Tag Archives: HP

TELECOMS: Unigroup Turns Up IT Drive With $23 Bln Micron Bid

Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s bid for Micron could move it towards a goal of becoming China’s first world-class IT products and services provider, though it could face potential rival bids and objections from Washington.

Unigroup makes bid for Micron

After puttering around with a few high-profile deals in $1 billion neighborhood, Tsinghua Unigroup has suddenly turned up the volume in its drive to assemble a Chinese IT giant with a massive $23 billion bid for US memory giant Micron (Nasdaq: MU). I’ll be the first to admit I didn’t see this particular deal coming, and I have some doubts about whether it will actually close due to its large size and also potential political sensitivities.

But Unigroup, which has already formed telecoms technology deals with US tech giants Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), has certainly shown it’s serious about try to assemble a major IT products and services provider. China is currently one of the world’s top consumers of such products, which power most of the world’s electronics and internal company networks. But despite that position, the country has yet to produce a company that can compete with such global giants as Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) in the chip space, and IBM (NYSE: IBM) in IT services. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: Beijing Tech Crackdown Takes Bite Out of Cisco

Bottom line: Cisco’s dismissal of several top China executives reflects its struggles in the market, and the situation will only improve if it takes a more conciliatory approach to address Beijing’s national security concerns.

Cisco lays off China execs

Beijing’s ongoing clampdown on foreign tech companies over national security concerns is taking a toll on Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO), with word that the US networking equipment giant is laying off several of its top local executives due to falling China sales. This particular development doesn’t come as a huge surprise due to Beijing’s recent obsession with national security and suspicion of foreign tech companies. But Cisco’s struggles do contrast sharply with that of Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), which appears to be faring better in China due to its more conciliatory approach to address Beijing’s concerns.

Read Full Post…

INTERNET: HP, Intel Get Strange China Bedfellow In Online Lottery Site

Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup’s latest investment in an online lottery ticket seller hints that it may add Internet services to its growing list of high-tech products and services through separate tie-ups with Intel and HP.

Unigroup invests in 500.com

A previously little-known company connected with China’s leading science university has made headlines over the last year through major new tie-ups with global tech titans Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HP), which makes its latest investment just slightly puzzling. That investment is seeing Tsinghua Unigroup pour a relatively modest but still significant $124 million into 500.com (NYSE: WBAI), a New York-listed Chinese firm that sells lottery tickets over the Internet.

I’m being just slightly whimsical in tying Unigroup’s latest purchase to its much larger recent tie-ups with Intel and HP, which I’ll recap shortly. But that said, Unigroup has rapidly emerged as a player to watch in a China’s underperforming domestic microchip and IT services sectors, and most of its high-profile investments since it first moved into the spotlight have been centered on efforts to assemble a homegrown Chinese giant in those spaces. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: HP Picks Beijing Group As China IT Partner

Bottom line: HP’s choice of a Beijing-based group with strong ties to a top science university as its China IT services partner looks like a smart move, which will help ease potential for conflict over national security concerns by Beijing.

HP choses Unigroup as China IT partner

Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) has chosen a relatively dynamic, Beijing-based tech company as its future China partner over a stodgier state-run firm in Shanghai, as the US computer giant prepares to split itself into 2. The development is seeing HP get a bit less money than it had hoped for the 51 percent stake of its China-based H3C unit, which makes equipment for use in small telecoms networks. But the choice of Tsinghua Unigroup as the buyer looks quite prudent, and will bring in a new politically connected partner for HP as it prepares to split off its core PC unit from its more dynamic business that sells computing and networking services to enterprises.  Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: HP Asset Sale Sparks China Bidding War

Bottom line: Tsinghua Unigroup is likely to win the bidding for a controlling stake in HP’s China-based networking equipment unit, and could help HP consolidate its place as one of China’s leading IT service providers.

Bidding war breaks out for HP asset sale

Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) is finding itself in a rare position of power in China, with word that an unusual bidding war has broken out as it looks for a partner to buy a controlling stake in its locally-based networking equipment unit. The development could bring not only a windfall in terms of money HP will get for its H3C Technologies unit, but will also allow it to choose between 2 potent partners to help consolidate its place as one of China’s leading IT services providers.

