Tag Archives: Alcatel

SMARTPHONES: Creditor Chases LeEco; TCL Teases BlackBerry

Bottom line: A new arbitration claim by a LeEco supplier could trigger a domino effect that sends the company into crisis, while TCL’s first BlackBerry model is likely to get lukewarm reviews when it debuts in March.

TCL teases first BlackBerry model at CES

We’ll close out the week with a couple of smartphone headlines, which seems appropriate since the world’s biggest consumer electronics show, CES, is taking place this week in Las Vegas. All 3 companies in the news are showing off their wares at CES, including cellphone stalwart TCL (Shenzhen: 000100), which is teasing us with video of its first model under a new tie-up with struggling smartphone pioneer BlackBerry (Toronto: BB).

Meantime, the other company on my radar, the cash-challenged LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104), was also in CES headlines earlier this week after showing off a sexy new energy car it’s helping to develop. But the company has just landed in a far more ominous headline here in China, where one of its smartphone manufacturing partners is calling for arbitration to try and get cash for a growing pile of unpaid bills. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Two Losers Unite in BlackBerry, TCL Alliance

Bottom line: TCL’s new licensing deal with BlackBerry will end up as a quiet failure due to TCL’s weak R&D skills and lack of consumer appeal to the BlackBerry name.  

TCL, BlackBerry in licensing tie-up

When does adding two negatives yield a positive? The answer is “never”, but dying smartphone makers BlackBerry (Toronto: BB) and TCL (Shenzhen: 000100) are hoping that maybe this time will be different. Of course, it’s easy for me to predict disaster for this particular new alliance, and I’d be much bolder if I said this partnership might revive the two dying companies. But the truth is that neither BlackBerry’s nor TCL’s smartphone business have much going for them these days. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: iKang Gets New Suitor, TCL’s Tired Phone Unit Bows

Bottom line: A bidding war for iKang could see prices rise above the current highest offer of $25 per ADS, while a buyout bid for TCL Communication will be priced at a slight premium to the current stock price and meet with little resistance.

iKang attracts new buyout offer

The twisted privatization tale of private clinic operator iKang (Nasdaq: KANG) has just taken a new turn, with its receipt of another buyout offer from Yunfeng Capital, the private equity investor with ties to e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). This development makes Yunfeng the third party to bid for iKang, which has easily become the most contested of some 40 US-listed Chinese companies trying to privatize from New York. Meantime, a far less contested buyout offer has just come in Hong Kong, where faded cellphone maker TCL Communications (HKEx: 2618) has just received a buyout offer from its China-listed parent. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: India Comes to China, Huawei Eyes Global Crown

Bottom line: Micromax’s plan to sell smartphones in China is likely to sputter due to intense competition, while Huawei stands a 50-60 percent chance of becoming one of the world’s top 2 smartphone brands by 2020.

India’s Micromax eyes China smartphone market

It seems the smartphone road connecting China and India isn’t just one-way, with word that leading Indian brand Micromax is planning to enter the intensely cut-throat Chinese market. Meantime, Chinese leader Huawei is looking beyond its home market and to the rest of the globe, with its brash smartphone chief declaring his target of passing Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung (Seoul: 005930) to take the world’s smartphone crown within 5 years. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Under Pressure, China Brands Skip Global Show

Bottom line: The absence of most mid-sized Chinese smartphone brands from the world’s biggest telecoms show this week in Spain reflects their inability to mount serious global campaigns, and also growing financial pressures many are facing.

Mid-sized Chinese brands skip MWC
Mid-sized Chinese brands skip MWC

China’s crowded field of low-cost and mid-range smartphone brands may claim to have global aspirations, but you would never know that judging by their loud absence at the world’s biggest telecoms show this week in Spain. I’ll admit that I’m not personally attending this year’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, so I’m dependent on the show’s website and media reports to determine who is and who isn’t attending.

But based on my own findings, including talks with spokesmen from at least one of the big domestic brands, most companies are skipping this show that has emerged in recent years as a major venue for debuting new smartphones. There are several reasons for skipping the show, but I suspect that chief among those is costs. Read Full Post…

PCs: Watch Out Lenovo — Huawei Moves Into Notebooks

Bottom line: Huawei’s new move into notebook PCs could seriously challenge the existing establishment, and it could become a top 5 brand by the end of next year.

