Tag Archives: Liu Qiangdong

INTERNET: CEO’s Love Antics Tarnish JD.com

Bottom line: JD.com CEO Richard Liu needs to behave more professionally in his business and personally lives, or risk seeing the reputation of his company suffer.

JD.com CEO love saga buzzes in cyberspace

China’s high-tech world is filled with colorful personalities, but few have managed to capture the public’s imagination like JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) founder Richard Liu, or Liu Qiangdong, whose love life has been the source of major headlines this week. I personally find such this kind of chatter entertaining but don’t usually write about it, because it’s not really related to the companies these executives represent. But in this case Liu’s antics are an increasing embarrassment to JD.com, and don’t seem fitting for an e-commerce giant that generated nearly $5 billion in revenue in its latest reporting quarter and has a market value of $34 billion. Read Full Post…

Weibo: JD.com, NQ CEOs Resume Blogging After Long Pauses

JD, NQ top execs blog again after long pauses

Three of China’s shyest tech CEOs have made rare appearances on their microblogs over the past week, emerging from the shadows after difficult periods for at least 2 of their firms. Liu Qingdong, CEO of e-commerce giant JD.com, was the first to come out of his shell, ending a 19 month self-imposed silence. He was followed by NQ Mobile’s (NYSE: NQ) CEO Lin Yu, whose microblog had gone silent since a scandal last year that saw the security software maker came under a short seller attack. Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) CEO Pony Ma also made a relatively rare posting on his microblog, though in this case his appearance was mostly promotional as he trumpeted another major milestone for his company’s popular social networking services. Read Full Post…

JD Shuffles Boardroom, Alibaba Profit Soars

JD makes boardroom adjustment

There’s a flurry of news out today on China’s 2 leading e-commerce firms, led by a new IPO filing and major boardroom adjustment at JD.com as the nation’s second largest player prepares to raise up to $1.5 billion through a New York listing. Meantime, industry leader Alibaba has reported impressive earnings for the fourth quarter of 2013, as it also heads towards a major New York listing as soon as later this year. JD’s boardroom change looks most interesting to me, as it’s a bit unusual to see such major movement in a company’s top ranks so close to an IPO. That leads me to wonder if this is the first in a series of moves leading to the eventual marginalization of JD founder and CEO Liu Qiangdong. Read Full Post…

Jumei Eyes $600 Mln IPO, JD’s Liu Eyes Rich List

Cosmetic seller Jumei.com readies for IPO

The pace of new Internet IPOs coming out of China continues to build up steam, with word that yet another e-commerce company has hired investment banks for a mega offering to raise up to $600 million. The move by Jumei.com, an online seller of cosmetics, comes just a week after JD.com, China’s second largest e-commerce firm, made its first public filing for a New York IPO to raise up to $1.5 billion. A new separate report is now saying that JD.com founder and chief executive Liu Qiangdong could enter the realm of China’s richest men following the offering, with his stake in the company expected to give him a net worth of up to $7 billion. Read Full Post…

Weibo: Jingdong, Alibaba Rush IPO, SNS; Parcel Services in Chaos

Alibaba continues hyping Laiwang

The microblog realm has been buzzing loudly this final week of 2013 with stories that are likely to be major themes in the new year, led by a probable IPO by Jingdong, China’s second largest e-commerce firm. Meantime, e-commerce leader Alibaba was showing no signs of slowing down the endless promotion of its recently launched mobile instant messaging (IM) service Laiwang, as it tries to catch up with Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) hugely popular WeChat rival service. Lastly, tweets coming from top e-commerce firms Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) hint that 2014 could see the start of consolidation in the booming but also fiercely competitive parcel delivery sector, perhaps including a few major acquisitions and closures and a long-awaited domestic IPO for China Postal Express, the parcel delivery unit of China’s Post Office. (previous post) Read Full Post…

Weibo: Jingdong’s Liu Comes Home, Weibo Loses Luster

Jingdong’s Liu comes home after year abroad

A major homecoming for the top executive at e-commerce giant Jingdong is topping the news this week in China’s microblog airwaves, which have been humming with gossip in the run-up to the Christmas holidays. Internet watchers will know I’m talking about Jingdong’s talkative founder Liu Qiangdong, whose voice suddenly disappeared from the microblogging realm for much of this year. Now we’re learning that his silence was due to his quiet departure from China for the US, where he spent a year in a study program.

Elsewhere in the microblogging world, a couple of high level executives at UnionPay, operator of China’s leading electronic payments network, and game operator 4399 are drawing attention to the fact that Sina’s (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo microblogging service may be past its peak and losing its luster. I’ve also noticed this trend, which spotlights how China’s Internet seems much more susceptible to fads than in other parts of the world. Read Full Post…