Tag Archives: iQiyi

iQiyi, is China’s leading advertising supported online television and movie portal.
Overview of the expert of Chinese high Tech company expert Doug Young

MEDIA: Youku Tudou Eyes Overhaul in Pursuit of Respect

Bottom line: Youku Tudou’s new name and campaign to create more exclusive content look like good strategic moves, but it really needs to sell itself to a larger benefactor to ensure its longer-term future.

Youku Tudou to change name, develop content ecosystem

Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) was once China’s top online video site when it was formed 3 years ago through the merger of the country’s 2 leading players. But those glory days are firmly in the past now, as the company has been overtaken by more aggressive names like LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) and iQiyi, the service backed by cash-rich online search giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU).

Now media are reporting that Youku Tudou is rolling out a major overhaul that will include a new name for the company, as well as a massive spending campaign to build up an ecosystem for creating its own video content. The campaign certainly seems interesting and long overdue. But I’ve argued for a while now and still believe that what Youku Tudou really needs is to consider selling itself to a stronger Internet partner, rather than trying to continue as an independent company. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Focus Media Changes Course, Renaissance Eyes Buyouts

Bottom line: Focus Media will re-list with a high valuation on a new enterprise-style board set to launch in Shanghai next year, while China Renaissance’s new fund to help US-listed firms privatize will attract strong investor interest.

Focus Media changes IPO re-listing plan

A couple of items are in the news involving the recent buyout wave for US-listed Chinese companies, which are rapidly abandoning New York in search of higher valuations in their home market. In an abrupt and somewhat surprising shift, Focus Media, one of the first companies in this homecoming wave, is reportedly abandoning its original plan for Shanghai.

The second item has China Renaissance, a well-respected domestic private equity firm, preparing to raise a major new fund that will help to finance privatizations of Chinese firms from New York. This particular deal looks significant, since many of the nearly 3 dozens firms to announce privatization plans this year could soon need new funding if previous commitments collapse due to recent volatility in China’s domestic stock markets. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Soaring Costs Sap Baidu Profit Growth

Bottom line: Baidu’s heavy spending on new businesses is rapidly eroding its profits, a strategy that looks acceptable over the short-term but should be abandoned within a year or two if it fails to produce results.

online search leader Baidu

Baidu profit disappoints

I have to commend online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) for steadily maintaining strong revenue growth of 30 percent or more over the last few years, even as China’s overall economy has started to slow and the company faces growing challenges from new rivals. But that said, Baidu‘s costs seem to be rising even faster that its revenue, which has led to anemic profit growth in its latest quarterly results.

At the end of the day, investors should be most concerned about profits at any company, since a stock price is directly tied to the bottom line. But Baidu seems to be less interested these days in profits. The company is indeed facing many challenges, both to its core search business and also as it expands into new areas, which is driving the rising costs. But it also needs to learn to bring those costs under control, to roughly in line with revenue growth, or risk facing the wrath of investors.

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INTERNET: Xunlei Ties With Baidu, 58.com Works on ChinaHR

Bottom line: Baidu could buy a small stake in Xunlei but is unlikely to acquire the company outright as part of their new alliance, while 58.com’s plan to rebuild its newly acquired job site should have good chances of success.

58.com goes to work on ChinaHR

I’ve been predicting a marriage for a while for online video orphan Xunlei (Nasdaq: XNET), even as it remains stubbornly single despite its lack of scale to survive as an independent company. First it appeared the company might get bought by smartphone sensation Xiaomi after the pair boosted their strategic tie-up in May, but then nothing more happened. Now the gossip mills are likely to start turning again, following the latest announcement of a major partnership between Xunlei and Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi online video service.

58.com

Meantime in another Internet news bit, the top executive at leading online classified ad site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) is saying he will need 2 years to turn around the underperforming online job site ChinaHR, which he acquired earlier this year. His assessment comes after the site laid off nearly all of its staff as part of the deal that saw 58.com buy ChinaHR from its Irish owner. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Baidu Throws Nuomi at Dianping, Meituan

Bottom line: Baidu’s spending blitz at Nuomi looks like a good but expensive strategy to help the company quickly pick up market share in the group buying space, and could pose a serious challenge to industry leaders Dianping and Meituan.

About Internet Giant Baidu

Baidu revs up spending at Nuomi

Internet giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is making a major push into the group buying space, announcing a bold campaign that includes 20 billion yuan ($3.2 billion) in new spending as it aims to replicate its earliest success in online search. This particular campaign is focused on Baidu’s Nuomi group buying site that it purchased a year and a half ago, and has the site’s chief saying he aims to overtake industry leaders Dianping and Meituan in the next 1 year and 3 years, respectively.

