Bottom line: KFC’s and McDonald’s latest moves to add high-tech elements to their China stores are a savvy way to update their images, and could help to attract a younger trendy crowd that has abandoned both chains in recent years.
KFC links up with Alipay
Leading global fast food chains McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) and KFC (NYSE: YUM) are both in the headlines as we head into the heart of summer, each trying new high-tech approaches to reignite their faltering China stories. Announcement of these latest initiatives seems especially appropriate right now, as we’re approaching the first anniversary of a food safety scandal that dealt a major blow to both chains in China.
KFC’s deal will see it pair up with Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) to offer its affiliated Alipay electronic payments service at hundreds of its China stores. The McDonald’s news is similarly high-tech, and will see the chain extend its new state-of-the-art hamburger customization program to the China market. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 4-6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Ant Financial Raises 13 Bln Yuan in First Funding, Valued at 180 Bln Yuan (Chinese article)
Alibaba-backed (NYSE: BABA) Meizu Sells 8.9 Mln Smartphones in H1, Up 540 Pct (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Xiaomi’s rapidly falling sales growth is the result of many factors that reflect its youth and inexperience, and the company should pause and return to its early strategy or risk seeing its slowdown accelerate.
Xiaomi sales growth slows further
Media are swarming to the latest sales figures from sputtering smartphone sensation Xiaomi, which has just announced first-half data that looks mediocre to downright bad, depending on how you look at it. The company is trying to put a positive spin on the data, saying its first-half sales rose 33 percent from a year earlier. But one media report points out the latest 6-month sales were actually down from the second half of 2014, marking the first-ever sequential decline for this rapidly sputtering smartphone superstar.
This latest data shouldn’t come as a huge surprise, but instead marks a continuation of a steady stream of signals that point to a rapid reversal of fortune for Xioami. I’ve previously said the company and its charismatic CEO Lei Jun are at least partly to blame for the negative publicity they are now receiving, since they built up huge expectations over the last 2 years through a non-stop series of lofty announcements and other high-profile publicity stunts. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 3. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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iQiyi, Ant Financial Picked to Make First IPOs on New Strategic Industries Board (Chinese article)
Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Said in Talks for More Seattle-Area Office Space (English article)
Xiaomi Sold 34.7 Mln Smartphones In H1 2015, Up 33 Pct Year-On-Year (English article)
China Unicom (HKEx: 763) Makes 4G Service Available to MVNOs (Chinese article)
Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) Receives Final Judgment in Its Dispute With eLong (GlobeNewswire)
Bottom line: Didi Kuaidi is likely to launch service in the US next year, while Uber’s decision to spin off its China operations shows its commitment to the market, as the rivalry between the pair intensifies.
Didi Kuaidi eyes US
A major global rivalry is shaping up between US hired car services pioneer Uber and its Chinese alter ego Didi Kuaidi, which both have extremely strong backing and are attracting billions of dollars in new funding. Just days after Didi Kuaidi was reportedly on the cusp of raising up to $2 billion in new money, media are now reporting the Chinese company has quietly begun hiring in the US for a move onto Uber’s home turf.
At the same time, Uber’s aggressive CEO Travis Kalanick has been quoted saying he’s planning to spin off his China business into a separate company. That move would be unique for Uber in its global strategy so far, and is aimed at better challenging Didi Kuaidi on its home turf. Uber also hopes the plan will allow it to respond more rapidly in a market that’s both extremely lucrative but also quite unique and challenging. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi’s hiring of a new CFO and entry to Brazil are its latest steps in a gradual transformation to a more western-style global company, in preparation for an IPO that is at least 2 years away.
Xiaomi to launch next week in Brazil
Stumbling smartphone sensation Xiaomi is back to doing what it knows best, namely making headlines with the latest moves in its global expansion and by hiring executives from other high-profile companies. In this case the smartphone high-flyer has just announced its formal plan to enter Brazil, putting it squarely in 3 of the 5 BRICS countries after India and China. The other move looks a bit scripted, and will see a top China executive from Russian high-tech investor Digital Sky Technologies (DST) join Xiaomi as CFO.