Huawei moves into notebook PCs

Telecoms giant Huawei is making a surprise move into the PC market, with word that it will launch a new line of notebook models next month using chips supplied by Intel (Nasdaq: INTC). The move would put Huawei into direct competition with leading PC maker Lenovo (HKEx: 992), as it aggressively expands beyond its older networking equipment business and diversifies into consumer electronics.

Huawei’s move into notebooks isn’t a huge surprise, since such products are increasingly similar to the new generation of smartphones where Huawei has found recent success. Huawei already sells tablet PCs, which perform many of the functions as notebooks as well. But the move does represent an entire new product area for Huawei, and is almost certain to put the company on collision course with Lenovo in their home China market. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Lenovo Needs to Admit Motorola Flop and Move On

Bottom line: Lenovo should write-off its Motorola investment as a failure, and focus its smartphone efforts on building up its own brand rather than relying on more acquired foreign names.

Lenovo in need of Motorola write-off

PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) repeated a frequent pattern last year when it purchased a former global leader, Motorola, with plans to resuscitate the struggling brand to boost its own smartphone business. It repeated yet another pattern last week when it said that early efforts to revive Motorola were failing, undermining its own profits and sparking one of the worst sell-offs for its shares in recent memory.

Having learned once more the difficulties of reviving broken western brands, Lenovo should now take the bold step of considering a complete write-off of its $2.9 billion Motorola purchase, or at least relegating the brand to niche status. The setback also shows more broadly why Lenovo and other globally-minded Chinese companies need to abandon the strategy of buying struggling global brands at bargain prices, and instead should focus on developing their own names. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: Huawei Growth Revives on Smartphone Drive

Bottom line: Huawei’s accelerating smartphone sales reflect its growing momentum in China, and could prompt it to consider spinning off the unit for a potential IPO in its drive to become more transparent.

Huawei News

Smartphones power Huawei resurgence

Growing momentum for its smartphone business has become the driving force behind a resurgent Huawei, which has just reported solid first-half revenue growth that is showing signs of accelerating after a recent slowdown. That’s good news for Huawei, but less promising for domestic rivals like Lenovo (HKEx: 992), Xiaomi and Coolpad (HKEx: 2369), which are struggling for direction in a crowded Chinese smartphone market where global giant Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) has also shown signs of a recent resurgence.

Huawei hasn’t been too generous in providing financial data for the first half of the year, saying only that revenue jumped by 30 percent to 176 billion yuan ($28 billion). (company announcement; Chinese article) For anyone who tracks the global market, that figure is already more than double the $12.5 billion in first half sales reported by Ericsson (Stockholm: ERICb), Huawei’s leading rival in its traditional networking equipment core area. Read Full Post…

COMPUTERS: 10 Years After IBM Buy, Lenovo Looks For New Relevance

Bottom line: Lenovo has done remarkably well since defying skeptics with its landmark IBM PC buy a decade ago, and could stand a 50-50 chance of remaining relevant a decade from now in the fast-changing world of high-tech gadgets.

Lenovo celebrates a decade since landmark IBM buy

Global PC leader Lenovo (HKEx: 992) is commending itself on how far it has come since its landmark purchase of IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) PC business 10 years ago, setting it on a path that has made it the world’s top computer seller. (company announcement) I’ll admit I was a skeptic at the time of the IBM deal in 2005, and have become much more bullish on Lenovo since then. Still, the company hasn’t completely convinced me that it has the necessary skill and vision to move past its global PC crown, which is fast becoming yesterday’s news as traditional computers rapidly lose ground to newer devices like smartphones and tablets.

