Tag Archives: TCL

News Digest: September 4, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China’s Bright Food In Talks To Buy Israeli Food Group Tnuva (English article)
  • Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi to Sell TCL (HKEx: 1070) Smart TVs (English article)
  • Bank Of America (NYSE: BAC) Selling Remaining Stake In Chinese Bank (English article)
  • Starboard Lines Up Rival Buyers For Smithfield Foods (NYSE: SFD) (English article)
  • Youku (NYSE: YOKU) Original Masters’ Short Films Pull in 10 Mln Views In 1st Month (PRNewswire)

News Digest: August 28, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 28. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China Investigates More Top PetroChina (HKEx: 857) Executives Over Corruption (English article)
  • Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Offers $550 Mln Convertible Senior Notes (PRNewswire)
  • Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi, TCL To Announce Internet TV Next Week – Source (Chinese article)
  • China Approves Mediatek (Taipei: 2454), MStar Merger With Conditions (English article)
  • LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) Reports Q2 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Apple, Samsung Face Smartphone Price Pressure

Apple, Samsung face pressure from low-cost crowd

I’ve been reporting on China’s cellphone market long enough to know that change can come suddenly and without much warning, and that a superstar one day might be struggling for survival just a year or two later. Such transformations often come in waves, and it appears the newest shake-up could be coming as consumers start to shun prestigious high-end smartphones in favor of booming lower-end models that perform many of the same functions for a fraction of the price. China’s slowing economy could cause the trend to accelerate, since many consumers are now looking for ways to cut back their spending due to uncertainty about the future. Read Full Post…

News Digest: January 18 报摘:2013年1月18日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 18. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Sharp (Tokyo: 6753), Lenovo (HKEx: 992) In TV Joint Venture Talks – Report (English article)
  • Suning.com (Shenzhen: 002024) Misses 2012 Sales Target By Big Margin (English article)
  • Group Buying Transaction Volume Reaches 21.4 Bln Yuan in 2012, Up 93 Pct (Chinese article)
  • Iron Man Joins China’s TCL (HKEx: 2618) to Challenge Apple Smartphones (English article)

Chinese Smartphones on the Rise 中国智能手机崛起

Chinese smartphone makers have surged in their home market over the last year, coming from out of the blue to challenge big global names like Apple and Samsung. But their rise could be short-lived if they fail to innovate, paralleling a similar rapid rise and fall a decade ago for names like TCL (HKEx: 2618) and Ningbo Bird that are now just footnotes in the history of China’s large but highly competitive mobile market. The rapid rise of Chinese brands over the last year has been nothing short of remarkable, as China gets set to overtake the United States as the world’s largest smartphone market. At the end of last year, the market was still dominated by foreign names, with Samsung (Seoul: 005930), Nokia (Helsinki: NOK1V) and Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) occupying three of the top four slots to control more than half of the market collectively.

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ZTE on Long Smartphone March 中兴走上智能手机“长征”路

Telecoms equipment maker ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) is hoping to avoid the fate of faded cellphone giants Nokia (Helsinki: NOK1V) and Motorola by focusing on smartphones as it hones an expansion strategy that it hopes will revive its stagnating fortunes. That seems to be the latest message from the embattled company, whose profits have plunged in recent quarters as its core telecoms equipment business weakens and it pumps major new investment its cellphone unit. Personally speaking, I do think the emphasis on smartphones is a smart one as these computer-like phones are clearly the wave of the future and will probably outsell older phones within the next 5 or 6 years.

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Haier Breaks China Pattern of Sickly M&A 海尔打破中国并购旧模式

I have to admit that my first reaction was one of skepticism when I read earlier this week that Chinese home appliance giant Haier (HKEx: 1169) was weighing a bid for New Zealand’s Fisher & Paykel (NZ: FPA), as the bid appeared to follow a familiar and largely unsuccessful pattern for Chinese companies making overseas M&A. But a closer inspection of the financials reveals that after previously falling on hard time, F&P may actually be a company on an upward trajectory, giving this potential acquisition a much better chance of success.

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Apple’s Next Targets: ZTE, Huawei, TCL 华为、中兴及TCL或成苹果下一轮专利诉讼目标

Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) big courtroom victory in its smartphone patent dispute with Samsung (Seoul: 005930) could soon send a chill through China’s up-and-coming tech sector, with the US giant likely to soon file a series of similar lawsuits against companies like Huawei and ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063). This probable new twist in Apple’s ongoing quest for global smartphone dominance would not only hit the Chinese firms financially, but would also shine a spotlight on the uncomfortable fact that most still depend strongly on foreign technology for many of their higher-end products.

