Tag Archives: People’s Daily

INTERNET: Weibo Nets People’s Daily, Passes Twitter

Bottom line: Weibo’s rise from the ashes is likely to be followed by a decline similar to the one after its initial rise, as the current boom in live broadcasting wanes or that part of its business gets stolen by a better product from rival Tencent. 

Weibo links with People’s Daily

A turbo-charged Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) is in a couple of headlines as the new week begins, led by a new partnership with Beijing’s powerful central media that looks eerily similar to one from about 5 years ago. At the same time, the company is also in headlines for passing its role model, U.S. social networking pioneer Twitter (Nasdaq: TWTR), in terms of market value, in a case of the offspring outrunning the parent.

The sub-story to all of this is the huge and sudden explosion of live streaming services in China, which has helped Weibo to rise from the ashes and suddenly become one of China’s hottest companies again. That same live streaming phenomenon is also helping to revive others, such as Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO), sometimes called China’s equivalent of U.S. hooking-up app Tinder. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Fox, Warner Eye New China Film Tie-Ups

Bottom line: Rupert Murdoch could soon announce a new China film tie-up after meeting with President Xi Jinping, while Warner Bros’ new China production venture could see mixed results due to the market’s challenging nature.

Warner, Murdoch salivate at China film market

Media heavyweights Rupert Murdoch and Warner Bros are both in the headlines, each snooping around the fringes of China’s film market in search of ways to exploit the nation’s booming box office. In the latest sign that Murdoch may be set to re-enter the market after an earlier withdrawal, the aging head of Twenty-First Century Fox (Nasdaq: FOX) was in Beijing late last week where he got a rare private meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping. That meeting was chronicled in an upbeat report by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party.

Meantime, Warner Bros was doing its own dance with China’s state establishment, announcing a film-making joint venture with a private equity fund owned by the nation’s second largest traditional media company. That deal saw Warner and China Media Capital (CMC) announce the formation of Flagship Entertainment Group, which will produce films in China for both the domestic box office and also overseas markets. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: iPhone Leads China List of Data Hogs

Bottom line: The iPhone’s appearance at the top of a Chinese investigative list of “data hogs” reflects the company’s obsession with control, but is unlikely to have a long-term negative effect on its local image.

iPhones gobble up data

Chinese media are once again feasting on leading smartphone maker Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), which has has come out squarely on top of a “list of shame” that details how some of the best selling brands quietly steal data minutes from their unaware users. I’m not an iPhone user so I can’t attest to how the iPhones steal their data and how easy it is for users to stop the process. But my Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Nexus phone is guilty of similar data hogging, and I had to pay a couple of large phone bills after I first bought it before I finally learned how to stop such automatic data consumption. Read Full Post…

IBM Gains, Losses Highlight China’s Tech Conundrum

IBM launches environmental initiative

A trio of cross-border news bits is highlighting the complexities in the China-US trade relationship, where accusations of cybersyping from both sides have raised tensions and threatened to derail business dealings in the sensitive high-tech space. All 3 news bits involve tech giant IBM (NYSE: IBM), which was one of the earliest and most active US tech firms to come to China, and thus stands to lose the most from recent tensions. Two of the headlines look relatively positive, including China’s approval of a multibillion-dollar M&A deal and IBM’s launch of a major new business initiative. The third looks more ominous, and has a top lender preparing to ditch its IBM servers in favor of homegrown products in a shift that looks highly political.

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Tencent Ties With 58.com, Xiaomi With Xunlei

Tencent buys into 58.com

Newly listed companies are becoming popular investment targets for some of China’s tech giants, with online classified site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) and video sharing site Xunlei (Nasdaq: XNET) both picking up major new backers in the form of Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Xiaomi, respectively. Meantime in other IPO news, a long-delayed domestic IPO for the website of the official Xinhua news agency is finally moving ahead, some 2 and a half years after a deal was first rumored. The case of Xinhuanet is particularly interesting because Xinhua and People’s Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper whose People.com (Shanghai: 603000) website is already listed, recently merged their 2 money-losing online search sites. Read Full Post…

Nu Skin Falls Under Media Microscope

Nu Skin blasted by People’s Daily

It’s not too often that I agree with articles published in the People’s Daily, but for once I  have to say that a new attack by the newspaper on personal health products maker Nu Skin (NYSE: NUS) looks at least partly deserved. That said, I did find the language used to attack Nu Skin somewhat comical and exaggerated, even if it the basic ideas are probably true. I was also somewhat surprised at how big a market China has become for Nu Skin, reflecting how easily such companies can win over Chinese consumers and businesspeople who often assume that any product with a western name must be good and trustworthy. Read Full Post…

News Digest: November 5, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alipay Restructures, Nearly 20,000 Employees Become Stakeholders (Chinese article)
  • Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) Announces Selective Preliminary Q3 Results (PRNewswire)
  • People’s Daily’s Jike Search Engine In Process Of Disappearing (Chinese article)
  • Mindray (NYSE: MR) Announces Up To $200 Mln Share Repurchase Program (PRNewswire)
  • AFM: China’s Top Industry Players to Descend on Hollywood (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

People’s Daily, Xinhua Merge Search Sites

Jike to merge with Panguso

When is the merger of search sites operated by 2 major media and a top telco not a very big news story? The answer: When all 3 of those companies are big state-run behemoths that have a poor track record for innovation in the fast-moving Internet world. That’s my personal assessment on reading news that Panguso and Jike, the respective online search sites of the Xinhua news agency and People’s Daily newspaper, have merged their operations to form a new company. (English article) In addition to its Xinhua backing, Panguso counts dominant mobile carrier China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) as its other major stakeholder. Read Full Post…

Chinese Media Take Aim At Microsoft

Media take aim at Microsoft

A new attack on software giant Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) by an English-language Chinese broadcaster looks like a relatively minor affair and would probably not even qualify as news in most western markets. But this is China, where all media are owned by the state and often support each other by speaking with a single voice. That means this new criticism by China National Radio could be just the opening shot against the world’s largest software maker, similar to an ambush faced by rival Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) just weeks ago. Read Full Post…

Critique Lands Lee Kai-Fu In Trouble 李开复因评论惹麻烦

Chinese Internet icon Lee Kai-Fu’s penchant for controversy is once again splashing into the headlines, this time with word that the former Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) China executive has gotten himself in trouble for criticizing the foundering online search engine of a major state-owned newspaper. This latest brouhaha highlights the risk that people who do business in China face when they speak too candidly in public forums about major official organizations like the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party.

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Alibaba, Sogou in New Search Moves 阿里巴巴和搜狗向在线搜索业务发力

There’s a flurry of interesting new developments in China’s online search market, which has suddenly become a hotbed of new activity after a several years of quiet during a period of domination by sector leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Leading the reports is news that e-commerce giant Alibaba, which already operates an e-commerce search site called eTao, is entering the more mainstream search market. At the same time, other reports are saying that Sohu’s (Nasdaq: SOHU) Sogou, the industry’s third largest search engine, is in talks to acquire Soso, the search engine run by Chinese Internet titan Tencent (Nasdaq: 700). Lastly there’s the more minor news bit that the search engine run by the People’s Daily has run into hard times and is laying off up to 10 percent of its staff.

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