Before I look at the challenges that Lenovo is facing, I want to start by personally congratulating the company on its huge accomplishments over the last decade since it announced it would purchase IBM’s storied PC business for $1.25 billion. I and many others predicted at the time that Lenovo could stumble badly with the move, since it had no experience at running such a major foreign business that was clearly in decline and need of restructuring. Read Full Post…

News Digest: February 8-10, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 8-10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alcatel (Paris: ALUA) In Talks To Sell Phone Unit To Chinese Investment Firm Huaxin (English article)
  • MIIT Says New VNOs Banned From Building Telecoms Infrastructure (Chinese article)
  • Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) Obtains Overseas Courier License (English article)
  • China To Extend Subsidies On Electric Cars Past 2015 (English article)
  • Google To Own $750 Mln Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Stake After Motorola Deal Closes (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q4 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

NEC China Cellphones: New Lenovo Tie-Up? NEC计划重回中国手机市场 或与联想联姻

What looks like a new wrinkle has emerged in the growing love affair between Chinese PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and Japanese electronics giant NEC (Tokyo: 6701), in what could well end up as a marriage that could serve as a template for similar Sino-Japanese tie-ups in the consumer electronics space. Media are reporting that NEC has announced it will once again enter the China cellphone market 6 years after its high-profile departure, with plans to sell a smartphone model, as well as 2 tablet PCs. (English article) Historians will recall that NEC left China back in 2006, at the time citing mismanagement for its decision to leave the world’s largest cellphone market. Of course the real issue was that its phones had become virtually invisible in the market, paralleling a trend in the rest of the world that has seen not only NEC but most Japanese brand cellphones and PCs become non-players nearly everywhere except for their highly protected home market. So what’s different now that would embolden NEC to return to China, the world’s biggest mobile market but also an incredibly competitive one where consumers are especially price sensitive and NEC has little or no brand recognition? The answer is: Lenovo. Last year the 2 companies entered into an interesting agreement that effectively saw Lenovo take over NEC’s PC operations through the establishment of a joint venture. (previous post) Lenovo followed later by saying it may move some of its production to Japan, in what looked like a bid to ease concerns from NEC’s Japanese customers who were undoubtedly worried that their computers could suffer a quality downgrade if all production was moved to China. (previous post) This kind of tie-up looked interesting as it had the potential to provide Lenovo with a quick entry to the lucrative Japan market that has been one of the toughest for foreign brands to tap due in part to local preference for domestic brands that are perceived as higher quality. It also gave Lenovo, the world’s second biggest PC maker, a new premium brand to market outside Japan through its numerous sales channels in both western and developing markets. There aren’t any details in the latest reports about NEC’s decision to re-enter China’s cellphone market, but I would be willing to bet that Lenovo, as China’s dominant PC player with about a third of the market, will be a strong partner behind the scenes, providing NEC with access to its strong sales and service networks throughout the country. Furthermore, while the Lenovo name is synonymous with good quality PCs in China, the same is hardly true for its cellphones, which have had a much more difficult time establishing a strong name in the company’s home market as it vies with better known names like HTC (Taipei: 2498), Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and up and comers Huawei and ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063). This NEC move back into China, if Lenovo is really involved, could provide Lenovo with an important new premium brand that doesn’t have any of the baggage associated with its own cellphones. That could pave the way for an eventual joint venture for the NEC cellphone brand similar to the 2 companies’ PC tie-up. In fact, TCL (Shenzhen: 000100; HKEx: 2618), another Chinese brand known for its cheap cellphones, made a similar shift with its purchase of the Alcatel cellphone brand name around 5 years ago, and Alcatel-branded phones now account for the lion’s share of its sales outside China. So, what exactly is the end game in this growing love affair between Lenovo and NEC? If the PC partnership proves successful in Japan and this new NEC cellphone initiative in China is also a success, I could easily see an eventual sale in the next 2-3 years that would see Lenovo acquire outright NEC’s PC and cellphone units, 2 of its main consumer electronics businesses. Such a deal could serve as a template for future tie-ups between Chinese electronics companies and their Japanese counterparts. Chinese companies could use such deals to shed their image as makers of cheap, lower-end products, while Japanese firms could shed their increasingly unprofitable and marginal electronics businesses.

Bottom line: NEC’s re-entry to the China cellphone market looks like the latest wrinkle in its growing ties with Lenovo, which could ultimately result in a longer-term marriage.

Related postings 相关文章:

Lenovo Considers Japan Production 联想向日本转移制造业务为明智公关手段

Lenovo Results: Honeymoon Nearing an End? 联想并购後的蜜月期何时结束?

Lenovo-NEC: Let the Defections Begin 联想与NEC结盟注定失败