HP is in the process of splitting itself into 2 as part of a broader restructuring announced last fall. In this case the China-based H3C networking equipment venture would almost certainly go into its new HP Enterprise unit, focused on products and services for corporate customers. The other main unit under the break-up will include HP’s older PC and printer businesses, which will go by the name HP Inc. Read Full Post…

News Digest: March 28-30, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on March 28-30. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════

  • HP (NYSE: HPQ) To Sell 51 Pct Of H3C Unit To Tsinghua Unigroup, Seeks $5 Bln (Chinese article)
  • Geely (HKEx: 175) Invests 250 Mln Pounds On British New Energy Taxi Plant (Chinese article)
  • Gome (HKEx: 493) To Open 100,000 Microstores On WeChat (English article)
  • China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939) Announces Annual 2014 Results (HKEx announcement)
  • Telsa (Nasdaq: TSLA) To Localize Production In China In 3 Years: Elon Musk (English article)

CELLPHONES: TCL, Lenovo Try To Rejuvinate Palm, Moto

Bottom line: TCL and Lenovo will face uphill battles in rebuilding the Palm and Motorola brands due to stiff competition and lack of experience building upscale brands.

TCL to resuscitate Palm

It’s no secret that PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) has big plans for its recently acquired Motorola smartphone brand, and now we’re learning that cellphone stalwart TCL (HKEx: 2618; Shenzhen: 000100) has similar plans for the former superstar Palm brand. That’s the latest word coming from Las Vegas, where Lenovo, TCL and other Chinese gadget makers are showing off their latest wares at CES, the world’s biggest consumer electronics show that happens this time each year. While TCL was low-profile about its newly acquired Palm brand, Lenovo was much louder about its plans to relaunch Motorola smartphones in its home market next month. Read Full Post…

HP Eyes Chinese Partner For Router Division

HP shops majority stake in China H3C unit

Ripples from Hewlett-Packard’s (NYSE: HPQ) decision to break itself into 2 companies are being felt in China, with word that HP is looking for someone to buy a majority stake in its China-based router division. I can immediately think of 2 Chinese firms that would be interested in the stake, namely homegrown networking equipment giant Huawei and also leading PC maker Lenovo (HKEx: 992).

China’s second largest networking equipment maker ZTE (HKEx: 763; NYSE: 000063) could also be interested, even though it doesn’t have a past record for major acquisitions. There’s also the chance that one of Europe’s major networking equipment makers might be interested, with Ericsson (Stockholm: ERICb) or Nokia (Helsinki: NOK1V) as the most likely choices. Read Full Post…

News Digest: October 25-27, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 25-27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════

  • China Mobile (HKEx: 941), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Partner on Fetion – Source (English article)
  • HP (NYSE: HPQ) Said To Seek Buyer For Majority Stake Of Chinese H3C Unit (English article)
  • 9 Air Gets Flight Permission, Becomes China’s Newest Budget Airline (Chinese article)
  • MIIT Vice Minister Meets With Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) President Aberle (Chinese article)
  • Users For Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) Yu’ebao Rise 20 Pct In Q3 To 149 Mln (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Lenovo’s New IBM Deal: Deja Vu?

Lenovo buys IBM server unit

While reading reports about Lenovo’s (HKEx: 992) new blockbuster deal to buy IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) low-end server business for $2.3 billion, I felt a strange and unusual lack of enthusiasm from Lenovo’s usually upbeat Chairman Yang Yuanqing. Yang never met a reporter he didn’t like, and he loves to talk about Lenovo’s big hopes and dreams at every opportunity he can get. Yet in the reports I read, this talkative chief executive was decidedly low-key and not extremely bullish on this new mega-deal, his company’s largest and the biggest ever tech acquisition by a Chinese firm. Perhaps that’s because he senses trouble ahead as his company tries to integrate and promote a business whose slowing growth was the main reason IBM desperately wanted to sell the unit. Read Full Post…

Lenovo CEO Breaks With Old Rhetoric For Big Donation

Lenovo’s Yang donates $3 mln to employees

It’s refreshing to see Lenovo’s (HKEx: 992) chatty CEO Yang Yuanqing finally doing something besides boasting about his big plans for the company, with word that he is donating a big chunk of his annual bonus to ordinary employees. I’m a bit too jaded to believe that Yang’s donation of $3 million is a purely selfless act, since he was quite willing to give the media a detailed account of his decision. Still, the latest news comes as a nice break from the usual chatter about new M&A targets and other global aspirations from one of China’s most successful tech firms. Read Full Post…