The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 8. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bottom line: A new 1 billion yuan co-production tie-up for iQiyi marks the latest bid by Baidu to build up its new businesses through big spending, but could pressure Baidu’s shares due to shorter-term profit erosion.
iQiyi, Shanghai New Culture in production tie-up
I have to credit Internet giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) for sticking to its guns with its recent strategy of aggressive spending on acquisitions and tie-ups as the centerpiece of a drive to diversify beyond its core search business. That strategy put a big damper on Baidu’s profit growth in its latest quarterly results, sparking a sell-off that has seen its stock lose more than a third of their value this year.
And yet despite those concerns, Baidu continues to aggressively pour money into its emerging new businesses, many of them companies that are growing fast but are also losing big money. That’s certainly the case with Baidu’s latest investment, which will see it pour 1 billion yuan ($160 milllion) into a new co-production deal between its iQiyi online video unit and a Shenzhen-listed film production house called Shanghai New Culture (Shenzhen: 300336). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi’s latest scandal involving false promotional claims will deal another blow to its rapid rise, increasing the likelihood that it will miss its already-reduced target for smartphone sales this year.
Xiaomi caught in bait-and-switch scandal
Smartphone maker Xiaomi started this year on a high note, after scoring a major new fund-raising late last December that gave it an impressive $45 billion valuation just 4 years after its founding. But it seems there was only one direction to go from there, as the company has been dogged by a steady series of minor scandals, product delays and disappointing sales figures ever since.
The latest headlines of a Xiaomi scandal reflect just how much momentum the company has lost this year. The reports center on allegations of false promotions for the company’s Hongmi Note 2, after consumers noticed the new low-end smartphone came with a cheaper screen than originally promised. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A plan by Alibaba’s chairman and vice chairman to borrow $2 billion using their company stock as collateral is a simple diversification move, and doesn’t represent any change in the company’s fundamentals or outlook.
Alibaba chairman, vice chairman eye $2 bln loan
Shares of e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) have been buzzing these last few days since media reported that Chairman Jack Ma and one of the company’s other co-founders are preparing to diversify their company holdings that are worth billions of dollars. Neither Ma nor Vice Chairman Joe Tsai is planning an actual share sale, which would almost certainly undermine the company’s shaky stock. Instead, the pair are in talks to take out a $2 billion loan using their huge stash of Alibaba shares as collateral.
Alibaba’s shareholders didn’t seem to like the plan too much, and made their voices heard by trimming nearly 4 percent from the company’s share price after reports of the move surfaced late last week. The latest close means Alibaba stock now trades at a record low of $63.91, or about 6 percent below the $68 price for its record-breaking $25 billion IPO that will celebrate its one-year anniversary later this month. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 3-7. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Chmn Said to Plan $2 Bln Loan Against Stock (English article)
Snackmaker Liwayway Said to Prepare $200 Mln Hong Kong IPO (English article)
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Watch China Sales Pass 1.07 Mln – Report (Chinese article)
iQiyi, Shanghai New Culture (Shenzhen: 300336) in 1 Bln Yuan Production Tie-Up (Chinese article)
Xiaomi Accused of False Promotion Claims for Redmi Note 2 (Chinese article)
Bottom line: The latest downbeat remarks from Unigroup’s chairman after a visit to the US indicate the company has given up on its bid to buy Micron, though it could potentially relaunch the effort after next year’s presidential elections.
Unigroup’s Micron bid looks dead
I wrote several weeks ago that a bid by China’s Unigroup to buy US memory chip giant Micron Technology (Nasdaq: MU) had become the victim of politics, and now it appears the deal is finally dead. Or at least it’s on life support, with little hope of resuscitation. That’s my interpretation, following the latest reports that say Unigroup’s chairman has given remarks that look quite pessimistic after returning to China from a last-ditch US visit to try to save the deal.
This deal looked quite interesting when it was first reported back in July, and would have been worth some $23 billion, marking the biggest-ever acquisition of a US company by a Chinese counterpart. But political sensitivities quickly surfaced due to Micron’s status as the biggest US maker of memory chips used in most electronic devices and also in the defense industry. Read Full Post…
We will be on holiday from Sept 3-6 for the Chinese holiday marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War 2. Regular postings will resume on Sept 7.
Bottom line: Smaller foreign tech companies could follow Trend Micro’s lead and withdraw from China over the next few years, as they suffer sharp business downturns due to restrictions under the country’s new national security law.
Trend Micro sells China unit
This summer has been unusually quiet for big multinationals in China, following campaigns in the last 2 years targeting foreign companies for monopolistic practices and corruption, among other things. But the real turbulence this year has been happening behind the scenes, as foreign technology companies face a major business downturn following China’s recent roll-out of a strict new law designed to protect national security.
Many foreign tech firms have complained the new law is too broad and intrusive, and now security software specialist Trend Micro may have become the first major victim. That’s my interpretation, following an announcement that appears to show Trend Micro is withdrawing from the market. This particular move will see Trend Micro sell all of its China operations to AsiaInfo, a Chinese owned maker of telecoms software. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new tie-up with a leading US wine maker is mostly symbolic and represents a boom in the e-commerce market for imported goods, while NetEase’s new share buyback plan is unlikely to provide much support for its sagging stock.
Robert Mondavi launches on Tmall
Leading Chinese Internet companies Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) are trying different approaches to boost their sagging stocks, amid a broader sell-off for US-listed Chinese companies in tandem with China’s own tanking markets. The first case has e-commerce leader Alibaba launching a new online wine shop with US giant Robert Mondavi, as part of a broader move to let Chinese consumers buy imported goods online. The move by online game giant NetEase looks a bit more conventional, with its announcement of a plan to buy back up to $500 million of its stock.
Alibaba and NetEase certainly aren’t alone in watching their shares tumble, amid a broader sell-off for US-listed Chinese stocks over the last 2 months. Alibaba shares have lost nearly half of their value from their all-time high reached last November, and now trade about 5 percent below their IPO price from a year ago. NetEase shares have lost a quarter of their value since early August, in a plunge coinciding with China’s own tumbling stock markets. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Phoenix New Media’s retrenchment could produce some short-term improvement for its profits, but won’t halt a longer term decline due to its inability to adapt in a rapidly changing new media environment.
Phoenix New Media in big job cuts
After stumbling badly in its latest quarterly report, a sputtering Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) is making major job cuts and rolling out a broader retrenchment, as it tries to avoid getting sidelined in China’s rapidly evolving media market. This particular story has an interesting parallel in a mostly forgotten company called Tom Group (HKEx: 2383), which was backed by Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing who hoped to build it into a regional media giant when he launched the company during the Internet boom of the late 1990s and early 2000s. But more on that shortly.
Phoenix also began its life as a traditional media company, and the lesson from all this is that such media are having a hard time adapting to the rapid pace of change in the Internet age. That said, I’m not at all optimistic that Phoenix will be able to chart an effective new course, and it could just be a matter of time before the company becomes a non-player on the Chinese Internet or disappears completely. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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NetEase’s (Nasdaq: NTES) Board Approves $500 Mln Share Repurchase Program (PRNewswire)
Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) to Cut Staff, Retrench – Memo (Chinese article)
Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Launches “Tmall Vineyard Direct” With Robert Mondavi Wines (Businesswire)
AsiaInfo to Acquire Trend Micro Chinese Subsidiary (Businesswire)