News Digest: June 17, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 17. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Guotai Junan Seeks $4.8 Bln in Biggest China IPO Since 2010 (English article)
  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) to Start Russian Shopping Site in Expansion Beyond China (English article)
  • Crowdsourcing Site Zhubajie Lands 2.6 Bln Yuan Series C Funding (English article)
  • Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) WeChat Probed in Taiwan for Potential Illegal Investment (Chinese article)
  • China’s HNA Group Buys 15 Pct of Red Lion Hotels (English article)

INTERNET: Alibaba Challenges LeTV, Didi Kuaidi Answers Uber

Bottom line: Alibaba’s new video streaming service could presage a buyout offer for Youku Tudou, while Didi Kuaidi’s massive new fund-raising presages a bloody battle with Uber in the hired car services market.

Didi Kuaidi in big new fund-raising

Two major strategic moves are in the Internet headlines today, reflecting growing rivalries between some of the biggest names in the red-hot markets for online video and hired car services. One move has e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) disclosing its plans to launch a video streaming service that it hopes can emulate the success of US giant Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX). The second has Didi Kuaidi, which was recently formed by the merger of China’s 2 largest taxi app operators, disclosing it is raising $1.5 billion in new funding to take on the aggressive Uber. Read Full Post…

IPOs: NY Says Bye-Bye to iDreamsky, HK Welcomes Legend

Bottom line: The see-saw performance of iDreamSky shares after its buyout offer reflects a growing number of speculators in the market for US-listed China shares, while Legend’s Hong Kong IPO is likely to price and debut weakly.

iDreamSky gets buyout offer

As we head into the end of June, the first half of 2015 is set to set an unusual record of becoming the first such period to see a negative number of New York IPOs by Chinese companies. That fact is being driven by a record number of companies that have announced privatization plans, including the latest by mobile game developer iDreamSky (Nasdaq: DSKY). If this latest plan is successful, iDreamSky would also set a new record for shortest time ever as a New York-listed Chinese firm, since the company only made its IPO last August.

Meantime, one actual IPO that is moving forward is coming in Hong Kong, where Legend Holdings, parent of PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), has set a price range, date and chosen a ticker for its offering. This particular deal appears to be getting a ho-hum reception in Hong Kong, as most investors remain fixated on a rally across the Chinese border that has seen China’s domestic stock markets more than double over the last year. Read Full Post…

Shanghai Street View: Hazardous Hurling

High-rise windows pose falling objects hazard

This week’s Street View takes us off the street and into the air to examine a couple of recent news stories involving objects that caused damage or even death after falling from apartment buildings. My description of these objects as “falling” is somewhat generous, since in at least one case, and possibly both, the objects were carelessly thrown from buildings by people who had little or no concern for consequences their actions might cause.

More broadly speaking this kind of action is an extension of the litterbug phenomenon, which sees some people often treat our streets and sidewalks as a garbage bin for their cigarette butts, empty drink containers and other unwanted things. The problem has certainly improved over the last decade, in no small part thanks to a major public awareness campaign about pollution in general. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 16, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 16. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Didi Kuaidi Seeks $1.5 Bln in Funding to Fend Off Uber – Source (Chinese article)
  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Plans to Roll Out Paid Video Service (Chinese article)
  • Lawson Plans To Triple China Convenience Store Count to 1,000 in 2-3 Years (Chinese article)
  • iDreamSky (Nasdaq: DSKY) Receives Proposal to Acquire the Company (GlobeNewswire)
  • Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO) Plans to Lay Offs Several High-Level China Executives (Chinese article)

FUND RAISING: Bona Film Cashes Out of NY, LightInTheBox In Shoe Tie-Up

Bottom line: A new strategic investment in LightInTheBox by a major shoemaker is a vote of confidence in its turnaround story, while Bona Film’s buyout offer caps a week of record privatization activity for US-listed Chinese firms.

LightInTheBox gets new strategic partner

Last week’s privatization frenzy for US-listed Chinese firms saw one more company join the queue on the final day of the week, with movie maker Bona Film (Nasdaq: BONA) adding its name to the list of companies looking to end their relationship with fickle New York investors. That final offer brought the number of US-listed Chinese firms receiving buyout offers last week to 5, which must surely be a record for such bids in a single week.