This particular campaign surprised me a bit, as Baidu hasn’t really announced any major plans for Nuomi since buying the company from struggling social networking site Renren (NYSE: RENN) for more than $200 million. But this kind of move would be similar to what Baidu did with online travel site Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR), which was already growing quickly when Baidu purchased a controlling stake in 2011. Since then, Qunar has made an IPO and Baidu has poured big money into the company, which is now posing a serious challenge to longtime industry leader Ctrip. (Nasdaq: CTRP) Read Full Post…

IPOs: New China Board Nets iQiyi, Ant Financial; Buyout Shares Sag

Bottom line: Shanghai will bid aggressively for Chinese tech firms to list on a new Nasdaq-style board planned for the city, while shares of companies privatizing from New York will continue to sag in sync with China’s stock market sell-off.

Soccer club eyes IPO on new Shanghai board

A new Shanghai-based Chinese board that aims to compete with Wall Street for new high-tech listings is moving closer to reality, with reports that Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi online video service and Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) affiliated Ant Financial unit will be among the exchange’s inaugural listing candidates. A separate report also says that another Alibaba-affiliated company, soccer team Evergrande Taobao, will also list on the board, which is being referred to right now as the new strategic industries board.

Meantime in New York, the current week looks set to end with just a single privatization announcement for a US-listed Chinese firm, a sharp slowdown from the 20 earlier offers in the month of June. In this case the abrupt slowdown is at least partly due to the plunge in China’s stock markets this week, and we’re unlikely to see any more offers until the situation stabilizes. Read Full Post…

News Digest: July 3, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 3. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • iQiyi, Ant Financial Picked to Make First IPOs on New Strategic Industries Board (Chinese article)
  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Said in Talks for More Seattle-Area Office Space (English article)
  • Xiaomi Sold 34.7 Mln Smartphones In H1 2015, Up 33 Pct Year-On-Year (English article)
  • China Unicom (HKEx: 763) Makes 4G Service Available to MVNOs (Chinese article)
  • Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) Receives Final Judgment in Its Dispute With eLong (GlobeNewswire)

MEDIA: SMG Challenges LeTV, Xiaomi with MTC Buy

Bottom line: Oriental Pearl’s new purchase of a stake in a set-top box and TV maker is part of a broader series of recent moves that could help position it to emerge as a viable rival to China’s private online video companies.

SMG buys into TV maker MTC

State-run broadcaster Shanghai Media Group (SMG) is wasting no time telling the world who it sees as its main rivals, with word that the company is buying a major stake in a TV and set-top box maker after completing an overhaul of its own digital TV assets. Anyone who follows the industry will know that the high-flying LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) appears to be the major target of this new SMG tie-up, which is seeing the company’s newly launched Oriental Pearl (Shanghai: 600637) digital video unit purchase a major stake in a Shenzhen-listed company called MTC (Shenzhen: 002429) for 2.2 billion yuan ($350 million). Read Full Post…

MEDIA: LeTV, iQiyi, Youku Snared In Crackdown — Again

Bottom line: Beijing’s latest online video clean-up is part of its drive to guide a bigger transition from a traditional TV to an Internet-based broadcasting landscape, with more similar moves likely over the next 1-2 years.

Beijing cracks down on cartoons

It’s been at least a month or two since Beijing’s latest crackdown on unhealthy Internet content, so it should come as no surprise that the morality police have launched yet another campaign, this time targeting cartoons. The latest dragnet has snared video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), Baidu-backed (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi and most other top industry players, who are among 29 companies being investigated in this latest web clampdown.

China’s broader Internet clean-up campaign is now actually entering its second year, and dates back to April last year when leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) had its video license revoked for hosting pornographic content. (previous post) Since then, nearly ever major video site has been investigated and punished at one point or another, and social networking sites (SNS) like Tencent (HKEx: 700) WeChat have also embarked on clean-ups of controversial content. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 9, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 9. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), iQiyi, Others Probed For Pornographic Cartoons (Chinese article)
  • Social Security Fund Buys 640 Mln Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030) Shares In Tie-Up (Chinese article)
  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Acquires Local Japanese Advertising Firm PopIn (Chinese article)
  • Shunfeng (HKEx: 1165) to Boost Suntech Solar Factory Capacity by 1 Gigawatt (English article)
  • Indonesia’s Bank Windu Says Pursuing ‘Corporate Action’ With CCB (HKEx: 939) (English article)

MEDIA: CCTV Takes Aim At LeTV, JD.com

Bottom line: CCTV’s new attacks on LeTV and JD.com reflect its growing assertiveness to counter the rise of new media, and could become more frequent in the months and years ahead.

CCTV takes aim at LeTV, JD.com

The rapid rise of new media is posing a serious challenge to China’s traditional media, which is perhaps partly behind a couple of headlines that have state-run broadcasting giant CCTV leveling separate attacks against online video high-flyer LeTV and e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD). The first case has seen CCTV sue LeTV for copyright infringement related to its popular Lunar New Year’s eve TV program. The second has CCTV airing an investigative report accusing JD.com of offering refurbished iPhones over its site that used unauthorized components, causing some to break down. Read Full Post…