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Tag Archives: Qualcomm
China Qualcomm latest Business & Financial news from Doug Young, the Expert on Chinese High Tech Market, (former Journalist and Chief editor at Reuters)
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Audi May Be Fined 250 Mln Yuan In First Anti-Trust Penalty Against Car Makers (Chinese article)
Mercedes under microscope for after-sales practices
It’s a new day, which means it’s time for yet another government investigation into foreign firms that are coming under increasing scrutiny for both their products and business practices. This time it’s luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz (Frankfurt DAIGn) that’s coming under the microscope for anti-competitive pricing in China. Word of this latest probe comes just a week after software giant Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) revealed it is being probed for monopolistic business practices. (previous post)
Other major western multinationals have been probed for similar anti-competitive behavior in the latest year-long campaign, and still others have been targeted over allegations of corruption. Yet another group has been blacklisted from selling to to government organizations over concerns their products could create national security risks. Read Full Post…
Beijing’s recent campaign against foreign tech firms is picking up more momentum, with word that security software makers Symantec (Nasdaq: SYMC) and Kaspersky Lab have been banned from selling to government agencies. The move continues a trend that has seen Beijing take similar moves against software from Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and hardware from IBM (NYSE: IBM) over worries that their products could compromise national security.
Meantime in another ominous sign for foreign tech firms, a government ministry that conducts anti-monopoly investigations is warning Microsoft not to interfere with its ongoing probe of the company. Industry watchers will note that the warning from the State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC) comes as an unrelated trial gets set to start for a British-American couple being charged with interfering in a bribery probe into British drug giant GlaxoSmithKline (London: GSK). Read Full Post…
US software giant Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the subject of 2 major news stories today, casting a spotlight on a pair of very different trends involving e-commerce and foreign companies in China. The first news bit has the world’s largest software company formally launching sales of its Xbox gaming console in China through a tie-up with JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), spotlighting the rapid rise of China’s second largest e-commerce company following its own tie-up with Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) earlier this year. The second news bit looks more ominous, with word that Microsoft is being probed by one of China’s anti-trust regulators. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China To Try GSK-linked (London: GSK) Investigator In Secret: Family Friends (English article)
A new complaint in Europe by smartphone maker ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) is shining a spotlight on Chinese gadget makers’ dependence on foreign technology, which often ends up making them hostages to big western patent holders. I personally find ZTE’s new complaint against Vringo just slightly amusing, since ZTE and crosstown rival Huawei are consistently among the world’s largest global patent recipients these last few years — a fact both companies love to trumpet. Apparently many of those patents aren’t worth too much, which leaves companies like ZTE still quite reliant on foreign technology. Read Full Post…
The latest reports that Beijing is pressuring Chinese banks to stop using high-end servers from computing giant IBM (NYSE: IBM) don’t come as a huge surprise, amid escalating tensions between China and the US over cyber spying. This particular development is just the latest in a series of similar moves that dates back to last year, when Beijing began quietly pressuring many big state-run firms to stop using US tech products following revelations from the Edward Snowden cyber-spying scandal. The ironic element of Beijing’s anti-foreign tech campaign is that it could actually make the nation’s technology networks and systems even more vulnerable to spying, since most domestic products are far less sophisticated than their foreign counterparts. Read Full Post…
Two news threads that started with relatively isolated moves are showing signs of becoming trends, with word that Beijing is taking new actions against overseas tech and drug firms. In the former case, media are reporting that China is preparing to roll out new security checks for all foreign IT products, in a move that looks aimed at the computing and telecoms sectors. The latter case has media reporting that investigators have visited the offices of Swiss drug giant Roche (Switzerland: ROG), which could auger more formal moves against the company for corrupt business practices. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Alibaba Offers $1.6 Bln For Digital Mapping Firm AutoNavi (Nasdaq: AMAP) (English article)
China’s Dongfeng (HKEx: 489) Says Held Talks With Peugeot, No Deal Yet (English article)
Does the world really need another cool and trendy smartphone maker from China? At least one entrepreneur seems to think the answer is yes, with the launch of a new brand called OnePlus at an event last week in Beijing. Normally I wouldn’t give too much attention to this kind of launch, since everyone in China is rushing these days to try and copy the trend Xiaomi, which itself is trying to copy the success of global tech giant Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL). But the fact that such a new company like OnePlus could attract so much attention for its event, including a blogosphere plug from global chip giant Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM), is making me hedge my bets that perhaps this could be a company to watch. Read Full Post…