Tag Archives: Visa

FINANCE: Apple Poised to Beat Visa, PayPal Into China E-Payments

Bottom line: Apple could become the first big foreign company to offer domestic electronic payment services in China, representing a major accomplishment for CEO Tim Cook in his recent campaign to improve relations with Beijing.

Apple Pay eyes February China launch

Big names like Visa (NYSE: V), MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and PayPal have been waiting for years to offer electronic payment services in China, but now it appears that tech titan Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) may be the first to break into the lucrative market. That’s the signal coming from the latest headlines, which say that Apple is aiming to formally launch its Apple Pay electronic payments service in its second largest global market in the next few months.

If Apple succeeds, the move would represent a major victory for the company and vindication of CEO Tim Cook’s recent campaign to cultivate better relations with Beijing. Apple Pay would be entering the market less than 2 years after the product’s formal launch, which is extremely fast for bureaucratic China. By comparison, Visa, MasterCard and PayPal have all been waiting more than a decade for China to open the market, and the 2 credit card giants even led a campaign that resulted in a complaint at the WTO. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Alipay Checks In to HK with Marriott Tie-up

Bottom line: Alipay’s move into Hong Kong through a tie-up with Marriott marks the start of a major global expansion for the online payment service, with Hong Kong the likely first stop due to its strong China ties.

Alipay in new Marriott tie-up

Homegrown Chinese electronic payments service Alipay is taking its growing rivalry with state-owned behemoth UnionPay to the global stage, with word of a major new move outside its home China market. That move will see Alipay follow a familiar route for many globally-minded Chinese companies, with a first stop in Hong Kong. It has Alipay forming a major new alliance in the former British colony with global hotel giant Marriott (NYSE: MAR), as the first stop on an overseas tour that could ultimately see the financial services affiliate of Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) challenge global names like Visa (NYSE: V) and MasterCard (NYSE: MA).

This latest move is part of a larger new tie-up between Marriott and Alipay, which is part of the Alibaba-affiliated but separately owned Ant Financial. The tie-up is mostly limited to mainland China initially, but significantly includes Hong Kong-based hotels. It also marks one of the biggest moves to date into Hong Kong by Alipay, which is better known as an electronic payments service used for smaller items usually costing $20 or less using shoppers’ online accounts and smartphones. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Alibaba’s Ant In Offline Challenge to UnionPay, Visa

Bottom line: Alibaba-affiliated Ant Financial is experiencing breakneck growth through its roll-out of a wide array of new products and services, and could be valued at up to $150 billion by the time it makes its IPO as soon as next year.

Ant Financial in Alipay offline campaign

A new report is spotlighting the rapid rise of Ant Financial, the financial services affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) that looks set to challenge not only domestic rival UnionPay but also upcoming drives into China by global giants Visa (NYSE: V) and MasterCard (NYSE: MA). Much of Ant’s incredibly rapid rise is tied to its core Alipay asset, which began life as an electronic payments service but is rapidly moving into other areas like credit card-style offline payments and savings account services.

The latest reports also contain a new figure on Ant’s valuation following its first major capital raising. That figure of $45 billion is substantially larger than an earlier figure of $30 billion that was contained in initial reports on the funding just a week ago. (previous post) But those earlier reports also pointed out the low valuation was based on shares that were probably sold at a discount to a big domestic institutional investor, perhaps for strategic reasons, and that the real value could be as high as $50 billion. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Foreigners Get E-Payment Green Light

Bottom line: China’s opening of the electronic payment services market could see PayPal and other foreign providers finally receive long-awaited licenses to operate in the market by year-end.

