TELECOMS: ZTE Back In Black As Turnaround Takes Hold

Bottom line: ZTE’s latest preliminary results show the company may have turned a corner in the second half of last year and could be set for a business rebound if it can maintain focus on key new product and service areas.

ZTE turns corner after restructuring

A new profit report from ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) is painting a cautiously upbeat picture about the telecoms giant as it emerges from a difficult period and tries to reposition itself as a specialist in networked systems and devices that talk to each other. The company’s report that its profit for 2014 nearly doubled from a year earlier certainly looks encouraging, though it probably includes many one-time items that make the figures less meaningful. A comparison with its last financial report from the third quarter is more meaningful and also looks mostly encouraging, showing operating profit and revenue growth were picking up even as net profitability appeared to be slowing. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba’s Ma, JD’s Liu Need Higher Standards

Bottom line: Unbecoming behavior by people like Alibaba’s Jack Ma and JD.com’s Richard Liu reflect poorly on China’s corporate sector, and reflects a lack of professional standards.

Alibaba’s Ma, JD’s Liu on bad behavior

Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) charismatic founder Jack Ma is known for speaking his mind, but he was on the defensive last week after inflammatory remarks he made about rival JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) were published in a book. JD.com graciously accepted Ma’s rare apology for the remarks, even as its founder Richard Liu was also in the Internet gossip columns for his own controversial behavior related to a rumored break-up with his longtime young girlfriend. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Huawei Ramps Up In US, LeTV Joins Crowded Space

Bottom line: Huawei could make significant progress in the US smartphone market this year if it devotes more resources to the campaign, while LeTV’s smartphone foray looks necessary but could face difficulty due to stiff competition.

Huawei to step up US smartphone campaign

Rapid developments in the smartphone space are showing no sign of slowing in the New Year, with the latest reports that stalwart Huawei is preparing for a major new  push in the US, as online video specialist LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) prepares its own campaign to enter the crowded arena. Of these 2 news bits, the Huawei one looks like the most significant, as it will see the company make a major play at a US market that is the world’s largest but has been elusive for the Chinese telecoms giant. LeTV previously hinted at its plans to enter the crowded smartphone space, and its relatively late arrival means its endeavor in the crowded field could ultimately fail. Read Full Post…

CONSUMER: Haier, Midea Crank Up Smart Device Dance

Bottom line: Chinese appliance makers and Internet companies need to focus their smart device efforts on one or two key alliances each, or risk spreading their resources too thin.

Haier in new tie-up with Evergrande

Smart devices look set to become a theme of the New Year, with new reports that domestic appliance giants Haier (HKEx: 1169) and Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) have formed major new tie-ups to develop the space. Similar alliances began accelerating in the second half of last year and are aimed at developing the “Internet of Things”, which envisions an interconnected world where devices and their owners can talk to each other at any time over a wide range of wired and wireless networks. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: ZTE Seeks Transformation In 2015

Bottom line: ZTE’s relaunch to focus on a wider range of interconnectivity products and services looks smart and well-conceived, but could be harder to execute if it tries to do too much too quickly.

ZTE launches new logo

The last few years have been a difficult time for telecoms equipment giant ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063), but the company is hoping to kick off a new chapter this year with the launch of a new strategy that focuses on interconnectivity at all levels. A news release and CEO’s letter detailing this new approach are filled with hype and buzzwords, though the broader idea looks strategically smart. I’ll admit I’m just a little skeptical that this company is capable of such a broad transformation, though I’m also hopeful that it can achieve at least some of its goals to jump-start its prospects. Read Full Post…

CONSUMER: Meat Scandal Freezes Out OSI, Tyson

Bottom line: Foreign-owned meat companies could lose their premium image over Chinese rivals after a Shanghai-based scandal over the summer, as foreign firms remain vulnerable to high scrutiny.

