Tag Archives: Air China

China News Digest: June 16, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 16. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • YY (Nasdaq: YY) Announces Withdrawal of Buyer Group’s Going Private Proposal (GlobeNewswire)
  • Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) Reports Unaudited Q1 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Uber Chinese Rival Didi Chuxing Said to End Funding at $28 Bln Value (English article)
  • Installment Plan E-commerce Platform Fenqile Wins $235 Mln Series D Funding (English article)
  • Air China, China Eastern Resume Ticket Sales on Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) (Chinese article)

TRAVEL: Ctrip Coopts China Eastern with New Equity Alliance

Bottom line: Ctrip’s new alliance with China Eastern continues its strategy of using equity tie-ups to further cement its position as China’s dominant provider of travel products and services.

Ctrip ties with China Eastern

In what looks like a first for private sector Chinese companies, leading online travel agent Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) has just announced it will invest 3 billion yuan ($460 million) in China Eastern (HKEx: 670; Shanghai: 600115; NYSE: CEA) as part of a new strategic tie up with one of the nation’s top 3 airlines. The deal comes less than a year after US giant Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) invested a similar amount in the Chinese carrier, and provides an important ally for Ctrip with one of its major suppliers.

This deal also comes as Ctrip’s former foe and new ally Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) remains locked in its own battle with China’s major airlines in a separate dispute tied to unruly third-party travel agents on its open platform. (previous post) Unlike Ctrip, which sells most of its plane tickets directly to travelers, Qunar’s open platform is home to hundreds of third-party travel agents who are harder to control and sometimes engage in deceptive practices when selling their products and services. As a result, many airlines have recently stopped allowing the sale of their tickets on Qunar’s website. Read Full Post…

TRAVEL: China Southern Joins Airlines Boycotting Qunar

Bottom line: China Southern’s removal of its air tickets from Qunar represents the latest boycott by a major supplier, and will further deprive Qunar of a key revenue source, causing its losses to further widen.

China Southern dumps Qunar

The bumpy ride for China’s online travel services sector continues this week, with word that leading airline China Southern (HKEx: 1055; Shanghai: 600029) is withdrawing all of its tickets from Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) due to a high volume of customer complaints. China Southern is just the latest airline to make such a move on Qunar’s site, following in the path of rivals Air China (HKEx: 753; Shanghai: 601111) and Hainan Airlines (Shanghai: 600221).

This particular series of boycotts marks the latest flare-up in an increasingly tense relationship between online travel sites and the airlines and hotels that are their biggest suppliers. Just last month China Southern reportedly decided to withhold its cheapest tickets from all travel agents. And major hotel operators last year formed a group to counter the increasing clout of Qunar and Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP), the industry’s top 2 players that are now allies after forming a major equity tie-up last year. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: March 15, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on March 15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Anbang Challenges Marriott (NYSE: MAR) With $13 Bln Starwood (NYSE: HOT) Offer (English article)
  • China Southern Follows Air China, Hainan Air in Quitting Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) (Chinese article)
  • China Mobile (HKEx: 941) Starts to Close Some 3G TD-SCDMA Base Stations (Chinese article)
  • Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) Cainiao Logistics Arm Raises Funds, Valued at 50 Bln Yuan (English article)
  • Restaurants Leave Ele.me Due to High Fees, Slow Deliveries (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q4 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

News Digest: January 6, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Dalian Wanda Clinches Deal for Legendary Entertainment – Source (English article)
  • Faraday Unveils Concept Electric Race Car with LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) (English article)
  • Commerce Ministry Asks More Questions in Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Anti-Trust Probe (Chinese article)
  • New Huawei Mate 8 Smartphone Sells More Than 1 Mln Units in Less Than a Month (Chinese article)
  • Air China, China Eastern Join Airlines Parting With Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) (Chinese article)

News Digest: July 29, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 29. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Chinese ADRs Drop 3rd Day Amid Mainland Rout, Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Plunges (English article)
  • WeChat Italy, ChatSim In Deal to Jointly Promote Instant Messaging in Europe (company announcement)
  • Air China (HKEx: 753) to Raise $1.9 Bln in Share Sale to Buy Planes (English article)
  • Phoenix Satellite (HKEx: 2008) Warns of Substantial Profit Decline in H1 (HKEx announcement)
  • Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) Announces Completion of Merger (PRNewswire)

