Tag Archives: 中国公司股票新闻, China company stock news

News Digest: October 21, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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China Mobile (HKEx: 941) Net Misses Estimates as Competition Cuts Margin (English article)

Suntech (NYSE: STP) Responds to Solar Trade Petition (PRNewswire)

Saab Owner Spurns Chinese Takeover (English article)

Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Receives RMB 100 Mln in Government Cloud Subsidies – Report (English article)

360Buy Slows Down US IPO Process, Still Seeking Foreign Underwriter (Chinese article)

China Solars Brace for Icy 2012 With US Trade Complaint 中国太阳能产业需直面美欧关税壁垒

After a month of tough-talk on Capitol Hill blasting China’s generous subsidies for its solar sector, the inevitable has happened and a group of leading US solar panel makers has filed to have punitive tariffs leveled against their Chinese rivals. The group, led by the US arm of Germany’s SolarWorld (Frankfurt: SWV) has officially petitioned the US International Trade Commission (ITC) to level the punitive tariffs after Chinese solar makers have prospered under years of support from Beijing, which has provided a wide range of incentives like cheap costs for land and low interest loans, to create an industry that now controls more than half the global market. (complaint announcement) Chinese solar firms, already suffering in the global sector’s worst-ever downturn due to overcapacity and weak demand, saw their shares plunge to near new all-time lows on the news, with Suntech (NYSE: STP), Trina Solar (NYSE: TSL) and Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE) all down 6-9 percent in New York trading on Wednesday. I have to admit that the rapid speed of this latest development has surprised even me. It was only a month ago that the US House of Representatives launched hearings into this matter (previous post), after a major firm, Solyndra, became the latest US victim to declare bankruptcy, in part due to stiff competition from China. Since then, governments in both the US and Western Europe, the world’s two largest markets for solar panels, have shown strong support for punitive tariffs, which, in the case of the US, is motivated partly by politicians’ desire to look tough on China in the year before presidential elections in 2012. With such strong Congressional backing, the filing of a complaint by US solar firms to the ITC is likely to get a quick hearing and could result in punitive tariffs being levied as soon as the end of the year, in my view. Punitive tariffs in Western Europe could follow a short time later, casting a huge chill over the Chinese sector until Beijing makes some very open moves to show it is cutting back on its generous subsidies. Either way, Chinese solar firms and their stocks are looking at a chilly climate in 2012, with no relief in sight until the second half of the year at earliest depending on how Beijing reacts.

Bottom line: China’s solar panel makers will face a chilly 2012 following the filing of an unfair trade complaint against them in the US and the likelihood of similar action in Europe.

Related postings 相关文章:

US Solar Probe: Get Ready for China Bashing 美国太阳能调查:炮轰中国大潮的前奏

China Brushes Off Western Protest With New Ming Yang Support 明阳获巨额融资 表明中国不理会西方反对

More Solar Woes With Plunging Prices

 

China Regulors Threaten E-Commerce, Group Buying 官方监管威胁到电子商务与团购业务

After standing aside and letting its online sector develop largely unhindered for the last decade, China is suddenly showing a worrisome trend of trying to regulate everything on its often unruly Internet, a move that, while needed, could also interfere with market forces. In separate developments on the same day, media are reporting Beijing is preparing to regulate both its group buying sites as well as its e-commerce sector to bring more order to these spaces that have become ultra-competitive in the last 1-2 years. (group buying article; e-commerce article) In this case the reason behind each move is unrelated. For group buying, the reason seems simply to be a desire to regulate an industry that has become ultra-competitive, with quality control virtually non-existent and many players teetering on the brink of closing. (previous post) For e-commerce, the issue is directly related to a massive fee hike last week by Alibaba’s Taobao Mall, China’s leading B2C site, that led to an uprising by smaller merchants who complained they were being targeted for elimination from the site. These two new rounds of regulation for major emerging sectors follow other recent reports that China will soon regulate the vibrant micro-blogging space, and months after it issued its first round of electronic payment licenses and as it prepares to issue online mapping licenses. There definitely seems to be a trend emerging here, which looks a bit worrisome in light of Beijing’s past record at heavy-handed interference in emerging tech sectors. In one case a few years back, Beijing’s heavy regulatory hand effectively killed a vibrant SMS industry that was once a major source of revenue for the likes of Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES). It has also attempted to regulate online games from time to time, which may be partly responsible for that industry’s unexciting growth profile of recent years after years of explosive growth. While some form of direction is certainly needed to bring order to the unruly e-commerce and online auction sectors, it’s far from clear to me that this direction needs to come from Beijing, which instead would be better advised to provide some “guidance” and let market forces do the main work.