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China Powers Up Aviation Drive With Hawker Bid 中国航空业迈向国际化

The recent expansion by Chinese aviation firms into international airspace is powering ahead with word of 2 more global deals, including a new aircraft parts joint venture involving Air China (HKEx: 753; Shanghai: 601111) and an even more intriguing bid for bankrupt business jet maker Hawker Beechcraft by a Chinese buyer. Both of these deals are just the latest in a series of outward moves by China’s aviation industry, a largely inwardly looking group which I suspect has come under recent pressure from Beijing to become more global.

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Lenovo Results: Second Time the Charm? 联想在日德的收购会重蹈覆辙?

Top Chinese PC maker Lenovo (HKEx: 992) has just announced some impressive results, saying recent acquisitions in Germany and Japan helped to lift its profit 60 percent in its latest fiscal quarter, as revenue rose an equally strong 54 percent. (Earnings announcement) But as a long-time China watcher, my first reaction is: I’ve seen this before, as the company’s results also got a quick boost back in 2006 after its ground-breaking purchase of IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) PC assets, which instantly gave its revenue a major boost with a large new global presence. But history watchers will also remember that honeymoon period was relatively short lived, and Lenovo later suffered big losses and launched a major reorganization after many of IBM’s former clients defected and it couldn’t efficiently run IBM’s overseas operations. So the question now becomes, are we going to see an encore performance of the IBM deal, which would see Lenovo’s fortunes rapidly fall and end with another reorganization; or will it learn from its previous IBM experience and this time do better, perhaps even achieving its goal of overtaking Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) to become the world’s largest PC company? Before I gave my answer, let’s take a quick look at the big picture, starting with the latest acquisitions that saw Lenovo purchase German PC maker Medion and take over the PC operations of Japan’s NEC (Tokyo: 6701) last year. The US may have been a difficult labor market for Lenovo, but the challenges there will seem small compared to what it will face in Japan and Germany, the former due to its tradition of companies providing lifetime employment to workers and the latter due to its strong labor unions. Those kinds of labor issues were largely behind the failure of TCL’s (HKEx: 1070) purchase of a French TV maker and the purchase of Siemens’ (Frankfurt; SIEGn) cellphone assets by Taiwan’s BenQ nearly a decade ago. Lenovo was a little smarter this time in Japan, taking over NEC’s PC operations through a joint venture rather than an outright purchase, meaning NEC will remain as a partner to help to run the operation. But TCL also tried the joint venture approach with France’s Thomson, and clearly that didn’t work. In terms of customer defections, I would also expect those to start happening soon. In this case, the defections could be even worse, since Japanese and German consumers and businesses are especially quality conscious, and are unlikely to like the idea that they are buying computers from a Chinese company instead of a German or Japanese one. All that said, look for both of these acquisitions to run into problems, with labor issues likely to flare up in the next year and customer defections to accelerate as corporate purchasing contracts expire. The situation could become worse as many of Lenovo’s recent forays into new product areas are also likely to run into trouble, meaning the company could quickly see its new zooming top and bottom lines start to stumble, setting the stage for yet another reorganization in the next 2-3 years.

Bottom line: Lenovo could soon see history repeat, with strong results after 2 recent acquisitions setting the stage for integration difficulties and an eventual reorganization.

Related postings 相关文章:

Lenovo’s TV Gamble: Failure Ahead? 联想电视赌注:未来会失败吗?

TCL Cellphones: History Repeats Itself TCL手机业务历史重演

Lenovo Completes Leadership Change, Yang Uninspired 联想完成高层调整,杨元庆难鼓舞人心

News Digest: May 24, 2012 报摘: 2012年5月24日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Reports Fiscal Q4 and Full Year Results (Businesswire)

China Mobile (HKEx: 941) to Spend 20 Bln Yuan on Handset Subsidies This Year – CEO (Chinese article)

Suntech (NYSE: STP) Reports Q1 Financial Results (PRNewswire)

Sina’s (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo Microblog Incorporates Web Search (English article)

TCL (HKEx: 1070) Showcases Its LED SMART Television in “Marvel’s The Avengers” (Busineswire)