IPOs: NetEase Media Eyes NY Listing; ZTO, Recurrent Energy Vanish

Bottom line: NetEase could abandon a newly announced New York IPO plan for its media arm if it can find a suitable buyer, while a previously announced New York listing plan by ZTO Express could be revived before year-end.

NetEase news unit makes filing for NY IPO

What’s shaping up as a quiet year for Chinese IPOs in New York has just gotten a small boost, with word that online gaming giant NetEase (NYSE: NTES) has made an initial filing to list its respected but financially-challenged news portal business. Meantime, rumors are building for what’s likely to be one of next year’s biggest offerings from Ant Financial, the financial services affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and owner of the Alipay e-payments service. But in this case, Ant is shooting down the latest buzz that specific plans are in place for a Hong Kong IPO next year. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Investors Unimpressed by Baidu Cars, Take-Out Dining

Bottom line: A Baidu downgrade by Deutsche Bank and new developments in its takeout dining and driverless car businesses highlight its heavy reliance on its search business and costly diversification attempts with no immediate profit potential.

Baidu teaming with Starbucks?
Baidu teaming with Starbucks?

A trio of headlines are spotlighting the difficulties faced by Chinese Internet giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) as it tries desperately to diversify beyond its core online search business. At the center of this news flurry is a downgrade of Baidu’s stock by Deutsche Bank, which looks mostly related to the company’s big revenue decline after a scandal earlier this year. But the other 2 headlines, one about Baidu’s driverless car initiative and the other about its online take-out dining service, both nicely highlight the huge money that Baidu is spending on its new businesses, nearly all of them losing big money. Read Full Post…

CHIPS: China Tries New US Chip Buy with Analogix

Bottom line: A Chinese buyer’s plan to purchase US chip maker Analogix for more than $500 million is unlikely to meet with political resistance, and could mark a new template for similar cross-border chip M&A by China.

Chinese group bids for US-based Analogix

After failing at several high-profile attempts to buy US microchip technology, China is trying once again with a newly announced plan to acquire venture-backed chipmaker Analogix Semiconductor for more than $500 million. Unlike previous failed efforts that targeted more mature companies, the acquisition target in this case is much younger, since Analogix was only founded in 2002.

This new deal looks strikingly similar to another one earlier this year that saw the Shanghai-based National Silicon Industry Group purchase a similarly young Finnish chipmaker called Okmetic in a deal that valued the company at nearly $200 million. (previous post) That deal and this latest one don’t appear to be related, though one can never be completely sure due to the vague descriptions of the buyers in both cases. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Online Grocer Shuts Down, Q&A Site Pares Back

Bottom line: The closure of online grocer Tablelife and a major overhaul at paid advice service Fenda show investors are growing more impatient with Chinese Internet companies without clear road maps to profitability.

Online grocer Tablelife shuts down

Two news items on downsizing websites reflect not only intense competition on China’s Internet, but also a growing impatience among financial backers for money-losing sites without a clear road map to profitability. It wasn’t long ago that anyone with a dot-com name could easily find hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars in funding, as both domestic and foreign investors threw money at anything with even the slightest hint of growth potential.

Fast forward to the present, when investors are becoming far more selective and avoiding companies that can’t show a clear paths to profits due to stiff competition and notoriously stingy Chinese web surfers. That reality has apparently spelled the end of the line for online gourmet grocer Tablelife, and a major scale-back for paid advice service Fenda following a 47-day disappearance from the Internet.  Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Wanda in Hollywood Overdrive with Dick Clark Talks

Bottom line: Wanda is likely to succeed in its purchase of Dick Clark Productions, but could pay a rich premium for the awards show producer as part of an effort to develop similar programs in China.

Wanda in talks to buy Dick Clark Productions

Just a week after making headlines through a strategic tie-up with Sony Pictures, China’s star-struck Wanda Group is in talks for yet another blockbuster deal to buy Dick Clark Productions, known for producing a number of popular award shows. My first reaction to the headline was a big “So what?” since the production company’s namesake, who died in 2012, is best known to me as the maker of the aging annual program celebrating New Year’s Eve in Times Square, New York. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Spurned by Paramount, Wanda Settles for Sony

Bottom line: Wanda’s new production tie-up with Sony Pictures will provide movies for its cinema chains in  China and globally, but could become a drag on its theater operations if the films are poorly received.

Wanda opens new resort in Hefei

Just days after receiving a major setback to its plans to invest in Paramount Pictures, Chinese Hollywood wannabe Wanda Group has just announced a film production tie-up with Sony Pictures. This particular deal looks decidedly like a consolation prize for Wanda, which is trying to build up a diversified entertainment empire similar to Disney (NYSE: DIS).

