INTERNET: Uber Gets New China Backer, Yidao Slips

Bottom line: Uber’s latest mega funding from a Chinese investor demonstrates its determination to stay in China, while Yidao’s marginalization could force it to sell itself to an Uber-Baidu alliance at a bargain price.

Hillhouse eyes Uber investment

The race for supremacy in China’s hired car services market is taking several new twists, with reports that US giant Uber is close to landing a major new funding from a Chinese backer as it shows no signs of leaving the market. At the same time, intense competition could be close to claiming its first big victim, with separate reports saying Yidao Yongche has made major layoffs as it struggles to keep up with Uber and homegrown Chinese giant Didi Kuaidi.

The hired car services story in China has been a noisy one, upsetting a stodgy industry that was mostly dominated for years by traditional taxis. But a new generation of companies are taking advantage of global positioning technology to offer location based services (LBS) that allow customers to easily find and book hired private cars that are nearby and also cheaper than taxis. That potent combination has resulted in a “democratization” of hired car services, which were usually considered a semi-luxury but are now increasingly used by people as an affordable substitute for public transportation. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Foreigners Get E-Payment Green Light

Bottom line: China’s opening of the electronic payment services market could see PayPal and other foreign providers finally receive long-awaited licenses to operate in the market by year-end.

PayPal may finally get China green light

Foreign financial companies came a step closer to realizing a long-awaited goal last week, when Beijing announced it would allow them to open fully-owned electronic transaction processing ventures for e-commerce services in the year-old Shanghai free trade zone. The move comes after years of lobbying by foreign companies like PayPal, MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V), which have watched enviously at the rapid growth of a domestic financial system that China committed to open when it joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 25, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Uber Lands Big Chinese Backer in Hillhouse (English article)
  • Suning’s (Shenzhen: 002024) Laox to Invest 3 Bln Yuan to Open 26 Stores in Japan (English article)
  • Hired Car Services Specialist Yidao Makes Big Layoffs (Chinese article)
  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Announces Pricing of $1.25 Bln Notes Offering (PRNewswire)
  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Fined 500,000 Yuan for Price Fraud, 200th Time in 3 Years (Chinese article)

BUYOUTS: Momo Gets Offer, Focus Media Gets More Headaches

Bottom line: Momo’s plan to privatize just 6 months after its IPO could set a new record, while Focus Media’s latest delay in its China re-listing plan should serve as a warning for others considering similar backdoor listings.

Momo unveils de-listing plan

The privatization story for US-listed Chinese companies has gained yet another member, with word that social networking app operator Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO) has become the latest name to receive a management-led buyout offer. The offer comes just 6 months after Momo made its trading debut in New York, and if it succeeds Momo could win the new record for a Chinese company with the shortest life as a US-listed company.

It’s worth noting that Momo’s announcement is the only one we’ve seen over the last 24 hours, which perhaps marks a slowdown from the 3 companies that made similar announcements over the long Chinese holiday weekend. (previous post) Many of the firms that are trying to de-list are eying re-listings at home in China, where their shares might be more appreciated by local investors. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Samples Food at Home, Offloads US Site

Bottom line: Alibaba’s decision to sell one of its early US e-commerce sites just a year after the launch looks smart and decisive for new ventures that aren’t performing well, while its new China-based dining services site will face stiff competition.

Alibaba tries dining services with Koubei

Acquisitive e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is throwing up a rare white flag of surrender in the US, selling off its 11 Main site just a year after launching the e-commerce platform. That surrender looks relatively minor, as Alibaba never really gave the site much time to develop. But the quick decision to call it quits reflects the challenges Alibaba will face as it tries to show investors that it can be competitive outside its home China market, which will be critical to its future growth.

Meantime, Alibaba was in another separate headline that looks much more typical for the company, announcing a new mega tie-up worth nearly $1 billion that will take it into the dining services category. That initiative looks squarely aimed at Dianping, often called the Yelp (NYSE: YELP) of China, and Dianping’s major backer Tencent (HKEx: 700). Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 24, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Revives Koubei to Take Fight With Tencent to Food (English article)
  • LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) in Spotlight Over Sales Figures (English article)
  • Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO) Announces Receipt of “Going Private” Proposal (GlobeNewswire)
  • KKR Bets on China Professional Education With Tarena (NYSE: TEDU) Investment (English article)
  • Hongda (Shenzhen: 002211) Chairman Quits Amid Probe, 165 Mln Shares Frozen (Chinese article)

MEDIA: SMG Challenges LeTV, Xiaomi with MTC Buy

Bottom line: Oriental Pearl’s new purchase of a stake in a set-top box and TV maker is part of a broader series of recent moves that could help position it to emerge as a viable rival to China’s private online video companies.

SMG buys into TV maker MTC

State-run broadcaster Shanghai Media Group (SMG) is wasting no time telling the world who it sees as its main rivals, with word that the company is buying a major stake in a TV and set-top box maker after completing an overhaul of its own digital TV assets. Anyone who follows the industry will know that the high-flying LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) appears to be the major target of this new SMG tie-up, which is seeing the company’s newly launched Oriental Pearl (Shanghai: 600637) digital video unit purchase a major stake in a Shenzhen-listed company called MTC (Shenzhen: 002429) for 2.2 billion yuan ($350 million). Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Vimicro, CNIT, AirMedia Line Up; Sina Joins E-House Bid

Bottom line: The next 2 weeks could see another 3-5 US-listed Chinese companies announce buy-out bids, but the number will slow after that and many deals could collapse if China’s stock market rally falters.

3 more names join buy-out queue

Another 3 companies have joined the fast-growing privatization queue over China’s long holiday weekend, leading me to create the temporary tag of “buyouts” for headlines describing this brief but explosive story. For anyone who hasn’t followed that story closely, the current quarter has now seen 19 privatizations unveiled by US-listed Chinese firms, including the 3 latest announcements from video surveillance specialist Vimicro (Nasdaq: VMIC), advertising specialist AirMedia (Nasdaq: AMCN) and IT services provider China Information Technology (Nasdaq: CNIT).

In related news, leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) has announced it is joining a group making a previously announced privatization bid for E-House (NYSE: EJ), one of China’s leading real estate services companies. That particular move looks related to an existing alliance between the 2 companies, and thus probably just marks a continuation of that relationship that I’ll describe below.

Read Full Post…

Shanghai Street View: Entertainment Ethos

Cirque du Soleil sets up tent in Shanghai

Flooded streets filled the Shanghai headlines for much of this week, but local officials were also working hard to make sure another, more upbeat story also shared the spotlight with early Plum Rains that caused massive headaches for commuters. Film buffs will know I’m talking about the annual Shanghai International Film Festival, which tries to showcase the city’s rising position in China’s rapidly evolving entertainment industry.

I’ve previously written about Shanghai’s entertainment sector, which was a trend-setter during its heyday in the early 20th century but later became neglected as local focus shifted to the city’s financial industry. But 2 events at the latest film festival caught my attention, and seemed to show our city is finally taking more serious steps to try and develop a creative entertainment culture that can be a true leader rather than just a follower. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 20-23, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 20-23. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • SMG’s Oriental Pearl (Shanghai: 600637) Enters Internet TV After Reorganization (Chinese article)
  • Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Joins Consortium in E-House (NYSE: EJ) Privatization Plan (PRNewswire)
  • Hershey (NYSE: HSY) Cuts Annual Profit Forecast After China Growth Slows (English article)
  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Responds to Short Seller Attack, Calls Report Misleading (Chinese article)
  • AirMedia (Nasdaq: AMCN) Announces Receipt of  “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)