Bottom line: New campaigns by Beijing to regulate e-commerce and online auctions are misguided efforts that will ultimately severely hamper growth in both sectors.

Related postings 相关文章:

Taobao Mall’s IPO March Collides With Merchant Uprising 淘宝商城IPO或因商户“起义”被推迟

Group Buying Turmoil Grows With 55tuan Layoffs 窝窝团撤站裁员 团购业整合在即

Investors Punish Sina for Slow Weibo Progress

News Digest: October 20, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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SolarWorld, US Solar Manufacturers Petition to Stop Unfair Trade by China’s Industry (Businesswire)

◙ China 3G Users Cross 100 Million Mark, Account For 60 Pct of New Users in Jan-Sept (Chinese article)

◙ China to Draft New Regulations For E-commerce – Xinhua (English article)

◙ Chinese Authorities to Release Group Buy Regulations (English article)

Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE) Gives Key Highlights from Its Global Investor Day (PRNewswire)

New Oriental Results: Slowing Education Growth Story 新东方发表最新财报 中国教育服务增长减速?

Leading Chinese education firm New Oriental’s (NYSE: EDU) latest results show a company heading into a new stage of slower growth, proving that no one is immune to a slowdown once it becomes big enough and that demand for even a hot product like education is limited. In reporting results for its latest fiscal quarter, New Oriental said it expects revenue for the upcoming quarter to grow by 30-35 percent, a bit of a slowdown from the 40 percent growth in the most recent quarter but a sharp drop from the last 2 years when profit and revenue were growing in the high double-digits and even triple digit percentages. (company announcement) This kind of slowdown is inevitable for nearly any company, although it’s been surprising to see how quickly it’s come for New Oriental, which just two quarters ago was reporting revenue that rose by 60 percent and net profit that doubled. (previous post) The company’s shares shed more than 10 percent after the results came out, even as Wall Street saw a broader rally, as investors realized that all good things must end, and no one is immune to growth slowdowns. Growing competition from foreign players like Disney (NYSE: DIS) and DeVry (NYSE: DV) are also making life more difficult, and Beijing’s recent efforts to cool China’s economy probably aren’t helping either. New Oriental didn’t provide any color for its guidance, but in reality this kind of slowdown is natural for any company in the industry and I suspect the Wall Street sell-off represents some profit taking from investors who have still seen strong returns on New Oriental’s shares over the last 2 years. Shares of one of New Oriental’s biggest rivals, TAL Education (NYSE: XRS) were also down more than 10 percent on Tuesday, signaling China’s education boom has probably reached its peak, and growth will enter a new slower phase.

Bottom line: New Oriental’s latest results and outlook show that boom times for education services firms have come to an end, to be replaced by slower growth in the next 2 years.

Related postings 相关文章:

Education: DeVry Deal Showcases Corporate Opportunity

New Oriental Shows Why Education Pays 新东方告诉你为何教育会有回报

Kaxin Buys Time With Tencent Tie-Up 开心网与腾讯合作堪称一箭双雕

Kaixin, one of China’s top social networking service (SNS) sites, has discovered that Wall Street doesn’t necessarily like money-losing companies and has turned instead to Internet titan Tencent (HKEx: 700) for a cash infusion that looks like a shrewd move as China’s Internet bubble shows signs of correcting. A company spokesman has confirmed receiving the investment, though he wouldn’t elaborate on the size or nature of the tie-up. (English article) From my perspective, this is exactly the kind of investment that all money-losing Chinese web firms should be seeking, rather than rushing to make IPOs that simply tell the world how much money they are losing and forcing them to focus more on becoming profitable rather than building their business. The new tie-up with Tencent comes after another Chinese Internet leader, top web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), has already invested in the company, giving Kaixin two very potent partners to help it build up its SNS business, whose growth founder Cheng Binghao previously said is starting to slow. (previous post) Like many of its Internet peers, Kaixin was previously gearing up to make a New York IPO, even though it was still losing money; but this Tencent investment appears to signal it has shelved those plans for the moment in favor of building up its business and waiting for sustained profitability before going public. Kaixin’s main rival, Renren (NYSE: RENN), was among a group of money-losing China web companies that went public starting late last year when their shares were in big demand from investors keen to buy into the China Internet growth story. Since then, however, sentiment has cooled considerably to all US-listed China firms, partly due to realization that China’s Internet was a bit overhyped. After jumping 30 percent on its trading debut in May, Renren’s shares have moved steadily downward and are now trading 60 percent below their IPO price. By bringing in Tencent as a new investor, Kaixin is not only giving itself more time to become profitable, but once it does go public should also avoid the kind of volatility that Renren has seen.

