Tag Archives: WalMart

RETAIL: Wal-Mart Dumped by China Partner As Landscape Changes

Bottom line: Wal-Mart’s loss of China Resources as one of its major Chinese partners reflects rapid changes in the traditional retailing market, and could prompt Wal-Mart to accelerate an overhaul of its broader China strategy to focus more on e-commerce.

China Resources dumps Wal-Mart JV stake
China Resources dumps Wal-Mart JV stake

Just 3 months after sacking the founders of its China e-commerce site, US retailing giant Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) has suffered yet another blow in the huge but difficult market with the loss of a major local partner for its traditional brick-and-mortar stores. That move is seeing China Resources, one of the country’s biggest and oldest consumer names, dump shares worth $515 million in a number of Wal-Mart stores that it jointly owns with the US retailing giant.

The move isn’t all that surprising for a number of reasons, but still doesn’t look too good for Wal-Mart in the fast-changing Chinese retailing market. For starters, China Resources is already a major owner of smaller supermarket chain called Vanguard. It also moved into the hypermarket business 2 years ago when it effectively took over the China-based operations of British giant Tesco (London: TSCO) through a joint venture. (previous post) Read Full Post…

News Digest: September 29, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 29. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) Yihaodian Overhaul Sparks Mass Resignations (Chinese article)
  • Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Leads Huawei into US Smartphone Market (Chinese article)
  • Didi Kuaidi Invests in Indian Car Hire App Ola (English article)
  • Beijing Commerce Department Opens Inquiry into Xiaomi False Claims (Chinese article)
  • Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) Says on Track to Spin Off Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Stake This Year (English article)

RETAIL: Carrefour Shops for Yuppies with Lifestyle Convenience Stores

Bottom line: Carrefour’s new foray into upscale, lifestyle-oriented convenience stores could stand a reasonable chance of success and breathe some new life into its struggling China business.

Carrefour expands Easy convenience store concept

After tinkering with a new convenience store concept for the last year, global retailing giant Carrefour (Paris: CA) has finally come up with a smaller-store model it likes and is planning a big expansion for its new chain of Carrefour Easy convenience shops. The move is part of Carrefour’s broader overhaul of its poorly performing China operations, which the company even considered selling at one point.

I do find this particular move somewhat contrary to industry trends, since Chinese are clearly buying more and more of their products online over popular services like Alibaba’s (Nasdaq: BABA) Tmall and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD). But that said, there will always be a place for traditional shops in the bigger retailing landscape, especially convenience stores whose main audience is usually impulse buyers looking for a quick drink, a bite to eat or just a place to quickly surf the web. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Seeks Share Boost with Wine, NetEase with Cash

Bottom line: Alibaba’s new tie-up with a leading US wine maker is mostly symbolic and represents a boom in the e-commerce market for imported goods, while NetEase’s new share buyback plan is unlikely to provide much support for its sagging stock.

Robert Mondavi launches on Tmall

Leading Chinese Internet companies Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) are trying different approaches to boost their sagging stocks, amid a broader sell-off for US-listed Chinese companies in tandem with China’s own tanking markets. The first case has e-commerce leader Alibaba launching a new online wine shop with US giant Robert Mondavi, as part of a broader move to let Chinese consumers buy imported goods online. The move by online game giant NetEase looks a bit more conventional, with its announcement of a plan to buy back up to $500 million of its stock.

Alibaba and NetEase certainly aren’t alone in watching their shares tumble, amid a broader sell-off for US-listed Chinese stocks over the last 2 months. Alibaba shares have lost nearly half of their value from their all-time high reached last November, and now trade about 5 percent below their IPO price from a year ago. NetEase shares have lost a quarter of their value since early August, in a plunge coinciding with China’s own tumbling stock markets. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba Answers Walmart Challenge With Grocery Blitz

Bottom line: Alibaba’s massive online grocery promotion looks aimed at countering potential new challenges from Walmart, as the US retailing giant overhauls its China e-commerce operations.

Alibaba launches major grocery promotion

Just days after Walmart (NYSE: WMT) made a major shift in its China e-commerce strategy, local market leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is firing back with a massive 1 billion yuan ($160 million) promotion that looks squarely aimed at the US retailing giant. This particular promotion comes in the grocery space, which also happens to be a core strength of Yihaodian, the major plank in Walmart’s China e-commerce operation. Alibaba’s announcement also comes just days after Walmart announced it was buying out its partners in Yahaodian to take full control of the site and better integrate it with its existing China operations. Read Full Post…

RETAIL: Walmart Eyes Alibaba, Amazon with China Buyout

Bottom line: Walmart’s Yihaodian could sharply boost its share of China’s e-commerce market in the next 2-3 years, following a buyout that will give the site better access to its parent’s experience, offline stores and global connections.

