Bottom line: The new iPhone 6S models will post lackluster sales during their first weekend in China, but could gain momentum later as the nation’s 3 mobile carriers launch aggressive promotions for their new 4G services.
High hopes for China with new iPhone launch
China has become a center of attention for Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) these last few days, on hopes that the world’s largest smartphone market will help to power the latest iPhone to a record launch. Apple is being quite circumspect about the situation, saying only that global pre-orders for its new iPhone 6S and 6S Plus were “very strong”, ahead of their official September 25 launch date when they will become available in stores.
Analysts are saying they expect China to play an important but also muted role in the early stages for the iPhone 6S, accounting for as much as 15 percent of global sales in its first weekend. At the same time, another report is spotlighting discrepancies in iPhone 6S prices in different global markets. As usual the report shows that models in China will cost around 20 percent more than the the US, though Chinese prices will be comparable with Britain, France and Germany. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Beijing should be commended for taking a national approach to regulating private hired car services, and should continue to update its policies to reflect the rapidly changing sector.
Beijing welcomes Uber, Didi to compete with taxis
A rambunctious young group of Internet companies could soon receive legal status in China, with reports that Beijing is getting set to unveil new rules governing private hired car services as early as this week. Beijing should be praised for taking an even-handed approach and regulating these services that are creating unprecedented competition for taxis, rather than bowing to pressure from state-owned taxi companies that want the aggressive group of newcomers banned.
These newer services do need to be regulated to avoid crime and fraud that has plagued industry pioneer Uber and similar services in other parts of the world. But to outlaw such services, like some countries have done, would have cost China an opportunity to nurture a whole new industry, including the homegrown Didi Kuaidi that was valued at $16.5 billion after a recent funding. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone Gets Boost From China as Sales to Hit Record (English article)
Alibaba’s Ant Affiliate Invests in China Insurance Unit of Cathay Financial (English article)
Bottom line: Intensifying competition in dining-related O2O services is pressuring Meituan to raise more funds, and the company should seriously consider a strategic alliance with Alibaba.
O2O dining wars dog Meituan
Online-to-offline (O2O) services have become the flavor of the day on China’s Internet, and take-out dining has emerged at the epicenter of a stampede by all 3 of China’s leading Internet companies to develop the market. Over the last 2 years, leading search company Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) have all launched major initiatives in the space, collectively pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the area.
Against that backdrop, the independent Meituan is emerging as an orphan in the space, since it’s the only player without a major backer despite its status as China’s top group buying site. That could explain the latest reports that say Meituan has returned to financial markets and is in the process of raising up to $2 billion in new funds, less than a year after it raised $700 million in another massive cash-raising exercise. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Trina’s plan to separately list its solar plant-building assets is likely to meet with lukewarm to frosty demand, while Yingli’s downward spiral will continue as customers abandon the company due to its financial weakness.
Trina eyes IPO for plant-building unit
More signs of stress are on display in the solar panel sector, where shares of the stumbling Yingli (NYSE: YGE) are coming under pressure after its latest earnings report and a new plan by Trina (NYSE: TSL) to separately list some capital-intensive assets has overtones of desperation. These 2 stories reflect the intense pressure solar panel makers continue to feel as their sector still struggles to recover from a downturn that dates back 4 years due to massive oversupply.
Panel prices have rebounded somewhat over the last 2 years and many of the best-run companies have returned to profitability during that time. But intense pressure still remains for less well-run companies like Yingli. Even better performers like Trina are feeling pressure as they pour massive money into construction of new solar power plants, in a bid to create more demand for their products. Read Full Post…
This week’s Street View takes us to Yangpu District and my workplace at Fudan University, as classes resume after our long summer recess and students surprise me with the latest new trends in higher education. My own classes in the Journalism School contain the usual lists of students in their early 20s, but I was amused to see that my colleagues in the math department will be welcoming a youthful 14-year-old prodigy into their ranks this year.