Bottom line: Kaixin’s new investment from Tencent looks like a good tie-up, and will give it more time to become profitable and avoid an unfriendly IPO market for China Internet stocks.

Related postings 相关文章:

Gaopeng, Kaixin Spotlight China Internet Turmoil 高朋网、开心网凸显中国互联网混乱现状

Renren Results: A Mixed Bag for Everyone 人人网业绩:苦乐参半

Sina’s Latest Weibo Move Looks Like SNS 新浪似要发展社交网站

China Brushes Off Western Protest With New Ming Yang Support 明阳获巨额融资 表明中国不理会西方反对

If China plans to cut back its subsidies to its alternate power sector in response to complaints from the West, it sure isn’t showing its intentions in a new announcement about a massive new loan support program for leading wind power equipment maker Ming Yang. (company announcement)  According to the announcement, China Development Bank, a major government policy lender, will provide Ming Yang with up to $5 billion in financing to help its customers both at home and abroad purchase its wind generation equipment. This is exactly the kind of state-backed subsidy that is at the center of a debate in both the US and Europe over solar energy, which has seen Western governments finally sit up and take notice of China’s massive support for its alternate energy sector. Punitive tariffs against China’s solar sector look almost inevitable as a result of Beijing’s huge support policies (previous post), and this kind of announcement of yet even more support for Ming Yang, even though its focus is wind and not solar power, will hardly help China’s case if it really wants to avoid such punitive tariffs, which would send a chill through its solar firms already suffering through their worst-ever downturn. If this kind of high-profile announcement is Beijing’s way of saying it has no intent to stop offering strong backing for its alternative energy makers, I would look for new punitive tariffs to come sooner rather than later and for a drawn-out standoff as neither the West nor China yields to pressure to compromise. Of course, there’s also the possibility that Ming Yang’s announcement is just very poorly timed, and China might still be willing  to curb its support for its solar energy firms. Time will tell. Meantime, one of the many struggling solar firms, Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) has just issued updated guidance that is very mixed. (company announcement) It says it will meet its unit sales targets for the third quarter, but that its margins will come in well below previous guidance due to stiff competition that has resulted in sharply falling prices. All this means the crisis could be easing, but it’s not over yet and it could heat up all over again if either the US or Europe issues punitive tariffs.

Bottom line: A new announcement of massive state loan support for a top Chinese wind power firm indicates China will keep strongly supporting its alternate energy sector despite Western protests.

Related postings 相关文章:

◙ More Solar Woes With Plunging Prices

US Congress Turns Up Heat in China Solar Debate

Tech, Environmental Issues Cast New Clouds Over Solar Firms

Shanda’s Private Ploy: For Real or Market Manipulation? 盛大拟退市:是动真格还是虚晃一枪?

The big news of the day from the tech world is most certainly the announcement by online game operator Shanda Interactive (Nasdaq: SNDA) that its founder and chairman Chen Tianqiao may take the company private, in the latest development for US-listed China shares that have seen their prices plummet in the last few months amid a broader confidence crisis. (company annoiuncement) The real questions, of course, is whether Chen is really serious, and, if he is, will we see other companies follow his lead as they search for investors who better appreciate their shares. My prediction is that Chen’s offer, which would give shareholders $41.35 per ADS, or a 24 percent premium to their last closing price, is largely a stunt that Chen has no intention of actually executing. The offer is explicitly non-binding, and, in a nod to the market’s skepticism, Shanda’s shares rallied 14 percent after the announcement but still finished on Monday at $38.33, or well below the privatization offer price. Some Chinese observers said perhaps Chen wants to bring his shares back to China to list in his home market where the company is better known, perhaps on a new international board for overseas-registered firms expected to launch in the next year or so. (Chinese article) This could be a long-term possibility, although Shanda might have to wait a while, as many other bigger-name firms like China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL), Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and HSBC (HKEx: 0005; London: HSBA) are already cuing to list on this new high-profile international board and will probably be given priority. In addition, there’s no reason that Shanda can’t list its shares both in the US and China at the same time, which makes a privatization of its US shares even less necessary. At the end of the day, Chen loves the spotlight and any privatization would move his company back into the shadows for a while, which he would no doubt dislike. Instead, this latest move to privatize looks largely like a show, and Shanda and other US-listed China firms will continue to maintain their overseas listings despite current negative sentiment.

Bottom line: A management-led plan to privatize Shanda Interactive is most likely just a stunt that will never happen, and other US-listed China firms are unlikely to follow with similar actions.

