Tag Archives: Alibaba

Latest news about Alibaba, historical stock charts, analyst ratings, financials, and today’s Alibaba Group Holding Ltd

Shanda’s Chen Eyes New Start With Company Sale Plan

Shanda’s Chen throws in the towel with company sale plan

I’ve followed online entertainment entrepreneur Chen Tianqiao for quite some time now, and can completely understand the latest news that he may be ready to throw in the towel by selling his flagship company, Shanda Interactive Entertainment. I remember first running into Chen in Hong Kong back in 2004 at an investor event, shortly before Shanda become China’s first publicly listed online gaming company later that year. Shanda was briefly on top of the world as China’s top Internet gaming firm for a few years after that; but it has run into a non-stop series of headaches since then, causing its value to stagnate as it got passed by more nimble rivals like Tencent (HKEx: 700) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES). Read Full Post…

Sina Weibo IPO Plan Fails To Excite

Sina hires investment banks for Weibo IPO

Leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) is rushing ahead with plans to separately list its Weibo microblogging unit, with word that it’s taken the first major step towards a New York IPO by formally hiring investment banks for the deal. I’ve previously said Sina was likely to accelerate its listing plan, amid growing signs that Weibo’s growth was slowing and users were abandoning the service in favor of Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) more mobile-friendly WeChat. The latest quarterly earnings report just out from Sina adds further reason for pessimism about the upcoming IPO, showing Weibo remains highly dependent on advertising for most of its revenue. Read Full Post…

News Digest: February 25, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China’s Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Plans $500 Mln US IPO For Weibo (English article)
  • Shanda Interactive To Sell 5 Units To Alibaba For $3.2-$3.5 Bln – Sources (Chinese article)
  • ZTE (HKEx: 763) Launches Two New Firefox OS Phones in the ZTE Open Series (Businesswire)
  • Autohome (NYSE: ATHM) Announces Q4 and Full Year 2013 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Supreme Court Dismisses Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) Appeal in Tencent Dispute (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q4 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Alibaba’s Yu’ebao Branded Vampire

CCTV takes aim at Alibaba’s Yu’ebao

Alibaba’s colorful and sometimes controversial founder Jack Ma has been called many things in the past, but even he must be surprised and somewhat alarmed at the latest monicker of “vampire” given to him by an influential commentator at CCTV, China’s leading broadcaster. I don’t usually take sides in this kind of politically sensitive debate, though in this case I really do think that CCTV’s claim is largely unjustified. I suspect the attack, which Alibaba is correctly taking quite seriously, was prompted at least partly at the urging of big state-run lenders that are unhappy about the meteoric rise of Alibaba’s Yu’ebao service, which competes with traditional savings accounts. Read Full Post…

News Digest: February 22-24, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 22-24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Fosun Int’l (HKEx: 656) May Acquire Forbes Media For Under $250 Mln (Chinese article)
  • CCTV Commentator Calls For Ban Of Alibaba’s Yu’ebao, Calling It A Vampire (Chinese article)
  • Vipshop Acquires Minority Interest in Ovation For $55.8 Mln (PRNewswire)
  • China Auto Lobby, Policymakers Collide Over Foreign Investment (English article)
  • Xiaomi Acquires Third-Party Payment License – Source (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q4 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Tencent/JD, Yihaodian/Dangdang Tie-Ups Advance

Unions loom for Tencent-JD, Yihaodian-Dangdang

I don’t usually write about the same news twice in a single week, but in this case reports with new details on looming tie-ups involving 4 of China’s top e-commerce firms seem to justify an update. In the larger of the deals, the latest reports say top Internet firm Tencent (HKEx: 700) is nearing a deal that would see it buy 6-20 percent of JD.com, forging a partnership that would create a major new e-commerce contender to rival industry leader Alibaba. In the second update, 2 smaller e-commerce firms, Yihaodian and Dangdang (NYSE: DANG), have confirmed earlier reports that they will announce a major alliance early next month. Read Full Post…

Telco Execs Flock To VNOs

Telecoms execs jump to new VNOs

A new report about a sudden exodus of middle- and top-level executives from China’s big 3 telcos is forcing me to rethink my earlier assertion about the relationship between those carriers and a group of new competitors called virtual network operators (VNOs). Earlier reports about the defection of a top executive from one of the big telcos to a new VNO had prompted me to declare the big 3 state-run carriers were trying to sabotage the new VNO scheme to quash any new competition. But now this new report reveals that similar defections at all levels of management are becoming widespread, indicating perhaps that market economics really are at work here. Read Full Post…

Online Travel Gets Hotter With Rising Tongcheng

Tongcheng gets mega-funding from Tencent group

Reports of major new funding for online travel site Tongcheng are casting a spotlight on a sudden rise in competition for the sector, which for years was dominated by industry leaders Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) and eLong (Nasdaq: LONG). The trend looks a bit worrisome to me, hinting at a new looming round of price wars and potentially some consolidation. Ctrip could well become a leader of such consolidation if it occurs, since the company now has a huge cash pile of nearly $2 billion following its raising of $800 million through a highly popular convertible bond offer last fall. Read Full Post…

Weibo: Vancl’s New Clothes, Dianping’s New Partner

Lei Jun, Chen Nian talk threads at Vancl

UPDATE: Since originally writing this post, Tencent has announced it will purchase 20 percent of Dianping for an undisclosed amount. (company announcement)

Talk involving major new investments in online clothier Vancl and restaurant ratings site Dianping was  buzzing through the blogosphere this past week, reflecting the many new partnerships that are quickly forming amid intense competition plaguing the overheated Internet space.

Vancl has been racing to find profits before it runs out of cash, and recently received a lifeline in the form of $100 million in new funding from a group led by Lei Jun, the marketing-savvy co-founder of trendy smartphone maker Xiaomi.  Lei Jun and Vancl CEO Chen Nian engaged in a round of online banter this week on their microblogs that could hint at some of the new directions and tactics that Vancl will take as it searches for the elusive business model that can move it into the black. Read Full Post…

E-Commerce Tie-Ups: Tencent-Jingdong, Dangdang-Yihaodian

Tie-up talk swirls around Tencent-JD.com, Dangdang-Yihaodian

It’s a new day on the Chinese Internet, which is as good an excuse as any to talk about rumors of the latest tie-ups in the overheated e-commerce space. One of the latest pieces of gossip has a partnership taking shape between JD.com and Tencent (HKEx: 700), China’s second and third largest e-commerce operators. The other has an alliance forming between Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and Yihaodian, 2 smaller players at the bottom of the list of the country’s top 10 e-commerce firms. I’ll offer my own guess that there’s a 50-50 chance the first rumor is true, while chances of Dangdang-Yihaodian tie-up look much smaller, perhaps around 20 percent. Read Full Post…

ICBC Investment Brouhaha: Crackdown Ahead?

Crackdown coming on financial products?

The latest reports of unrest among some unhappy investors who bought a product that failed to deliver on promised returns through top lender ICBC (HKEx: 1398; HKEx: 601398) bodes poorly for a recent boom in similar products, hinting at a looming crackdown that could send a chill over the entire industry. I previously predicted we could see such consumer backlash, as many of the products flooding into the market promised unrealistically high returns to lure in investors. Such products may also include disclaimers saying that returns could also be lower, or that investors may even lose money. But unsophisticated Chinese investors often ignore such small-print, which will inevitably lead to howls of complaint when they don’t receive the headline returns. Read Full Post…