In a different sign of the times, another headline noted that up to 40 percent of incoming freshmen at Fudan are using the Tenpay online payments service to pay their tuition this year. Of course the more popular Alipay might dispute that figure, which does seem quite high for such a new service. But the bottom line is that students are conducting more and more of their lives electronically, especially over popular platforms like Tencent’s WeChat and Alibaba’s Tmall. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 12-14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China to Issue Online Car Hire Service Regulations – Source (English article)
Meituan in Urgent Need of Funds as Online Take-Out Dining Wars Continue (Chinese article)
Boeing (NYSE: BA) Plans to Finish Some 737 Jetliners in China: Report (English article)
Trina (NSYE: TSL) Plans IPO of `Growthco’ to Manage Solar Farm Developments (English article)
Bottom line: Dell’s massive new China commitment could foreshadow a major new tie-up that could see it sell a big stake of itself to a local partner, while Lenovo could be eyeing a major shift to OEM production for its floundering smartphone unit.
Dell bets big on China
Two of the world’s top PC makers are in the China headlines today, with homegrown leader Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and US giant Dell both making major strategic moves. But in a sign of the times, neither item is related to either companies’ core PC business, showing just how quickly personal computers are losing their relevance in the fast-changing gadget world.
Dell’s announcement contains the biggest headline figure, with the company announcing a new commitment to spend a whopping $125 billion in China over the next 5 years. But the Lenovo news is equally intriguing if it’s true, and hints the company could be preparing a major shift for its floundering move into smartphones. That shift would see Lenovo’s smartphone unit build up its business of taking manufacturing orders from third-party brands, a model known contract manufacturing or OEM production. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Mindray is likely to finally privatize following its announcement of a new, lowered offer price, kicking off a new round of revised bids for some of the other Chinese companies that received similar offers earlier this year.
Mindray lowers buyout offer price
In a move that didn’t get investors too excited, medical device maker Mindray (NYSE: MR) announced that a group aiming to privatize the company has lowered its earlier offer price to reflect recent declines in the company stock. Shareholders greeted the news by dumping Mindray stock, which ended the latest session at $23.60, or 13 percent below the revised offer price of $27 per American Depositary Share (ADS).
Frankly speaking, I’m quite impressed that this deal is moving forward at all, since I fully expect most of the 3 dozen similar privatization bids announced earlier this year to ultimately collapse. Mindray is the first of the huge field of buyout candidates to update investors on the status of its bid since shares of US-listed Chinese companies began to tank in sync with a much louder sell-off on China’s domestic stock markets in June. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Major new funding raising by Uber, its Chinese equivalent, and Alibaba’s logistics arm reflect continued interest in such leading Internet firms by major global Investors, though funding will slow sharply for smaller, less known players.
Three new Internet deals raise $5 bln
It seems my earlier forecast was incorrect that major fund-raising for Chinese Internet companies could be cooling due to waning investor sentiment during the recent market volatility. The latest headlines include 3 major new deal close to completion, worth a collective $5 billion. The largest has Didi Kuaidi, the homegrown Chinese equivalent of private car services giant Uber, on the cusp of new a funding deal worth $3 billion. The second has the actual Uber also near a deal to raise $1.2 billion for its Chinese business, as it prepares to spin off the unit into a separate company.
Meantime, the smallest of the deals has e-commerce leader Alibaba ‘s(NYSE: BABA) Cainiao logistics unit also on the verge of a deal to provide hundreds of millions of yuan for a small logistics company. In this case the move appears aimed at helping Cainiao to build up its stable of partners providing logistics service. The addition of such outsiders would also help to validate Alibaba’s 2-year-old program to plow 100 billion yuan into its logistics capabilities.
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Dell Says to Invest $125 Bln in China Over 5 Years (English article)
Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Starts OEM Smartphone Production for Other Brands – Report (Chinese article)
Mindray (NYSE: MR) Receives Revised Proposal to Acquire Company at $27 Per ADS (PRNewswire)
Didi Kuaidi Said to Join Alibaba, Tencent in Lyft Funding Deal (English article)
Tencent (HKEx: 700) WeBank Chief Cao Tong Resigns (Chinese article)