Tyson China expansion on hold

Just yesterday I wrote how foreign food makers generally enjoy a better reputation in China over their domestic rivals, but one glaring exception to that rule is the processed meat industry. The meat processors also used to enjoy a strong reputation, until a major food safety scandal erupted over the summer involving Husi Food, a unit of US meat processor OSI Group. Now the latest headlines are quoting OSI saying 6 of its China workers have been arrested in connection with the scandal. It has also confirmed layoffs of most workers at its Shanghai plant that has been idled since the scandal first broke. Read Full Post…

INTERNET – HK-Shanghai Link Boosts Chinese Tech Investors

Bottom line: The new connection between the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges will make China tech stocks accessible to Chinese investors, and could prompt more companies to abandon New York for Hong Kong IPOs

HK-Shanghai link opens doors for Chinese tech buyers

The newly launched link between the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock markets should breathe new life and stability into China’s volatile stock markets by making shares of mainland-listed firms accessible to sophisticated Western buyers with billions of dollars to invest. But equally exciting is a bumper crop of new investment opportunities that will soon become available to Chinese investors, who will finally gain access to wide range of top domestic high-tech firms that for years were beyond their reach. Read Full Post…

BANKING – Minsheng Gets Creative, ICBC Eyes Mexico

Bottom line: Minsheng Bank’s new stock incentive plan and ICBC’s Mexico expansion reflect moves to make China’s banking sector more market-oriented, providing potential upside for the lenders’ undervalued stocks.

Minsheng rolls out employee stock plan

Two big stories on the banking front are reflecting the big potential in depressed Chinese bank stocks, even as the sector faces a major bad debt crisis brought on by several years of state-ordered binge lending during the global financial crisis. The first of those will see Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), China’s first private lender, launch a program that rewards top performing employees with stock at discounted prices. The second has leading state-run lender ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) getting final regulatory approval to open a subsidiary in Mexico, one of the world’s largest developing economies. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES – Sony Slumps, Moto Aims High

Bottom line: Sony’s stalling fortunes in China’s smartphone market are the prelude to its eventual pullout, while Lenovo’s high-end push with the Motorola brand is likely to fall flat.

Sony smartphones in China setback

The latest news bits from the overheated Chinese cellphone market show an increasingly grim battle that’s claiming a growing number of victims at the lower and even middle ends. The latest bad news comes from struggling Japanese giant Sony (Tokyo: 6753), which has announced a significant pullback in the market as part of a broader global retrenchment. That could bode poorly for the equally struggling mid-range Motorola, as media report the brand will also target the mid- to upper-range of the Chinese smartphone market under its new ownership by PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992). Read Full Post…

Cellphone Sales Tumble, As Mobile Ads Zoom

Cellphone sales tumble in August

New sales data for August is showing that China’s cellphone market is rapidly cooling due to saturation, putting even more pressure on domestic brands that have engaged in a battle for share that has resulted in plummeting prices. At the same time, a separate report is showing that mobile advertising is zooming, in a development that’s almost certain to mean big headaches for companies like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) that depend heavily on advertisers that traditionally targeted desktop PC users. The pair of trends both cast a spotlight on how quickly things can change in the tech and media landscapes, putting huge pressure on established companies to innovate and spend heavily to translate their leadership into emerging areas. Read Full Post…

Weibo: TCL Dotes On HTC, LinkedIn’s Shen Warns Of Bubble

TCL’s Li praises HTC’s Cher Wang

The microblogging realm has been relatively quiet this past week as Chinese tech executives enjoy the long October 1 holiday. Still, a few couldn’t completely stay away from their online accounts, led by TCL’s (Shenzhen: 000100) thoughtful Chairman Li Dongsheng who hinted at a possible tie-up with struggling former Taiwanese smartphone giant HTC (Taipei: 2498).

Meantime, LinkedIn’s (NYSE: LNKD) China chief Derek Shen commented on the current overheated investment environment in China’s Internet, reinforcing a view I’ve been stating for a while now. Finally there was Lenovo (HKEx: 992) CEO Yang Yuanqing, who let his deputies do the talking on his behalf as he donated a portion of his annual bonus to rank-and-file company employees in a goodwill gesture for the third straight year. Read Full Post…