Xiaomi’s low-end Redmi smartphone line will certainly bring the company down yet another notch in the eyes of investors and consumers. Read Full Post…

News Digest: September 24, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) Tmall to Split Headquarters Between Hangzhou, Beijing (Chinese article)
  • Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO) in $100 Mln JV with China’s Inspur Group (English article)
  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Hack Exposes Flaws in Building Apps in China (English article)
  • ReneSola (NYSE: SOL) Announces $20 Mln Share Repurchase Program (PRNewswire)
  • Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) Billionaire Founder Sells $414 Mln in Shares (English article)

INTERNET: Spending Hits 58.com, Cost Cuts Dog LightInTheBox

Bottom line: 58.com’s buying binge and LightInTheBox’s cost-cutting drive are both risky strategies that could boost profits if they succeed, but also stand a sizable chance of backfiring if they become too excessive.

Buying binge pushed 58.com into the red

When the history books are written, “turbulence” and “volatility” are 2 words likely to get liberal usage when describing the second half of 2015 for Chinese companies. Two mid-sized Internet names are in the headlines this week as they face their own separate headwinds, pressuring the profits and stocks of leading online classified site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) and struggling e-commerce company LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB).

The first story quotes 58.com’s CEO saying he’s engaged in a buying spree this year that could result in $200 million in losses for his company. The news around LightInTheBox stems from reports saying the company has embarked on a major cost-cutting campaign that has seen numerous employees leave and also suppliers express dissatisfaction over slow bill payments. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Corruption, Market Turbulence Kill Citic’s Russell Bid

Bottom line: The pending collapse of Citic Securities’ bid for Russell Investments is the direct result of company instability due to corruption allegations and stock market volatility, and highlights the risk of doing business with big state-run companies.

Instability sinks Citic’s bid for Russell

Recent turbulence in China’s corporate world may be set to claim one of its first big victims, with word that a deal to sell fund manager Russell Investments to top  Chinese brokerage Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030; Shanghai: 600030) is on the brink of collapse. London Stock Exchange Group has been looking to sell Russell for the last few months, and Citic had emerged as the preferred buyer after several others dropped out.

But Citic Securities has suddenly become a symbol of instability in China, hit by the one-two double whammy of corruption allegations and plunging profits for its core securities brokerage business. The recent corruption allegations against some of its top officials are part of a bigger national crackdown on graft, while the woes at its core brokerage business are the result of volatility in China’s stock markets. Read Full Post…