The latter piece of news looks slightly strange because DST is one of Xiaomi’s investors, and it would be unusual to do something hostile like stealing a top executive from one of your big backers. Instead, this looks more like a planned move that is relatively common in this kind of situation, which sees big investors supply executives to the companies they back in preparation for eventual IPOs. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Yingli’s use of crowd-funding to finance a small project and the bargain sale price of a small polysilicon maker reflect continuing struggles at second-tier solar companies and the need for more consolidation.
Desperate Yingli tries crowd funding
Two solar energy stories are showing how overcapacity continues to haunt the sector 2 years after it began to emerge from a major downturn. The first involves a desperate-looking fund-raising plan from the struggling Yingli (NYSE: YGE), which is trying to use crowd funding to pay for a new solar plant. The other news involves another slightly bizarre investment in the space, with Internet titan Tencent (HKEx: 700) and real estate giant Evergrande (HKEx: 3333) paying a bargain price for Mascotte (HKEx: 136), a money-losing Taiwanese maker of polysilicon, the main ingredient used to make solar panels. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s boosting of its stake in a leading Indian e-payments firm is part of a broader strategy that aims to replicate its China success in India through a series of acquisitions, and looks relatively well conceived.
Alibaba eyes new India investment
Just a week after abruptly pulling out of a major US investment, e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is increasingly focusing on India as the first major stop on its global expansion, with word that it’s in talks for a major new investment in a local e-payments firm. The new investment in Paytm, which would be worth about $600 million, is just the latest in a growing string of similar Indian acquisitions for Alibaba as it tries to replicate its success in China in overseas markets.
From a strategic perspective, India looks like a smart bet for Alibaba. The Indian market shares many characteristics with China, including the lack of a mature western-style retail industry from the pre-Internet era. As a result, a far bigger percentage of people in these markets are more likely to shop online. What’s more, the Indian retail market is relatively less competitive than western markets, and is experiencing rapid growth. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China needs to let traditional banks behave more independently and encourage them to take risks, or risk seeing them overtaken by private, entrepreneurial financial companies.
Alibaba bank goes online
China’s 2 leading e-commerce companies were in the headlines last week with major new moves in the financial services sector, continuing a trend that has seen private firms pose the first serious challenge in decades to China’s banking establishment. One move saw Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) launch its online bank, MYbank, as part of a Beijing pilot program to allow private companies into the sector. The other saw JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) form a credit scoring joint venture, aiming to tap its huge volumes of transaction data to help rate the creditworthiness of individuals. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Didi Kuaidi could rise over the next 1-2 years to challenge Uber, as it embarks on a global expansion starting in Southeast Asia, fueled by billions of dollars in new investment.
Didi Kuaidi, Uber race for new funds
China’s homegrown version of global hired car services giant Uber continues to race ahead, with word that Didi Kuaidi is on the cusp of a new fund-raising that’s similar in size to the many recent amounts raised by its larger US cousin. At the same time, we’re seeing the earliest signals that Didi Kuaidi may be getting read to challenge Uber outside of China, with separate reports saying the former is in talks for a major investment in a major Southeast Asian taxi app operator.
The market for hired car service apps seems to change almost daily, with hardly a week passing without the announcement of a major new milestone or conflict between these aggressive companies and traditional taxi drivers. Uber is a good example, hitting speed bumps with government raids of 2 of its Chinese offices earlier this year, only to disclose it had no intention of leaving the market and was preparing to invest $1 billion in China this year alone. (previous post) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The current fund-raising frenzy reflected in a recent round of buyouts for US-listed Chinese companies and large IPOs like the one for Legend Holdings is likely to quickly fizzle if China’s stock market sell-off continues.
KongZhong gets buyout offer
The China fund-raising machine has continued to rumble ahead despite the recent stock market sell-off in Shanghai, with yet another privatization offer coming for a New York-listed firm and a lethargic but respectable debut for newly listed Legend Holdings (HKEx: 3396). The former item saw shares of game operator KongZhong (Nasdaq: KZ) jump after receiving a buyout offer, even as most New York-listed Chinese shares slumped in line with the big sell-off in Shanghai. The latter item saw Legend shares finish down slightly in their Hong Kong trading debut, which doesn’t sound too exciting but was still far better than the 3.3 percent decline of the Shanghai benchmark index. Read Full Post…