The company was bidding for a stake in Paramount, one of the top 6 Hollywood studios, after the studio said earlier this year it wanted to sell a strategic stake in itself. But Paramount ultimately reversed that decision following an internal battle for control of the company’s parent Viacom, leaving Wanda out in the cold. (previous post) This new Sony tie-up doesn’t involve any equity swap, and instead looks mostly like a relatively routine co-production deal that is becoming quite common between Hollywood and Chinese partners. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Lenovo Slashes Moto, Xiaomi Goes Further Offline

Bottom line: Lenovo’s big job cuts at Motorola could auger a write-off of the brand in the next half year, while Xiaomi’s huge offline expansion looks necessary but will further undermine its trendy high-tech image.

Lenovo slashes jobs at Moto

Two former smartphone high-flyers are in the headlines today, with PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and Xiaomi both taking steps to try and regain their former glory. Lenovo’s move looks like a major retreat for its struggling Motorola brand, which has just slashed more than half of its staff. Meantime, Xiaomi has just rolled out two higher-end models in a bid to go upscale. But what caught my attention were details of the company’s plans to sharply boost its offline presence in the latest reports.

Both stories reflect companies in transition, after each tumbled from the ranks of China’s top smartphone brands due to failure to build a loyal customer base. Lenovo bought Motorola for $2.9 billion 2 years ago and was hoping to position the faded brand as its premium product line. Meantime, Xiaomi skyrocketed to fame 3 years ago partly on an online-only sales model that helped it control costs and position itself as a trendy, cutting-edge brand. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: More Proactive Stance Needed in Telco Fraud Fight

Bottom line: Chinese companies need to become more proactive in ending practices that harm consumers, or risk facing pressure from regulators and hurting their prospects for expansion abroad.

Telcos get tough with real name registration

A campaign requiring all mobile phone users to register with their real names was in the headlines for much of last week, in the latest step to curtail rampant phone fraud in China that has grabbed recent attention due to several high-profile cases. Notably, the real-name registration drive was led by 6 government ministries, rather than the nation’s 3 major wireless carriers whose networks are the primary platform for committing most of the fraud.

Both the government and carriers have known about this kind of fraud for years, but did little to aggressively tackle the problem until the recent wave of negative publicity. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: September 27, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on September 27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Yum (NYSE: YUM) Board Approves Separation of Yum China, Increases Dividend (Businesswire)
  • Merchants Securities (HKEx: 6099) Makes IPO, Tencent’s Pony Ma Among Investors (Chinese article)
  • Dick Clark Productions in Talks to Be Bought by China’s Wanda (English article)
  • Didi Chuxing Invests 8-digit US Dollar Sum in Bicycle Sharing App Ofo (English article)
  • Meituan Dianping Acquire Payments Company, Receives License (Chinese article)

IPOs: Lufax Kicks Off HK Listing, Xinhuanet Eyes Shanghai

Bottom line: Lufax’s Hong Kong IPO could launch by the end of this year and will get a strong reception, while Xinhuanet’s Shanghai IPO will get a similarly positive reception due to strong support from state-run investors.

Xinhuanet approved for Shanghai IPO

Just days after the stodgy Postal Savings Bank of China launched an IPO that will be the world’s biggest in 2 years, the much higher-tech P2P lender Lufax has kicked off another Hong Kong listing that’s nearly as large. More specifically, Shanghai-based Lufax has begun hiring investment banks for a listing that could raise up to $5 billion, according to new reports.

Meantime, a flurry of new domestic Chinese IPO plans is also in the headlines, led by word that state-owned online news giant Xinhuanet has been approved for a new listing in Shanghai. China stock watchers might recall that Xinhuanet’s IPO plan first surfaced in the headlines 3 years ago, but was indefinitely shelved due to repeated slowdowns and freezes for new domestic offerings due to market volatility. Read Full Post…

Shanghai Street View: Biking Revival

Mobike pedals into Shanghai
Mobike pedals into Shanghai

The fast lanes of Shanghai’s streets have been full of change these last few months, in a campaign by thousands of police and other assistants to tame our unruly traffic. But this week’s column takes us instead to the slower lanes of the streets of Shanghai, where a quieter revolution is reviving China’s bicycling tradition.

In a somewhat unusual twist, this new revolution is both high-tech and low-tech at the same time, involving the roll-out of two new Internet-based leasing services deploying thousands of very basic bikes in the city. The revolution seems to be centered in my own stomping grounds in the Hongkou and Yangpu districts, due to the high concentration of wide streets, and students and young professionals who are the primary audience for such services. Read Full Post…