Tag Archives: Shanghai Media Group

China News Digest: June 2, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Japan’s SoftBank Plans to Sell $7.9 Bln in Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Stock to Cut Debt (English article)
  • Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Sells Patents to Xiaomi, Builds ‘Long-Term Partnership’ (English article)
  • Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Seeking Up To $221 Mln by Selling Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Stock (English article)
  • Jaunt, SMG and CMC Launch Virtual Reality Venture Jaunt China (Businesswire)
  • Michael Kors Acquires Greater China Licensee for $500 Mln (Businesswire)

MEDIA: China Trips up Disney, Paramount; Draws Comcast to DreamWorks

Bottom line: New China setbacks for Disney and Paramount look relatively minor, and reflect their growing involvement in a market whose fast growth is also driving Comcast’s pursuit of DreamWorks Animation.

DreamWorks’ China exposure draws Comcast

In a very rare occurrence, 3 top Hollywood studios are all in the China headlines today, reflecting the growing links between these media titans and a country that could become the world’s largest entertainment market in the next decade. Leading the headlines are relatively minor China setbacks for Disney (NYSE: DIS) and Paramount Pictures, which are facing new battles with Beijing censors and unhappy local clients, respectively.

Meantime, DreamWorks Animation (NYSE: DWA) is reportedly in talks to be bought by US cable TV giant Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSA), and some are pointing out that a major driver behind the deal may be DreamWorks’ strong China exposure. That’s because DreamWorks Animation has bet big on the market, with a major joint venture in Shanghai that produced the latest installment in its Kung Fu Panda series. Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Alibaba Opens Up SCMP Website, Changes PR Head

Bottom line: Alibaba’s removal of the paywall from the SCMP’s website shows it may want to use the newly acquired newspaper in its bigger strategy to get more news from big data, as it seeks to boost its global influence.

Alibaba removes paywall at SCMP.com

E-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is in the headlines as it wraps up its landmark purchase of Hong Kong’s leading English language newspaper, announcing it will formally remove the paywall on the South China Morning Post’s (SCMP) website as its first major strategic move. In a completely separate headline, Alibaba has also named a new head for its international public relations team, replacing a heavy-hitter it hired less than 2 years ago in the run-up to its record-breaking New York IPO.

Both of these moves reflect the rapid changes taking place not only at Alibaba, but also in the traditional media realm where the SCMP operates. Traditional newspapers like the SCMP are looking desperately for new revenue sources as they get abandoned by their traditional advertisers and subscribers who are flocking to the Internet. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Wanda, CMC Kick Up New Soccer Deals

Bottom line: Wanda’s new FIFA sponsorship is an opportunistic and savvy move both politically and financially, while CMC’s new smaller soccer investment also looks like a good play to win goodwill from Beijing.

Wanda, CMC in new soccer plays

China’s recent fascination with global sports deals continues, with word of major new tie-ups involving 2 big fans of President Xi Jinping’s recent call to improve the nation’s poor performance in soccer. The larger deal has an opportunistic Wanda Group signing on as China’s first top-tier sponsor of FIFA, the world soccer body whose reputation has suffered lately due to a major corruption scandal. The second deal has the acquisitive China Media Capital (CMC) investing in in SoccerWorld, a British operator of sports stadiums.

Both deals have a strongly political element, since Chinese President Xi Jinping is personally a big soccer fan and has appealed to China’s private sector to help improve the nation’s performance at the world’s most popular sport. Some of China’s other top corporate leaders have also answered that call, including Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder Jack Ma, leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) and electronics retailing giant Suning (Shenzhen: 002024). Read Full Post…

LEISURE: Jin Jiang Courts Accor, SMG Eyes Imagine Entertainment

Bottom line: Jin Jiang’s Accor investment reflects its global aspirations and could result in a strategic partnership, while SMG’s new Imagine Entertainment investment reflects its increasing focus on film production.

Jin Jiang boosts Accor stake

Two major overseas investments are in the headlines from the leisure and entertainment sector, with hotel operator Jin Jiang (HKEx: 2006; Shanghai: 600754) and Shanghai Media Group (SMG) making major purchases in Europe and the US, respectively. The first deal has the acquisitive Jin Jiang boosting its stake in Accor (Paris: AC) to 11.7 percent, making it the French hotel giant’s second largest shareholder. The second has SMG’s China Media Capital (CMC) unit signing on as one of several new investors in Imagine Entertainment, the Hollywood production company co-founded by director Ron Howard.

Both stories reflect China’s recent drive to form global tie-ups in the leisure and entertainment sectors, as companies try to capitalize on the nation’s booming domestic market and also a growing flood of Chinese tourists traveling overseas. Jin Jiang has been China’s most acquisitive hotel company, while CMC has also been very active in forming tie-ups and investing with big names both at home and abroad. Perhaps it’s no coincidence that both of these companies are based in my adopted hometown of Shanghai, which is also China’s commercial capital. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Qiyi Eyes Music, Qihoo Goes Video

Bottom line: Qiyi’s new tie-up with Universal Music could presage its purchase of Baidu’s music unit, while Qihoo’s new video campaign is likely to stumble due to intense competition from existing players.

