Tag Archives: Viacom

MEDIA: Era Ends with Closure of Time Warner’s Former China TV Play

Bottom line: The closure of former Time Warner Chinese TV station CETV reflects the broader decline of traditional broadcasting worldwide, and also heavy restrictions on foreigners for operating video delivery channels in China.

CETV pulled from China airwaves

As Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) pursues a blockbuster merger deal with AT&T (NYSE: T) in the US, a much quieter story in China reflects the end of a frustrating chapter for the entertainment giant and many of its western peers that hoped to make a fortune in the world’s most populous market. That story has the relatively obscure Tom Group (HKEx: 2383) announcing the shuttering of its China Entertainment Television station, also known as CETV. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Wanda, Baidu Spurned by Film Partners

Bottom line: Wanda will look for new Hollywood assets after being rejected in the bidding for a stake of Paramount, while the departure of a member of the group buying Baidu Video is a minor setback and a new investor will be easily found.

Paramount abandons stake sale plan

A couple of headlines are showing that China’s love affair with the film and video industries isn’t always so smooth, with the collapse of 2 major deals involving cinema giant Wanda and online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). The far larger of the 2 developments has seen leading Hollywood studio Paramount scrap plans to sell a strategic stake in itself, ending a deal that reportedly had seen Wanda emerge as one of the most likely buyers. The Baidu deal is quite a bit smaller, and has seen one of the buyout partners withdraw in a plan to spin off its relatively minor Baidu Video business. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: September 20, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on September 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Wanda Rejected as Viacom’s (NYSE: VIAb) Paramount Abandons Stake Sale Plan (Chinese article)
  • Internal Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Probe Nets 17 for Corruption, Worst at Nuomi Unit (Chinese article)
  • China Unicom (HKEx: 762) Offers Biggest iPhone 7 Subsidies, Up to 49 Pct (Chinese article)
  • Zeus Entertainment (Shenzhen: 002354) Halts Plan to Invest in Baidu Video (English article)
  • LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) Supercar Completes $1 Bln Funding, Legend Among Backers (Chinese article)

INTERNET: Baidu Welcomed in Milan, Rebuffed in Hollywood

Bottom line: Baidu’s Robin Li could announce a deal later this week to buy 40 percent of soccer club AC Milan, while his company’s pursuit of Paramount was likely killed by internal fighting at the Hollywood studio.

Paramount spurns Baidu, Wanda

Internet search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is in a couple of major entertainment headlines as the new week begins, led by word that it could finally announce a highly anticipated deal that would see it buy a major stake of European football club AC Milan. At the same time, separate new reports are saying that the company was rejected in a recent bid for a strategic stake in Hollywood giant Paramount, the studio arm of Viacom (NYSE: VIAb). Those same reports are saying Wanda Group, another Chinese entertainment aspirant, was also rejected in pursuit of a similar deal. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: 25 Years After Japan, China Eyes Hollywood with Paramount Interest

Chinese clamor for Paramount Pictures stake

China’s growing love affair with Hollywood is reaching new peaks, with word that major studio Paramount Pictures may be preparing to sell a stake of itself to a Chinese buyer. Such a deal would be the highest profile investment yet in an ever-growing string of Chinese tie-ups with Tinseltown over the last 2 years. In some ways the movement looks strangely similar to Japan’s invasion of Hollywood more than 25 years ago, which saw Universal and Columbia Pictures sold to Japanese buyers.

That parallel may lead some to wonder if this latest Chinese drive into Hollywood could end with similarly disappointing results that saw both studios sputter under Japanese ownership. Prickly US-China relations could also add an element of discomfort to this new budding love affair, since Beijing enjoys a far less friendly relationship with Washington than Tokyo. Read Full Post…

Murdoch’s News Corp Exits China TV

News Corp calls it quits on Chinese TV

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp (Nasdaq: NWSA) ended its stormy love affair with Chinese television late last week, when it sold its last remaining major asset to a private equity firm. The company’s gradual withdrawal over the last 3 years underscores the difficulty that many western media firms still face in China’s TV market despite rapid changes over the last year. Domestic and foreign companies alike need space to act more commercially in a streamlined regulatory environment for China to develop a truly world-class industry that can someday challenge the dominance of Hollywood. Read Full Post…

Universal Dreams of China Park — Again 环球公司再次期待在华建立主题公园

I have to admire the determination Universal Studios, the theme park arm of Comcast’s (NYSE: CMCSA) NBC Universal, which, after 2 failed attempts to set up theme parks in China is making yet another bid to enter the market in the northeast port city of Tianjin. (English article) The foreign media report on the subject is quite vague, disclosed by a Tianjin official visiting Los Angeles, which sounds to me like talks are still in a very early stage and could easily go nowhere. But the idea is certainly intriguing and even sounds like a good business move for Universal if it can reach a deal, as Tianjin is already China’s sixth largest city and, more importantly, is just a half hour from Beijing via high speed rail link, giving any future park access to more than 20 million people within easy driving distance and millions more who come to Beijing as tourists. Increasingly wealthy Chinese have shown they are not afraid to spend the relatively expensive ticket prices of up to $100 per person to visit big-name theme parks, as evidenced by strong attendance for Walt Disney’s (NYSE: DIS) Hong Kong Disneyland. Still, getting such expensive theme parks approved in China can be quite difficult, as all require central government approval because of their big costs. Universal has already discovered this fact through the failure of 2 previous plans, both announced with fanfare about a decade ago for parks in both Beijing and Shanghai. The Beijing plan quickly fell apart, but the Shanghai one seemed to be moving ahead for several years when it also ran into trouble for reasons that were never fully explained and was ultimately scrapped. Disney has also found out how difficult it can be to build a park in China. The company was in talks with the Shanghai government for nearly a decade before finally closing a deal to build a $4.4 billion Disneyland resort in the city a couple of years ago. Back in Tianjin, Paramount Studios, the theme park and movie division of Viacom (NYSE: VIAb) was also in talks with the city’s government to build a theme park based on its characters and other property and even announced a deal for the 5 billion yuan project back in 2006. A quick Internet search on what ever happened to that project reveals that it was finally approved by the central government just a year ago, meaning it took another 4 years after the original announcement to get approval. Given the preliminary nature of Universal’s latest talks and the slow speed of Chinese approval, I wouldn’t expect to see a new Universal Studios park in Tianjin until 2020 at the earliest, and think it’s more likely the US entertainment giant will fail yet again in its China theme park hopes.

Bottom line: Universal Studios’ latest attempt to build a China theme park is likely to end in failure, but looks like a good idea in the unlikely case that it succeeds.

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