News Digest: October 31 报摘: 2012年10月31日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 31. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China’s Big Banks Set For Slowest Annual Profit Growth Since Going Public (English article)
  • Air China (HKEx: 753), GA Telesis in Aircraft Leasing, Spare Parts JV (Businesswire)
  • Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) Qunar Aims for US IPO By Year End (Chinese article)

China Powers Up Aviation Drive With Hawker Bid 中国航空业迈向国际化

The recent expansion by Chinese aviation firms into international airspace is powering ahead with word of 2 more global deals, including a new aircraft parts joint venture involving Air China (HKEx: 753; Shanghai: 601111) and an even more intriguing bid for bankrupt business jet maker Hawker Beechcraft by a Chinese buyer. Both of these deals are just the latest in a series of outward moves by China’s aviation industry, a largely inwardly looking group which I suspect has come under recent pressure from Beijing to become more global.

Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 13, 2012 报摘: 2012年6月13日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 13. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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◙ E-commerce Giant Alibaba Ventures Into Online Book Retailing (English article)

◙ Apple iOS 6, OS X Mountain Lion to Integrate Youku (NYSE: YOKU) Services (PRNewswire)

Shanda Cloudary Wins $15 Mln from Orbis, Valuing Company at $800 Mln (Chinese article)

Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) Bribery Review Includes Brazil, China (English article)

JetBlue (NYSE: JBLU), Air China (HKEx: 753) Announce Plans to Partner (Businesswire)

China Eastern’s Budget Play: Turbulence Ahead 东方航空成立廉价航空公司:将面临动荡

I don’t usually write about China’s airlines as I don’t think the industry is very exciting as a growth story; but as a Shanghai resident I just had to comment on the big new announcement by my hometown carrier China Eastern (HKEx: 670; Shanghai: 600115; NYSE: CEA), which is forming a budget airline joint venture with Australia’s Quantas (Sydney: QAN). To put it bluntly, I would warn investors that this new venture is destined for major turbulence, if it ever even gets off the ground. Under the tie-up, the 2 sides will form a new airline under Quantas’ JetStar low-cost brand to be based in Hong Kong. (English article) The venture will start off small, with just 3 airplanes, and plans to expand that to 18 over the next 3 years. I don’t like to say bad things about my hometown airline, but frankly speaking China Eastern is the worst managed of China’s major 3 airlines, with frequent unexplained delays and so-so service, and most people I know will take any other carrier whenever they can. The airlines tried to improve its situation in 2008 when it tried to sell 24 percent of itself to Singapore Airlines (Singapore: SIA), one of Asia’s best-run airlines. But that investment was ultimatelyl blocked by Air China (HKEx: 753; Shanghai: 601111), one of China’s other big three airlines which was also a major stakeholder in China Eastern. Frankly speaking, I think that Air China deliberately sabotaged the deal to make sure China Eastern remained a weak player in the industry. I also think the system of cross-stakeholding that allowed Air China to veto the deal will be a major obstacle to China Eastern’s future development, and could easily see Air China trying to meddle in this new Quantas joint venture if it is even slightly successful — a prospect that seems highly unlikely. China Eastern executives said one of the reasons for forming a low-cost carrier was that they noticed that the company’s business- and first-class cabins often had many empty seats, which they interpreted to mean that passengers were more interested in saving money than paying for premium service. But if the airline had bothered to survey passengers who frequently fly in business and first class, it probably would have quickly learned that such travelers avoid flying on China Eastern because they don’t want to pay more only to receive its poor service and frequent delays. Strong management is key to running any successful airlines, and even more important at a budget carrier where efficient cost controls are the only way a company can earn money. Given China Eastern’s already poor management record, I would seriously doubt its ability to effectively run an efficient budget airlines, and would expect even the most cost-sensitive consumers to ultimately become fed up with its new low-cost airline and look for other options.

Bottom line: A new budget carrier from China Eastern and Quantas is destined for major operational problems, and is more than 50 percent likely to fail within its first 5 years.

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Hainan Airlines Hits Free Market Turbulence 海南航空:自由市场是福还是祸?

HNA: China’s Next Big Global Investor? 海航集团:中国下一个大型全球投资者?

Hilton, Starwood Roll Out Welcome Mat for Chinese 喜达屋、希尔顿迎合中国消费者