Qiyi ties with Universal Music

A couple of new reports are casting a spotlight on the rapid colonization of the video and music spaces by new media companies. The most intriguing of those has Qiyi.com, the online video site affiliated with search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), taking a major step into the music space through a tie-up with global entertainment giant Universal Music. The second has the aggressive Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) making a late but big push into the online video space via a major new hire.

Both of these stories reflect the big challenge that private companies are now posing to traditional TV and radio stations, as they rapidly challenge a state-owned establishment that held a monopoly on China’s entertainment sector for decades. The resulting boom in video and music services has been great for consumers. But in usual Chinese fashion the explosion has sparked another cycle of hyper-competition that has pushed everyone deeply into the red, and is almost certain to end with the typical bust in a few years. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: China’s ‘Business Insider’ Reels in SMG

Bottom line: Wall Street Round-Up’s new venture funding from China Media Capital testifies to its rapid rise, using a similar formula to the popular US-based Business Insider financial news aggregator.

SMG backs Wall Street Round-Up

A fast-rising financial news website that looks like China’s answer to the popular US site Business Insider has just netted its latest funding, in the amount of a relatively modest 100 million yuan ($15 million). But what’s attracting the biggest interest in this story is the source of the funding, which is coming from China Media Capital (CMC), the new media investment arm of the aggressive Shanghai Media Group (SMG).

As a member of the media, this story is of particular interest to me because of the controversial nature of the funding recipient, called Huawerjie Jianwen, or roughly Wall Street Round-Up. The company was founded as a financial news blog in New York in 2010 by a group of young entrepreneurs, but its rapid rise didn’t begin until they returned to China in 2013 and re-registered the company here in Shanghai. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMMENT: ‘Star Wars’ Rattles China Box Office, Draws SMG

CMC teams up with special effects house Base FX

The newest “Star Wars” movie is in two headlines this week, led by a strong debut for the seventh installment in the franchise that has just opened in China several weeks after its global premier. The movie is also in headlines related to a new initiative by the hyperactive China Media Capital (CMC), which has just formed a joint venture with a company that made some of the special effects for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”. In this case CMC’s new partner is Base FX,  a Beijing-based start-up with strong ties to Hollywood.

Much has been written about prospects for the new “Star Wars” movie in China, where the franchise isn’t very well known because none of the first 6 films in the series were screened in the country unit recently. To address that problem, the movie’s producer Disney (NYSE: DIS) has been working overtime to promote the film in China, with relatively strong results. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Sina Scores in Soccer, LeTV in Baseball

Bottom line: Sina’s new deal to broadcast the video channel of the Manchester United soccer team looks like a good bet, while LeTV’s new deal to broadcast US baseball games is more likely to strike out.

Sina tries soccer with Man United

Leading web portal Sina (Nasdsaq: SINA) and online video giant LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) have just announced 2 new sporting deals, extending a recent streak of similar investments by media companies in search of exclusive content. The first deal will see Sina become the official broadcaster in China for Britain’s Manchester United soccer club, while the second will see LeTV’s sports division get similar rights for live broadcasts of US Major League Baseball (MLB).

Both moves are really just licensing deals, though each could become an important new revenue source for Sina and LeTV as they search for exclusive content to lure viewers to their services. From a quantity perspective, LeTV is the big winner in this new round of deals since it will gain rights to hundreds of baseball games played in America each year. But Sina is the winner from a quality perspective, since soccer is far more popular in China than baseball, which is relatively unknown among average Chinese. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: SMG’s Newest Target in Baidu’s iQiyi?

Bottom line: Rumors that Shanghai Media Group is in talks for a strategic stake of Baidu’s iQiyi could quite possibly be true, with an investment of about $3 billion likely in exchange for half of the company. 

iQiyi talking tie-up with SMG?

The New Year is starting with a salient rumor from the online video space, with reports that the new media investment arm of Shanghai Media Group (SMG) may be eyeing a major stake purchase of Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi. The reports aren’t being widely circulated in the Chinese media yet, which suggests they may not be accurate. The head of SMG’s China Media Capital (CMC), which would reportedly make the investment, has also previously said he’s not interested in online video assets right now.

But such a tie-up would be quite consistent with Baidu’s recent strategy of selling major stakes in its non-core businesses to strategic partners. From SMG’s perspective, such a deal would also make sense, as it plays catch-up with both private companies and also state-owned rival Hunan Broadcasting in the fast-evolving online video space. Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Suning Joins Sports Club with Soccer Buy

Bottom line: Suning’s move into sports is aimed at providing content for its PPTV online video service, but is also the latest in a string of wide-ranging investments that reflect a company with an identity crisis.

Suning invests in soccer

Sports teams are becoming flavor of the day for Chinese firms with entertainment aspirations, with word that retailing giant Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) has joined the bandwagon via a new investment in a local soccer club. The company’s latest deal will see it invest 523 million yuan ($80 million) in the Jiangsu Sainty Football Club, which like many other professional Chinese sports teams is struggling financially.

Suning’s interest in soccer is probably related to its 2013 purchase of PPTV, a relatively large player in China’s crowded online video space. The Suning-PPTV tie-up left many people puzzled at thee time of that announcement, since the 2 companies have little in common. But Suning has been aggressively promoting the service in its trademark consumer electronics stores, and in August it announced a plan to invest 1 billion yuan into a campaign to sell smart TVs equipped with PPTV’s online video service. Read Full Post…