Meantime, another interesting deal has seen underperforming e-commerce company LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB) receive its own big new investment from one of China’s leading shoemakers. That deal saw Aokang Shoes (Shanghai: 603001) buy about a quarter of LightInTheBox’s shares, hinting at a major new direction for the foreign-focused e-commerce company and also implying it’s unlikely to de-list from New York anytime soon. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Technology Issue Gives Xiaomi New Headache

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s newest technology headache, if true, could delay the launch of its fifth-generation phone, further sapping its momentum and making it difficult to reach its 2015 sales target.

Xiaomi reportedly hits technology glitch

The once invincible Xiaomi is starting to look increasingly mortal, with reports that the smartphone high-flyer may have to delay the launch of its newest model due to technical reasons. I’m not too knowledgeable on the technical issues in this instance, but the potential new delays for the release of the Xiaomi 5 appear to be related to fingerprint recognition technology that the company plans to build into the new models.

If these latest reports are true, the delays could put a big crimp in the Xiaomi’s ambitious sales plans this year as it attempts to maintain its breakneck growth. Maintaining that kind of growth looks increasingly difficult due to all the technical issues, combined with intensifying competition in Xiaomi’s core China market. That competition is causing the company to abandon the online-only sales model that helps it keep costs down, which will ultimately undermine its profit margins. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: HP, Intel Get Strange China Bedfellow In Online Lottery Site

Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s latest investment in an online lottery ticket seller hints that it may add Internet services to its growing list of high-tech products and services through separate tie-ups with Intel and HP.

Unigroup invests in 500.com

A previously little-known company connected with China’s leading science university has made headlines over the last year through major new tie-ups with global tech titans Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HP), which makes its latest investment just slightly puzzling. That investment is seeing Tsinghua Unigroup pour a relatively modest but still significant $124 million into 500.com (NYSE: WBAI), a New York-listed Chinese firm that sells lottery tickets over the Internet.

I’m being just slightly whimsical in tying Unigroup’s latest purchase to its much larger recent tie-ups with Intel and HP, which I’ll recap shortly. But that said, Unigroup has rapidly emerged as a player to watch in a China’s underperforming domestic microchip and IT services sectors, and most of its high-profile investments since it first moved into the spotlight have been centered on efforts to assemble a homegrown Chinese giant in those spaces. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 13-15, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 13-15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Bullish Uber Plans to Invest $1 Bln in China in 2015 (English article)
  • Prada (HKEx: 1913) Profit Tumbles as Luxury Company Struggles in China (English article)
  • Shoemaker Aokang Acquires 26 Pct Stake in LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB) (PRNewswire)
  • Bona Film (Nasdaq: BONA) Announces Receipt of “Going Private” Proposal (GlobeNewswire)
  • Staples (Nasdaq: SPLS) Receives Approval from China to Acquire Office Depot (Businesswire)

CELLPHONES: Xiaomi On Defensive As Momentum Slows

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s latest moves and remarks reflect attempts to rekindle its fading momentum, as its growth slows and it faces a rising challenge from LeTV and a resurgent Apple.

Xiaomi battles slowing momentum

Sputtering smartphone sensation Xiaomi is in a flurry of headlines as we go into the weekend, spotlighting the recent challenges it is facing as it tries to maintain its breakneck growth and live up to huge expectations it created for itself. The most revealing of those portrays Xiaomi’s charismatic chief Lei Jun in a rare defensive posture, at a company event where he took aim at the increasingly threatening LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104).

The second headline comes from the same event, and boasts of Xiaomi’s heavy spending on content for its online services over the last 2 years, again taking aim at LeTV. Lastly there’s the news that US chip giant Qualcomm’s (Nasdaq: QCOM) China chief has jumped ship to take up an executive position at Xiaomi. Again, this looks like Xiaomi’s attempts to portray itself as a hot company that can still attract top talent away from leading western companies. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Twitter CEO Exits, China Re-Think Coming?

Bottom line: Twitter’s new CEO is likely to re-think the company’s decision to stay out of China due to Beijing’s strict self-censorship policies, and could ultimately make a play for the market in the next 2-3 years.

Twitter to re-think China under new CEO?

It seems that Weibo (Nasdaq: WB), often called China’s equivalent of Twitter (Nasdaq: TWTR), isn’t the only one struggling these days in the social networking (SNS) realm. The original Twitter has just announced that its own CEO Dick Costolo has succumbed to calls for his resignation due to stagnating growth, meaning his replacement will come under intense pressure to jump-start the company’s prospects. One of the fastest ways to do that would be going to China, leading to the intriguing prospect that Twitter’s road map could bring it to China sooner than many expected under its yet-to-be-named new leader. Read Full Post…