Former high-flying car maker BYD (HKEx: 1211) has come out with an interesting strategy to try to win over skeptics of its grand electric car dreams: bury them with numbers. At least that’s the impression one gets from reading a new press release from the company, which updates investors on the many pilot EV projects it is now running. (Company announcement) Granted, the company’s various EV pilot programs do seem to have logged a lot of miles, showing they are moving forward. But nowhere in the pile of numbers is there any mention of issues that have cropped up in the course of all that driving; and there’s only one mention of additional orders in its home city of Shenzhen, where BYD is well connected, that might start to validate all this effort. You have to give them credit for placing such a big bet on EVs, and I do like their recent tie-up with Daimler to further develop EV technology. (English article) But I’m still not convinced that BYD — despite backing from Wall Street guru Warren Buffett — has what it takes just yet to become a leader in this area, and this update certainly doesn’t help to bridge the credibility gap.
Bottom line: BYD is trying hard to validate its massive electric car initiative, but has yet to produce any compelling results that show its efforts are bearing fruit.
一度风光无限的汽车制造商比亚迪<1211.HK>祭出了一个有趣的战略,试图打消人们对其电动车宏伟构想的怀疑:那就是用数字狂轰滥炸。至少有关其电动车项目的新闻稿给人这样的印象。虽然比亚迪试验的多款电动车听起来确实录得了不错的续航里程,说明这些项目的确在取得进展,但在这麽多数字里,我们找不到电动车试驾中出现的任何技术问题,而且只有一处提到了来自本土城市深圳的新增订单。比亚迪对电动车的大举压注值得称道,我也确实喜欢他们最近与戴姆勒合作开发电动车技术的举措。但我仍不能相信,得到股神巴菲特青睐的比亚迪真正具备成为该领域领先者的素质,公司最近发布的这一连串数字显然也无助於人们建立对它的信心。
一句话:比亚迪在努力试图证实其大规模电动车计划值得信赖,但迄今并未拿出任何具有说服力的具体成果。
Related postings 相关文章:
◙ China’s Green Auto Dream: A Road Paved with Problems 中国的绿色汽车之梦:前途荆棘密布
◙ It’s Good News, But More Is Needed To Jump-Start BYD 比亚迪:需要更多好消息
◙ BYD: Jump-Starting Stalled Sales With Auto Finance 比亚迪:试水汽车金融
(Tokyo: 6758) and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) have all largely avoided the China gaming console market so far. In a nutshell, rampant piracy makes selling legitimate gaming titles — the main profit source for the console business — virtually impossible in China. Perhaps Lenovo has found a way to beat the pirates as it’s certainly very familiar with the China market. But if it hasn’t, which I suspect will be the case, this could become yet another failure for the company and also a major distraction from products it should be pursuing.
It seems that ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063), already reeling from more recent setbacks than I can recount in this space, has just received yet another blow in its own backyard from crosstown rival Huawei Technologies. To be more precise, the actual blow has come in Europe where Huawei has sued ZTE for stealing its intellectual property, Chinese media are reporting (
at around 1 percent, I would advise people to focus on the fact that Beijing has indicated that billions more in capital raising is likely to come (
In the latest twist in the increasingly complex race to market between Renren and Kaixin, China’s two Facebook wannabes, Renren has apparently confessed to US stock regulators that its initial public filing significantly inflated its user numbers. According to Chinese media, Renren has told the SEC in a new filing that it added 5 million new users in the first quarter, not a bad figure but quite a bit less than the 7 million it originally reported. (
While I admire Huawei for wanting to keep posting triple-digit growth (heaven forbid they should slip into double digits!), it does in many ways feel like this company has become obsessed with growth at any cost and may be losing its common sense. I’m not saying it can’t make such a transition — after all, IBM (NYSE: IBM) made such a move, and HP (NYSE: HPQ) is moving in that direction. But given that such transitions can be difficult — Lenovo (HKEx: 992) tried and failed at a similar move less than a decade ago — Huawei and rival ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) might be better advised to focus on developing new products that take advantage of their expertise as low-cost, quality manufacturers.
In a major about-face, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), after initially leaving China off its Asia launch list for the iPad 2 (
I love the imagery associated with the latest blockbuster deal on China’s fast food scene, which would see YUM brands (NYSE: YUM), operator of KFC and Pizza Hut restaurants, swallow up Little Sheep (HKEx: 968), China’s leading hot pot chain. (
like Taiwan, Japan and South Korea, where hot pots are also popular. The big potential obstacle in all this is China’s regulator, which has shown an increasing tendency to use its anti-trust powers as a political tool, as it did two years ago when it vetoed Coke’s (NYSE: KU) proposed purchase of leading chinese juice maker Huiyuan (HKEx: 1886). If the regulator is smart, it will approve this deal and ignore any nationalistic sentiment, or risk further damaging its reputation as an objective and impartial anti-trust body.
its 2G and 3G networks, which are both very weak as a result of neglect over the last five years. Too many of my friends and acquaintances have complained to me that they subscribed to Unicom’s 3G service, only to discover it either slow or nonexistent much of the time even in big cities like Shanghai. If it doesn’t make solving this problem a top priority, which I’m not sure it’s doing, Unicom could discover its sharp drop in profits is more than just a short-term issue.
In what’s shaping up as one of China’s most colorful races to market in a long time, social networking site Kaixin says it has won a coveted hearing with China’s highest court in its ongoing grievance with archrival Renren. (