Tag Archives: Micron

News Digest: July 24, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Walmart (NYSE: WMT) Takes Full Ownership of Yihaodian Business in China (Businesswire)
  • China’s H1 2015 Mobile Internet User Base Hits 594 Mln (English article)
  • Tsinghua Holdings Chief Says Still in Micron (Nasdaq: MU) Talks, Hopeful on Deal (English article)
  • China Postal Savings Bank Seeks Strategic Investors in Run-Up to IPO (Chinese article)
  • Uber Partners With Xiaomi for Smartphone Sales in Singapore (English article)

MULTINATIONALS: Micron Spurns China Bid in Bargaining Tactic

Bottom line: Micron’s decision to discourage a buyout offer from China’s Unigroup is a bargaining tactic due to high regulatory risk, and Unigroup is likely to come back with a sharply raised offer in the next 2 weeks.

Micron discourages China bid

A week after splashing into the headlines, a potential bid by China’s Tsinghua Unigroup for Micron Technology (Nasdaq: MU) is being cast into doubt, with word that the leading US memory chip maker is worried such a deal would get vetoed by Washington on national security grounds. The development comes as a slight surprise to me, as I previously predicted that such a deal would ignite some controversy but would ultimately get approved by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which conducts reviews for national security risks.

It’s quite possible that Micron really doesn’t want to proceed with talks because it believes there’s a big enough chance that such a deal could get vetoed in Washington. But that said, it’s also quite possible that Micron could quickly resume the talks if Unigroup offers a higher price than the previous $21 per share being discussed, and that all of this is just a bargaining tactic. Read Full Post…

News Digest: July 21, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Micron (Nasdaq: MU) Does Not Believe Deal With Tsinghua Is Possible – Sources (English article)
  • Huawei’s H1 Revenue Up 30 Pct Year-on-Year at $28 Bln (English article)
  • Travel Site Tongcheng Launches 100 Bln Yuan Promotion, Links With Wanda (Chinese article)
  • Uniqlo Leaves JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) After 3-Month Trial (English article)
  • No Money Makers Among China’s New VNOs (Chinese article)

MULTINATIONALS: Micron Deal Likely to Get Washington Nod

Bottom line: US national security regulators are likely to approve the potential purchase of Micron by China’s Tsinghua Unigroup, to demonstrate their commitment to fair trade and avoid politicizing cross-border high-tech M&A.

Micron sale likely to get US approval

In the days after reports emerged that China’s Tsinghua Unigroup was planning a bid for US memory chip giant Micron (NYSE: MU), media have been buzzing with speculation over whether Washington might veto a deal on national security grounds. I can understand the logic from both views, and some say recent US allegations of frequent hacking attacks from China could add to arguments for a veto of the deal.

But as a longtime watcher of this kind of transaction, I expect that Washington will ultimately approve the purchase to demonstrate its commitment to fair trade. Such a move would also send a strong signal to Beijing, which is showing growing signs of limiting sales by foreign technology companies in China with its recent introduction of a sweeping new national security law. Read Full Post…

News Digest: July 16, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 16. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • McCain raises concerns about possible China bid for Micron Tech (Nasdaq: MU) (English article)
  • Huawei Gets Permission to Manufacture Cellphones in India (Chinese article)
  • China’s Tsinghua Gives $100 Mln to Android Challenger (English article)
  • Meituan to Acquire Chinese Travel Search Engine Kuxun – Source (English article)
  • HK Securities Regulator Orders Halt to Trading in Hanergy (HKEx: 566) (Chinese article)

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…

News Digest: July 14, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Chip Maker Tsinghua Unigroup Makes $23 Bln Bid for Micron (NYSE: MU) (English article)
  • Billionaire Wang Plans for Wanda to Expand Into Finance Industry (English article)
  • Xiaomi, Partners Planning to Open Privately Funded Bank? (Chinese article)
  • ZTE (HKEx: 763) Prepares 1 Bln Yuan Share Buyback Program (Chinese article)
  • Citic Securites (HKEx: 6030) Announces Preliminary H1 Financial Data (HKEx announcement)

Lenovo Sister Firm Looks to Japan, Taobao Quits “围城”日本:弘毅想冲进去 淘宝想撤出来

Japan’s foreign minister was in China yesterday on an official visit, so I thought I’d start the week with 2 items on Chinese companies in the notoriously difficult Japanese market, including an interesting move into the chip sector by a sister company of PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) and a hasty retreat by e-commerce giant Alibaba. Let’s start with the more intriguing of the items, which is seeing Hony Capital, the high-profile technology investment arm of Lenovo parent Legend Group, pairing with US private equity giant TPG Capital to make a planned bid for bankrupt memory chipmaker Elpida (Tokyo: 6665), according to a Japanese media report. (English article) If they made a bid, the pair would join 2 other suitors, Korea’s Hynix Semiconductor (Seoul: 000660) and US-based Micron (NYSE: MU) in pursuing the Japanese company that controls 12 percent of the global DRAM market. Frankly speaking, Hynix and Micron look like much better suitors for Elpida, as both are competitors that could consolidate the Japanese company into their own operations for an industry that has been in desperate need of consolidation for the last 5 or 6 years. But the Hony-TPG pairing does include one interesting element, namely the Lenovo connection. Lenovo itself has been trying to break into Japan for years now, following its 2005 purchase of IBM’s PC assets that included sales and distribution networks in Japan. More recently Lenovo has taken over the PC assets of NEC (Tokyo: 6701), and has discussed setting up a manufacturing base in Japan. (previous post) A successful bid for Elpida could theoretically provide Lenovo with a strong DRAM supply for its Japan-based business. Still, I would be wary of such a purchase since Lenovo has little or no experience in running a DRAM operation, and it’s unclear what kind of savings it could achieve by combining its Japanese PC business with Elpida’s money-losing memory business. Moving on, the other Japanese news bit has seen Alibaba’s Taobao service officially shutter its Japanese shopping channel that was operating on a platform run by Yahoo Japan (Tokyo: 4689). (Chinese article) Alibaba made a relatively low-key move into Japan several years ago, seeking to take advantage of ties to one of its earliest investors, Japan’s Softbank (Japan: 9984), which is also the main investor in Yahoo Japan along with Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) itself. Clearly the market hasn’t proven as easy to penetrate as Alibaba had hoped, and the media report even says that sales on the Taobao Japan channel were below the company’s targets. This withdrawal doesn’t surprise me at all, as Chinese firms of all types have had a difficult time in the Japanese market, which has become famous for its impenetrability by foreign firms. The other big Chinese web firm trying to crack the market is search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which has spent millions of dollars over the last 3 years on a Japanese search portal with little results to show for that investment. This Taobao withdrawal from the market was completely predictable, and I wouldn’t be surprised at all to see a similar retreat by Baidu within the next 12 months.

Bottom line: A bid by a Lenovo sister company for bankrupt Japanese chipmaker Elpida is likely to fail, while Baidu is likely to follow a recent Alibaba retreat from Japan in the next 12 months.

Related postings 相关文章:

Lenovo Considers Japan Production 联想向日本转移制造业务为明智公关手段

NEC China Cellphones: New Lenovo Tie-Up? NEC计划重回中国手机市场 或与联想联姻

Baidu Dreams of Brazil 百度试水巴西