The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on March 23. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
◙ ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) Unveils US Website (English press release)
◙ Li Ka-Shing’s REIT to Start First Hong Kong Yuan IPO Today (English article)
◙ Groupon’s Gaopeng China site fares poorly in first week (Chinese article)
◙ IBM (NYSE: IBM) settles SEC lawsuit alleging bribery in China, South Korea (English article)
◙ China Telecom (NYSE: CHT; HKEx 728) announces year-end results (English announcement; Chinese)
◙ iPad 2 Arrives in 25 More Countries This Friday (English press release)
◙ St. Jude Medical Opens Technology Center for Physicians in Beijing, China (English press release)
data is out and continues to show Unicom winning steady share from China Mobile in the 3G space. (
Saudi Arabia has seen the future, and the world’s biggest oil exporter sees it in a place called China: a realization that will play to Beijing’s advantage. Saudi Aramco, the nation’s oil producing arm, has announced it’s pairing up with top Chinese oil producer PetroChina (NYSE: PTR; HKEx: 857; Shanghai: 601857) to build a large new refinery in south China’s Yunnan province, a move that plays nicely to the Chinese producer as it looks to secure its supplies in these volatile times for oil prices. (
It seems Chinese automakers know a major slowdown is in the air at home, and are revving up for it by doing just about anything to buffer their cash reserves. In one piece of news, we learn that Jianghuai Auto (Shanghai: 600418) is looking to raise a hefty $426 million by offering new shares, saying it needs the money for expansion (
First Jianghuai, also known as JAC: this company is NOT a top name in China autos, and any savvy investor would stop to think why a second-tier player might be looking for so much cash. As to Dongfeng, having a big name like Honda behind it certainly won’t hurt in its export drive, and South Africa could be just the kind of sort-of developed market that could be fertile ground for its exports. Still, this move also smells a bit of desperation, as China’s domestic car market shows fresh signs of slowing.
Now that the salt shortage in Shanghai seems to be easing as people realize it isn’t practical to ingest 10 kg of salt per day to protect themselves from Japanese radiation, it’s time to move on to some real news. One interesting report today is coming from the US, where China lockout victim Facebook seems to be sniffing for a backdoor into the country. The world’s most popular social networking site, available nearly everywhere except for China, said over the weekend it will buy mobile apps developer Snaptu for around $70 million (
Sure, most Western companies would probably kill for that kind of growth, but it looks like a sharp slowdown for a company that was seeing its international revenue double every year for a while there. Lingering problems in India mean that growth from that market may not come back right away, and a hoped-for opening of the US market may be at least a year off. That said, look for even more sluggish results from China’s former high-flyer, and also for its cross-town rival Huawei, in 2011.
There’s a new video sharing alliance that smells suspiciously of Tencent (HKEx: 700) trying to throw its weight around in this new Web space it has yet to dominate. Chinese media are reporting that a so-called “group” of operators of video-sharing sites, including Tencent, Xunlei, PPLive, Baofeng and Joy.cn, have formed an alliance to share rights to TV or movie content obtained by any single alliance member. (