Bottom line: China’s traditional broadcasters need to move quickly to forge new, meaningful partnerships with private companies outside the media space, or risk being overtaken by new media rivals.
Mango TV ties with China Mobile
Two of China’s leading regional broadcasters have been in the headlines these last 2 weeks, as they scramble to transform themselves to compete with a new generation of web-based private companies that are rapidly stealing their viewers and advertising dollars. Both stories involve new tie-ups with industry outsiders, reflecting the need to bring in new expertise to help these state-run broadcasters leverage digital and web-based technologies that will dominate the media landscape of the future.
The first big story came 2 weeks ago, when Shanghai Media Group (SMG) signed a landmark deal with e-commerce titan Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) to develop a financial news and information service that could someday take on the likes of global giants like Bloomberg and Reuters (NYSE: TRT). The second came last week, when media reported that Hunan Satellite TV had raised 1 billion yuan ($162 million) in the first private funding round for its fledgling paid video service Mango TV. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Shanda’s participation in a bid for a US financial firm marks the start of the company’s move into finance, and reflects the broader rise of a new group of major private equity investors in Shanghai.
Shanda joins bid for US investment firm
Following its failed bid to become a major online entertainment company, the Shanghai-based Shanda is trying its hand at deal-making, with word that it’s part of a group making a bid for major US financial firm Russell Investments. Shanda’s entry to the private equity realm marks a growing trend that is seeing Shanghai-based companies emerge as some of China’s most aggressive homegrown private equity investors.
That trend is being led by Fosun International (HKEx: 656), which has been one of China’s biggest international buyers these last 2 years with a number of high-profile investments in Europe and North America. More recently Fosun has been joined by the aggressive China Media Group, which is connected to Shanghai’s leading media company SMG, and whose name is also showing up on a growing number of high profile investments. And then there’s the recently formed China Minsheng Investment Corp, an offshoot of the entrepreneurial China Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), which is also being quite aggressive. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new tie-up with SMG could produce a homegrown financial news and information giant drawing on both companies’ strengths, but could also face obstacles due to the 2 partners’ differing backgrounds and styles.
Alibaba buys into SMG financial newspaper
E-commerce titan Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is taking an interesting new step into the news media realm, with word that it’s investing 1.2 billion yuan ($200 million) in one of China’s leading financial newspapers that is owned by Shanghai Media Group (SMG), the country’s second largest state-owned media company. I’ve watched for the last couple of years as traditional newspapers like SMG’s China Business News, or CBN, have struggled to chart a new path in the digital media age.
For many of these traditional media, that movement has meant putting their content online, and launching a mobile app, but not much more. As a result, many are seeing their revenue shrink as advertisers flock to more dynamic new media, mirroring a trend in the west. In that light, this new Alibaba tie-up could breathe some new life into CBN’s new media push, providing new ideas and other expertise to reverse the newspaper’s decline.
Bottom line: China’s regulators should work closely with innovators like Alibaba and SMG to minimize the risk from their new financial products that bring small lenders and borrowers together.
Alibaba, SMG partner on film finance
E-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) made its latest advance in the financial realm last week, announcing a major tie-up with Shanghai’s leading broadcaster to promote film finance over its online platform based on the crowd-funding concept. The move extends Alibaba’s recent forays into both entertainment and finance, and could provide a major boost for smaller Chinese movie makers who often lack access to project funding.
But the reality is that movie making is a highly risky business for even the most experienced companies, and smaller productions are famous for losing money. That means many of the projects that get financed through the new Alibaba tie-up with Shanghai Media Group (SMG) may ultimately see investors lose some or all their money if and when poorly conceived projects fail to find an audience. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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User Sues Xiaomi In Shanghai For Making False Claims (Chinese article)
Huawei Revenue Increases 20 Pct on Sales of Higher-End Smartphones (English article)
Bottom line: China should completely up its film market to foreign participation, following recent liberalizing steps that have resulted in a boom in cross-border tie-ups.
Hollywood falls in love with China
The mayor of Los Angeles called on Chinese leaders to ease their restrictions on imported movies during a visit to Beijing last week, seeking better access for a product that is one of the most lucrative US exports to China.
The fact is that China has already taken big steps over the last 2 years to open its movie theaters to overseas products, as both foreign and domestic producers chase a fast-growing market that is now the world’s second largest behind only the United States. At the same time, a growing number of foreign filmmakers are getting improved access to the market through co-investments with Chinese partners, including joint ventures and joint production agreements. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 22-24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU), Xiaomi Get VNO Licenses In 4th Round Of Awards (Chinese article)
Disney (NYSE: DIS) Expands Shanghai Media Group (SMG) Partnership To TV (Englisha article)
Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Flippers Eke Out $11.5 Mln Gain In Bond Debut (English article)
Oriental Pearl, BesTV Complete Merger, Become SMG’s Internet Flagship (Chinese article)
Los Angeles Mayor Presses China To Allow More Hollywood Films (English article)
I’ve stopped using the term “love affair” to describe the romance between Hollywood and China over the last 2 years, as it no longer seems sufficient to describe the flood of tie-ups that have emerged since China became the world’s second largest box office. The Long March of new deals has now gained 2 more members, with word that US film giant Warner Bros (NYSE: TWX) is in a major new movie financing deal with Shanghai Media Group (SMG), China’s leading regional maker of filmed entertainment. In a separate headline, other reports are saying that real estate giant Wanda Group is also deepening its own involvement in movie industry finance, by filing to make a domestic IPO for its movie theater business. Read Full Post…
I’m not a close follower of global game console leaders Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Sony (Tokyo: 6753), but the latest reports of the latter’s launch plans for its PlayStation in China seem to reflect the recent state of disarray at the ailing Japanese giant. Microsoft was quick to formulate a China plan for its popular Xbox after Beijing recently lifted a decade-old ban on foreign consoles, forming a joint venture and launching the consoles last month. By comparison, only sporadic reports have emerged over that time about Sony’s plans, including the latest confusing reports that indicate the company will try to launch its PlayStation 4 in China by the end of the year. Read Full Post…
A few weeks ago I praised Shanghai’s laggard media for uncovering one of the biggest stories of the year, so it seems fitting that this week I take another look at our local media’s return to the spotlight for far less positive reasons.
For those who don’t follow the industry so closely, the rare moment of glory for Shanghai’s media I’m referring to came back in late July. That’s when undercover TV reporters from Shanghai Media Group (SMG) exposed that a range of unsavory practices at Husi Food, a US-owned meat supplier to such major global brands as McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD), KFC (NYSE: YUM) and Starbucks (Nasdaq: SBUX). Read Full Post…
A new report on big investment plans in digital media by Hunan Satellite Television is shining a spotlight on this aggressive company in interior China, and its potential to become an important consolidator as Beijing looks to revamp the stodgy traditional media sector. According to that report, Hunan Satellite is planning to invest 1 billion yuan ($160 million) in its Mango TV service, which delivers video over the Internet and other digital platforms and competes directly with private sector firms like Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) and Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi. Read Full Post…