PayPal may finally get China green light

Foreign financial companies came a step closer to realizing a long-awaited goal last week, when Beijing announced it would allow them to open fully-owned electronic transaction processing ventures for e-commerce services in the year-old Shanghai free trade zone. The move comes after years of lobbying by foreign companies like PayPal, MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V), which have watched enviously at the rapid growth of a domestic financial system that China committed to open when it joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. Read Full Post…

News Digest: April 23, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on April 23. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Visa (NYSE: V), MasterCard (NYSE: MA) Surge On China Move To End Card Monopoly (English article)
  • Chinese Banks Disobey Order To Support Housing Market (English article)
  • ZTE (HKEx: 763) Accuses Huawei Smartphones Of Intellectual Property Theft (Chinese article)
  • Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Recalls Nearly 90,000 ThinkPad Computers In China (Chinese article)
  • P2P Lending Site Jimu Box Raises $84 Mln in Third Fund-Raising Round (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

FINANCE: UnionPay Zooms In Korea, Wanda Buys Into 99Bill

Bottom line: Wanda will face a steep uphill climb in electronic payments following its purchase of 99Bill, while UnionPay will continue to grow rapidly overseas as more Chinese travelers and businesses go abroad.

Wanda buys control of 99Bill

Two big news bits from the electronic payments space are in the headlines as we round out 2014, led by news of a major new acquisition by property giant Wanda Group just days after a Hong Kong IPO for its core shopping mall unit. The other new revolves around industry giant UnionPay, which has feasted on outbound Chinese tourist and business spending to pass larger global rivals MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V) for issuing credit cards in nearby South Korea. Read Full Post…

News Digest: December 26, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Dalian Wanda (HKEx: 3699) To Buy Online Payment Platform 99Bill: Sources (English article)
  • UnionPay Inches Past Visa (NYSE: V), MasterCard (NYSE MA) In South Korea (English article)
  • Huawei’s Smartphone Sales Shoot Up After Copying Xiaomi’s Online Strategy (English article)
  • Samsung (Seoul: 005930) Calls In Experts To Halt Flagging China Numbers (English article)
  • Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) Makes Major Investment In Traveling Bestone Website (Chinese article)

FINANCE – Apple Ties With UnionPay, Baidu Eyes 99Bill

Bottom line: Apple’s new UnionPay tie-up is aimed at an eventual roll-out of its Apple Pay in China, while Baidu’s reported purchase of 99Pay marks a late but needed bid to boost its electronic payments capabilities.

Baidu eyes 99Bill

A couple of electronic payments stories reflect the rapid changes taking place in China’s banking market, where such payments are quickly making cash and even traditional credit cards obsolete. The higher-profile of the 2 deals has global gadget leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) in a deal to accept payments for its China app store in partnership with leading electronic payments firm UnionPay. The second deal has leading Internet search Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) reportedly looking to boost its presence in the space with plans to buy existing player 99Bill for 2 billion yuan ($325 million). Read Full Post…

GUEST POST – Foreign Credit Cards Take New Swipe At China

Bottom line: China’s acceptance of applications for bank card clearing services from foreign firms marks a positive step for Visa and MasterCard, but it could still be years before such services become reality.

By Lu Jin

UnionPay set to lose longtime monopoly

Many people traveling to China may have experienced an embarrassing moment as they got stuck at the cashier in a local shop after having their foreign bank-issued credit card rejected. Anyone who has experienced such embarrassment knows that what happened next is they need to run around in desperate search for an ATM machine or simply forget about the purchase.

That situation is expected to change, or at least there is real hope now. Read Full Post…

Adobe, Visa Snub China As R&D Dud

Adobe to shutter China R&D lab

Product development centers aren’t extremely expensive as investments, but they carry a much higher level of prestige for developing countries due to their status as cutting-edge centers for innovation. Against that backdrop, major new R&D moves by global corporate giants Adobe Systems (Nasdaq: ADBE) and Visa (NYSE: V) certainly don’t look too good for China. In the former case, software giant Adobe has announced it will shutter its China R&D facility, resulting in the loss of hundreds of jobs. In the latter, financial services giant Visa has also snubbed China by announcing a major new global technology development strategy that includes a new center in neighboring India but not in China. Read Full Post…

Alibaba Finally Gives Some Figures, Eyes Record Books

The final countdown has just begun for e-commerce giant Alibaba’s highly anticipated New York IPO,  allowing us to see just how much the company might be worth, how much money it might raise and whether it might be the biggest US or even global IPO of all time. The final answer to all of those questions will remain a mystery until Alibaba actually prices the deal, but at least we can speculate now what the chances are of it meeting some of the lofty goals that market watchers have set for the company. I’ll start by giving my view that the deal should price relatively strongly, and make some conclusions from that later in this post. Read Full Post…