Related postings 相关文章:

CDC Kicks Off China Bankruptcy Parade 中华网打开赴美上市公司破产魔盒

US China Stocks: Bloodbath Becomes Correction 在美上市中资股遭抛售 迈入股价修正新阶段

US-Listed China Firms Fight Back — Finally 中国赴美上市公司最终还击

55tuan: A Company in Denial 窝窝团拒不接受现实

Despite turmoil in US markets that has put a halt on most IPO activity, struggling group buying site 55tuan has come out very publicly and said it is aiming to list on the Nasdaq by the end of this year, a goal that probably reflects more on its critical cash situation than any basis in reality. At the same time, another company in need of cash, video-sharing site Xunlei, has officially withdrawn its application for a US listing after demand for the offering dried up back in July. First let’s look at 55tuan, as clearly the company is going through a crisis in the ultra-competitive group buying space. After reports emerged last month that the company had become the latest group buying site to make mass layoffs, 55tuan finally came out last week and admitted making major cuts at many of its offices, particularly in smaller cities. (previous post) Now 55tuan CEO Xu Maodong has come out and reassured the world that his company, which previously had difficulty finding an investment bank to underwrite an IPO, is moving ahead with the offering and expects to make it by the end of the year. (Chinese article) The only problem in all this is that I suspect Mr. Xu and his money-losing company will find little or no demand for their shares from Western investors. That same lack of demand for money-losing Web firms, combined with broader weak sentiment towards US-listed China companies, also caused Xunlei to scale back its plans for an IPO to raise up to $200 million in July, before finally suspending the offering altogether. (previous post) Its latest filing to the US securities regulator indicates it has given up on the deal for now. (Chinese article) But I suspect that unlike 55tuan and rival group buying site Lashou, Xunlei still has sufficient cash to survive for a while longer, and we’ll see it return to market once the current turbulence and negative sentiment toward China stocks subside.

Bottom line: 55tuan’s determination to make an IPO by year end reflect its dire cash situation, with such an offering likely to find little or no demand if it really moves forward.

Related postings 相关文章:

Group Buying Turmoil Grows With 55tuan Layoffs 窝窝团撤站裁员 团购业整合在即

Lashou Ropes in Small Potatoes For US IPO 拉手网聘二流承销商赴美上市

Xunlei’s Shrinking IPO Disappears 迅雷无限期推迟IPO时间

Weibo Still Faces Crackdown Despite Govt Tie-Up 新浪微博难改“被监管”命运

Everyone is buzzing over remarks from a senior party official saying government agencies should embrace mircroblogging to better perform their jobs, interpreting the comments to mean that the popular medium dominated by Sina’s (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo service won’t come under regulatory pressure soon as many had feared. But a closer look at the actual remarks by Wang Chen, director of China’s State Council Information Office, offers no such reassurances, and I predict it’s only a matter of time before the industry indeed comes under strict new regulations, seriously hampering Weibo and other Twitter-like microblogging services in China. (English article) Wang’s remarks sparked a rally in Sina shares, which soared 18 percent on the news. But a more careful look at his comments show he merely encouraged government agencies to actively use microblogging to better serve society. That sounds fine, but it doesn’t really address the major concern that sparked a sell-off of Sina shares earlier this month after another official said the government was likely to require all microbloggers to register with their real names in the future to curb the rampant rumor mongering and anonymous critical blabbering that has become a staple on the medium. (previous post) That requirement sent a chill over Sina shares because investors realized that many of Weibo’s 200 million registered users would probably decline to open new accounts using their real names if such a new requirement was added, greatly lowering the number of users and Weibo’s attractiveness to advertisers and others who might be willing to pay for exposure on the system. While the latest remarks indicate Weibo isn’t likely to be shut down anytime soon and may even have good government relations, they don’t change the reality that strict new regulations are almost inevitable as the government tries to clean up the mircroblogging space.

Bottom line: New remarks showing government support for microblogging don’t change the fact that strict new regulations are coming that will lower traffic dramatically.

Related postings 相关文章:

Sina’s Weibo: Growth Engine or Growing Burden? 新浪微博:动力or负担?

Investors Punish Sina for Slow Weibo Progress

Sina Gets Serious on SNS With New “Blogging Light” 新浪推出轻博客 大力进军社交网络业务

News Digest: October 15-17, 2011

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 15-17. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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◙ Chinese Government Encourages Officials to Microblog, Easing Crackdown Fears (English article)

55tuan Plans IPO By End of This Year – CEO (Chinese article)

HTC (Taipei: 2498) Chief Executive Says No Plans to Acquire A Mobile Operating System (Chinese article)

Camelot Information Systems (NYSE: CIS) Appoints Two New Independent Directors (PRNewswire)

CNOOC (HKEx: 883) Reports Minor Oil Leak in Subsea Pipeline in Jizhou 9-3 West Oilfield (PRNewswire)