Walmart buys out Yihaodian partners

Just a week after sacking the 2 founders and top executives of its China e-commerce site, global retailing giant Walmart (NYSE: WMT) has taken the next step and bought out its partners in their Yihaodian joint venture. The buyout completes a takeover that began with Walmart’s purchase of a controlling 51 percent of Yihaodian 3 years ago. It also signals that Walmart is preparing to pump major new investment into the site, as it tries to become a major player in a market dominated by local giants Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD).

I have to applaud Walmart for finally taking control and tossing out Yihaodian’s founders, who weren’t doing much to challenge any of the nation’s top e-commerce sites. But that said, foreign companies have a very poor track record competing with homegrown Chinese Internet firms, and its far from clear if Walmart can succeed where other big names like Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO), Expedia (Nasdaq: EXPE) and eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) have failed in the past. Read Full Post…

News Digest: July 24, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Walmart (NYSE: WMT) Takes Full Ownership of Yihaodian Business in China (Businesswire)
  • China’s H1 2015 Mobile Internet User Base Hits 594 Mln (English article)
  • Tsinghua Holdings Chief Says Still in Micron (Nasdaq: MU) Talks, Hopeful on Deal (English article)
  • China Postal Savings Bank Seeks Strategic Investors in Run-Up to IPO (Chinese article)
  • Uber Partners With Xiaomi for Smartphone Sales in Singapore (English article)

INTERNET: Walmart Sacks Yihaodian Founders Amid Slow Progress

Bottom line: Walmart’s dismissal of Yihaodian’s 2 top executives marks a major shake-up due to the unit’s disappointing performance, and could be followed by closer integration with Walmart’s own China operations.

Yihaodian in management shake-up

A major shake-up has just occurred at Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) China e-commerce unit, reflecting its disappointing progress 3 years after the US retailing giant took control of local upstart Yihaodian. The shake-up has seen the sudden resignation of Yihaodian’s 2 founders, Yu Gang and Liu Junjun, who were also the chairman and CEO, respectively. Yihaodian confirmed the departures, and said they were announced after a high-level Walmart official came to visit the company. (Chinese article)

The reports say Walmart issued a nicely worded statement on the matter, saying “A company’s founders will naturally leave after a certain stage of development, and we wish them well”. But the fact of the matter is that Yihaodian has been quite a disappointment for Walmart, which took control of the company in 2012 and has made it the central focus of its e-commerce strategy in China. Read Full Post…

News Digest: July 15, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on July 15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Yum’s (NYSE: YUM) Sales Miss Projections After Slump Persists in China (English article)
  • Uber China to IPO – Source (English article)
  • Food Giant Mondelez (Nasdaq: MDLZ) Cuts China Sales Team in Major Shift (Chinese article)
  • Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) Yihaodian Announces Resignation of 2 Co-founders (Chinese article)
  • LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) CEO Jia Buys 19 Mln Shares Beijing Media (HKEx: 1000) (Chinese article)

News Digest: May 1-4, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 1-4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Walmart (NYSE: WMT) To Boost Sam’s Club China Stores By 60 Pct Over 3 Years (Chinese article)
  • WuXi PharmaTech (NYSE: WX) Announces Receipt Of Buyout Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • Itochu, CP Group In E-commerce Venture With Chinese Firms In Shanghai FTZ (English article)
  • ZTE (HKEx: 763) Taps Japan To Help Sell 60 Mln Handsets Globally (English aritcle)
  • ‘Cheating’ Chinese Antivirus Firm Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Blames Cultural Differences (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

RETAIL: Lianhua Gets Lifeline Amid Supermarket Shake-Out

Bottom line: Poorly run traditional supermarkets like Lianhua are destined for extinction in the next 5-10 years as they get overtaken by the rapidly rising e-commerce names like Yihaodian and JD.com.

Tired Lianhua sells stake to Yonghui

A couple of supermarket headlines are casting a spotlight on a Chinese market that is rapidly transforming, putting pressure on traditional stores operated by domestic players like Sun Art (HKEx: 6808) and global chains like Carrefour (Paris: CA). The first headline has Shanghai-based operator Lianhua (HKEx: 980) selling a major stake of itself to smaller but more nimble rival Yonghui (Shanghai: 601933) in a $120 million deal. The second has Yihaodian becoming the first online grocer to break into an important annual industry ranking list, underscoring the rapid rise of Internet-based supermarkets. Read Full Post…