Tag Archives: Etao

News Digest: September 13, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 13. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • ZTE (HKEx: 763), Huawei Win US 337 Infringement Investigation (English article)
  • China’s Wanda Has $5 Bln A Year For Foreign Acquisitions (English article)
  • Mobile Is Becoming The Key Booking Platform For Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) (PRNewswire)
  • Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Microblog, eTao Partner On Price Drop Alerts (English article)
  • China To Issue 4G Telecoms Licenses Very Soon – NDRC Official (Chinese article)

Google Rethinks China E-Commerce

Google’s new “good value” site shows continued China commitment

Six months after abruptly shuttering its China-based e-commerce search business, global Internet titan Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is reportedly rethinking that decision with plans to re-enter the market. The decision looks like the latest acknowledgement by Google that China is simply too big to ignore, following its high profile shuttering of its China-based general search business in 2010 after a spat with Beijing over censorship. If this latest story is true, the next logical question might be whether we could see Google return to the general China search market, where competition is suddenly starting to heat up after years of dominance by market leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Read Full Post…

News Digest: May 23, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 23. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Galaxy Securities (HKEx: 6881) Soars 11 Pct In Debut After $1.1 Bln HK IPO (English article)
  • Sovereign Funds, China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939) Buy Into Russia’s VTB (English article)
  • Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Partners with Etao to Introduce Shopping Search (English article)
  • Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) Reports Q1 Unaudited Results (PRNewswire)
  • Pactera (Nasdaq: PACT) Board Forms Privatization Plan Review Committee (PRNewswire)

Alibaba Scrambles to Prove High Valuation 阿里巴巴高估值或将作茧自缚

E-commerce leader Alibaba, scrambling to find financing to buy back a 40 percent stake in itself held by Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO), is in a sudden scramble to tell the world why it’s worth $32 billion — a number it helped to float into the market back in September and one which, in my view, seems ridiculously high. In separate news bits from the last day or so, media are reporting the company’s Etao e-commerce search engine has launched a historical pricing search feature (English article), while its popular Taobao consumer-oriented sites have launched social networking functions. (English article) First Etao, which Alibaba hopes to build up as an e-commerce search specialist to one day take on industry titan Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). This historical price search function seems like a good idea, as it would make it easier for cost-conscious consumers to track previous prices for items they want to buy. The only problem is that historical prices could soon be the only thing that Etao can show, as several major online retailers, including 360Buy and Dangdang (NYSE: DANG), have blocked their items from being indexed in Etao search results. (previous post) Meantime, the social networking functions being built into Taobao seem like a direct attempt to take on existing SNS sites like Renren (NYSE: RENN) and Sina’s (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo. While this strategy of building on its industry-leading C2C and B2C platforms to build up SNS sounds interesting, the two areas are relatively unrelated and few if any Chinese web firms have successfully executed similar strategies despite many efforts to leverage popular existing services to build up a new, unrelated ones. This flurry of initiatives seems designed, at least in part, to show the world why Alibaba thinks it may be worth $32 billion. Its only listed unit, Alibaba.com (HKEx: 1688) has a market cap of about $5 billion. That means that its other big assets, which mostly consist of a very successful Taobao Mall and more modestly successful Etao and its Alipay e-payment service, would have to be worth $27 billion collectively, which seems unlikely. Ironically, Alibaba’s high estimation of its own value could ultimately come back to hurt it, as Yahoo apparently seems to want to sell its 40 percent of Alibaba based on that overinflated value. The true amount will come out when a sale finally occurs, but I suspect the final valuation will be closer to $20 billion.

Bottom line: Alibaba is trying to convince the market it is worth $32 billion, but a sale of 40 percent of the company held by Yahoo will probably show a much lower valuation.

Related postings 相关文章:

Alibaba Tests Waters for Yahoo Buyout – Again 阿里巴巴再试水竞购雅虎股权

Alibaba’s Incredible Shrinking Profit Growth 阿里巴巴盈利呈加速放缓趋势

Albaba Faces New Assaults From Merchants, 360Buy 阿里巴巴受到中小商户和京东商城的双重夹攻

 

Tidbits: Alibaba, Anhui Conch, Sinopec, China Mobile

There are quite a few too good stories out there today, so here are some quick takes on a few that didn’t make the headlines but look interesting nonetheless.

— The chief executive of Alibaba’s Etao has held a high-profile media briefing to announce his company, operator of a search engine specializing in e-commerce, will invest 1 billion yuan in its business. (English article) This event is a clear signal to the market that Alibaba intends to stand by this investment despite recent moves by a number of major e-commerce sites, including 360Buy, Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and Suning (Shenzhen: 002024), to block their pages from inclusion in Etao’s search results.

Sinopec (HKEx: 386; NYSE: SNP) is reportedly in talks to buy a stake in Galp’s Brazilian Unit, for what’s sure to be an overinflated price. (English article) This latest potential mega-acquisition by a Chinese oil major just shows how China’s policy of buying global assets at any cost to feed its growing economy continues to be in effect, even as oil prices show every sign of coming down for an extended period.

