Unicom’s Half-Baked 4G Strategy Moves Ahead

Unicom advances half-baked 4G plan

The 4G strategies of China’s 2 smaller telcos are starting to emerge under an unusual hybrid scheme being rolled out by the nation’s telecoms regulator, and the path being pursued by China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU) certainly doesn’t look encouraging. Both Unicom and China Telecom (HKEx: 728; NYSE: CHA) have been given the nod to launch commercial 4G service using a homegrown standard known as TD-LTE, even though both plan to build their main networks using a more globally tested technology technology called FDD-LTE. But whereas China Telecom is making minimal investment in TD-LTE, Unicom seems intent on wasting billions of dollars, with word that it has awarded contracts to 8 companies to start construction of a network based on the technology. (Chinese article) Read Full Post…

Dangdang Disappoints With New Yhd Tie-Up

Dangdang in new tie-up with Yhd

If I was a shareholder in e-commerce firm Dangdang (NYSE: DANG), I would definitely sell my stock after hearing about the company’s latest announcement of a tie-up with Walmart-backed (NYSE: WMT) Yhd.com. I personally wasn’t surprised by the nature of the tie-up, which will see the pair cross-promote each others’ services, even though I was a bit disappointed that there was no equity exchange.  Dangdang had previously confirmed it would announce a tie-up after rumors of an alliance first appeared a few weeks ago. This kind of hype followed by disappointment is quite typical of Dangdang’s co-founder and CEO Li Guoqing, whose fierce independence could ultimately lead to the marginalization or even death of his company. Read Full Post…

State Asset Sales: Removing The “SOE” Stigma

Beijing opens protected sectors to private money

Everyone is getting quite excited these last 2 days about word that Beijing will soon launch a major new sell-down of its stake in many of China’s largest state-owned enterprises (SOEs), in a bid to breath new life into these bureaucratic behemoths. The news certainly looks like a positive sign all around, providing an exciting new opportunity for investors who would prefer to own major companies that behave more commercially rather than the current group that take their orders from Beijing.

Equally important, the shift could help many of these state-run giants to shed their “SOE stigma”, which often carries connotations of state-control, bureaucracy and political agendas. Such a shift could fuel a new wave of outbound M&A by some of these giants, whose major global purchases often raise suspicions among host governments who currently view such SOEs as tools used by Beijing to execute its political goals. Read Full Post…

Weibo: Xiaomi Skips Barcelona, Litigation Challenge Looms

Xiaomi global march opens door for lawsuits

Much of the China tech world was focused last week on the world’s largest telecoms trade show taking place in Barcelona, but one company that was noticeably absent from the  Mobile World Congress was fast-rising smartphone maker Xiaomi. That absence was all the more noticeably because Xiaomi has made no secret of its plans for a global expansion this year as part of a strategy to maintain its explosive growth in the 4 years since its founding. Xiaomi seems to have skipped the big show this year, and instead focused its energies on its own internal suppliers meeting, as reflected by a flurry of microblog posts from that event. Read Full Post…

YY, Vipshop Reap Rewards Of Risky IPOs

YY shares up 8-fold since IPO

I wanted to take this opportunity to commend Internet companies YY (Nasdaq: YY) and Vipshop (NYSE: VIPS) for taking the risky move of launching New York IPOs at the heart of a deep freeze in investor sentiment towards Chinese companies in 2012. The pair, which have both just announced their latest stellar results, were 2 of the only major offerings by Chinese firms in New York that year. Shares for both received an initial tepid reception due to the chilly investment climate at the time. But all of that has changed more recently with a sudden surge in investor interest, and anyone who was brave enough to buy the companies’ shares shortly after their IPOs has been handsomely rewarded. Read Full Post…

Geely Joins New Energy Buying Binge

Geely buys UK’s Emerald Automotive

Chinese car makers are fueling a new global buying binge of clean-energy assets, with the latest word that privately owned Geely Automobile (HKEx: 175) is buying a British electric car startup. Geely’s deal comes just weeks after China’s Wanxiang Group completed its second major acquisition of a clean energy firm in the US, hinting at a growing wave of global M&A by tech-hungry Chinese car makers. This flurry of deals also comes as China’s leading electric vehicle (EV) maker, BYD (HKEx: 1211; Shenzhen: 002594), spotlights new government data that showcases its own technology development prowess. Read Full Post…

iKang Healthcare IPO Faces Medical Indifference

iKang files for New York IPO

iKang Healthcare could find the going tough in New York with its newly announced plan for a Nasdaq IPO, at least based on the lackluster record for others from China’s medical sector. iKang has become the latest in a growing list of Chinese firms lining up for New York listings this year, following its first public filing for a plan to raise up to $150 million. But while most Chinese IPO candidates so far have come from the Internet space, iKang comes from a Chinese healthcare sector that has failed to generate much interest from US investors despite its huge growth potential. Read Full Post…

Shanghai Street View: Firecracker Fuss

Firecracker debate lingers after Chinese New Year

After a bit of deliberation, I decided to focus this week’s column on the recent debate over firecrackers in Shanghai rather than the feistier and fast-moving brouhaha over taxi apps that has also been making headlines. The taxi topic is perhaps a bit sexier and quite colorful, centered on capitalistic cabbies who refuse to pick up regular passengers as they pursue more lucrative customers who book through taxi apps.

But the firecracker issue seems more substantive, speaking to the concept of cultural traditions, their value in society, and how and whether they should adapt with changing social conditions. As the New Year’s season officially ends, I’m also running out of time to raise this interesting topic, which has already largely disappeared from the headlines as people look forward to spring and the warmer weather ahead. Read Full Post…

Tencent Eyes Sohu Video, Merger Ahead?

Sohu eyes video tie-up with Tencent

Just a half year after pooling their online search assets, leading web firm Tencent (HKEx: 700) and the much smaller Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) are reportedly in talks to also merge their video businesses amid a broader wave of consolidation sweeping China’s Internet. I have some doubts about whether this new deal will happen for reasons I’ll explain shortly, though I’m far less skeptical now than I would have been at this time a year ago. If such a deal does happen, it could mark the latest step in what could become Tencent’s eventual acquisition of Sohu, one of China’s oldest Internet companies. Read Full Post…

New Suntech Rises From Ashes, Eyes UK

Suntech faces final sunset

Opportunities for me to write about former solar pioneer Suntech (OTC: STPFQ) are growing fewer with each passing day, as its life as an independent company nears an end with the imminent finalization of its bankruptcy liquidation. That said, a company announcement saying that a new Suntech has emerged after the yearlong bankruptcy storm seems like a good opportunity to write about this company one last time before it and its stock permanently disappear. The announcement features a photo of Suntech’s youthful looking new CEO, Eric Luo, and says the company is preparing a new push into Europe, starting with Britain. (company announcement) Read Full Post…

IPOs: Legend Eyes HK, Xunlei New York

Legend Holdings eyes HK IPO

The recent window of positive sentiment towards Chinese tech firms continues to fuel a wave of offshore IPO plans, with video sharing site Xunlei and Lenovo (HKEx: 992) parent Legend Holdings the latest subjects of new listing rumors. All these reports come as a top New York Stock Exchange executive predicts 15-20 Chinese firms will list in New York this year. (English article) That forecast by David Ethridge, a senior vice president at NYSE Euronext, certainly looks quite bullish, especially compared with only 6 companies that listed in New York last year and just 2 in 2012. But it’s also worth noting the figure is a bit more conservative than another forecast earlier this month from an unnamed investment banking source for as many as 30 New York listings this year. (previous post) Read Full Post…