— The China Daily is reporting that Anhui Conch (Shanghai: 600585; HKEx: 914), one of the country’s leading cement makers, aims to go global by purchasing distressed international assets for bargain prices, as most of the world’s construction industry suffers during the global downturn. I would look for this company to carry through with this plan with a major announcement or two over the next year, but have serious doubts about its ability to manage such global assets.

— Chinese media are reporting that China Mobile‘s (HKEx: 941) long-running talks with Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) to make a TD-SCDMA iPhone have finally broken down, confirming what I had already suspected several weeks back. (Chinese article) If true, which seems likely, this would be a relatively major setback for China Mobile, which was counting on the iPhone to breathe some life into its anemic 3G business.

Alibaba’s Etao Faces New Merchant Revolt

E-commerce leader Alibaba Group looks set to soon get its long-awaited wish for separation from major stakeholder Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO), but it won’t have much time to celebrate as new fires seem to be popping up everywhere for nearly all of its major businesses. The latest crisis for the increasingly embattled company has cropped up at its Etao search site, which Alibaba is trying to build up as a specialist in e-commerce searches that can eventually rival online search titan Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Chinese media are reporting that Etao has confirmed that it is no longer indexing search information from sites for a number of major online retailers, including general merchandiser Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and electronics giant Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) (Chinese article). The confirmation comes just a week after another leading e-commerce site, 360Buy, hinted it may block its pages from Etao searches (previous post), and indeed 360Buy was among the new list of confirmed companies whose pages will no longer be indexed by Etao. With all these major online retailers blocking their material from Etao searches, and the list likely to grow, Alibaba must certainly be worried about the future viability of Etao as a true e-commerce search engine. This latest crisis follows an uprising earlier this month by independent merchants on Alibaba’s B2C platform, Taobao Mall, after the site sharply hiked its fees. That same group of merchants, which has been wreaking havoc on the Taobao Mall site, later moved its rabble-rousing campaign to Alibaba’s electronic payments site, Alipay, as well. (previous post) While all of these crises rage, Alibaba got a rare piece of good news as domestic media reported that Yahoo is looking to sell its 40 percent stake in Alibaba, as the US web giant tries to dispell broader talk that the entire company itself is for sale. Alibaba has long clamored for Yahoo to sell the stake amid friction between the two companies, so clearly it should be happy about this news. But with all the crises now happening in its own businesses, Alibaba won’t have much time to celebrate and indeed might wish it had an ally to help it in this time of trouble.

Bottom line: Alibaba may soon get its official independence from major stakeholder Yahoo, but it won’t have time to celebrate as it faces an escalating crisis at its Etao search site.

Related postings 相关文章:

Albaba Faces New Assaults From Merchants, 360Buy 阿里巴巴受到中小商户和京东商城的双重夹攻

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

Alibaba Sharpens Focus in Yahoo Buy-Out, Taobao Mall 阿里巴巴回购雅虎所持股权有望

Albaba Faces New Assaults From Merchants, 360Buy 阿里巴巴受到中小商户和京东商城的双重夹攻

Embattled Chinese e-commerce leader Alibaba is looking more and more like a fortress under attack these days, facing assaults on two fronts in the latest chapter of its ongoing spats with the rest of the online world. The first and more serious of those spats has seen smaller online merchants, upset over huge fee hikes at Taobao Mall, Alibaba’s main B2C site, launch an assault on Alibaba’s Alipay electronic payments site, according to domestic media reports. (English article; Chinese article) The reports are quite colorful, with enraged small- and medium-sized merchants, who have complained the fee hikes are designed to weed them out, withdrawing massive amounts of money from Alipay one day late last week, and then blocking access to the service completely. This mass movement comes after the same group of merchants wreaked havoc on Taobao Mall itself a couple of weeks ago by making mass bogus purchases from large merchants on the site, only to cancel their transactions hours later. (previous post) Beijing has reportedly stepped in to try to mediate the dispute and Alibaba itself has made some conciliatory gestures, but obviously the merchants aren’t happy with progress so far and the damage to Taobao Mall looks set to drag on for at least a couple of months, if not longer. In the second development, media are reporting that 360Buy, one of China’s largest e-commerce sites, is hinting it may soon block its pages from searches on Etao, Alibaba’s site that specializes in e-commerce related searches. (Chinese article) Such a break would be a major blow to Etao, and would follow 360Buy’s cut off of ties with Alipay back in August, reflecting a broader feud. (previous post) Many in the online world already blame Alibaba founder Jack Ma for the negative overseas sentiment towards China Internet stocks due to his high profile dispute with Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) earlier this year over ownership of Alipay. These latest disputes will hardly help his company’s damaged reputation, and could mark the latest chapter in a longer decline for the company.

Bottom line: Alibaba’s latest disputes with smaller merchants on its Taobao platform and e-commerce giant 360Buy mark the latest chapter in what could become a long-term decline for the firm.

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

Alibaba Sharpens Focus in Yahoo Buy-Out, Taobao Mall 阿里巴巴回购雅虎所持股权有望

Alibaba.com Blows Smoke With HiChina Spin-Off Plan 阿里巴巴网络分拆万网放烟幕弹