Tag Archives: Weixin

Tencent WeChat In Anemic US Promotion

WeChat launches US promotion

I wasn’t too impressed on reading about one of the first promotions in the United States by Tencent (HKEx: 700), following reports last year that it planned to take its popular WeChat mobile instant messaging service to the lucrative but highly competitive market. I realize it will be difficult for WeChat to find an audience in the US, where its name is unknown and it will face stiff competition from local players like Whatsapp and even Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). But the company will have to do a bit more to raise its profile if it really hopes to win over demanding US consumers. Read Full Post…

China Telecom, NetEase JV Challenges WeChat

China Telecom, NetEase JV takes on WeChat

The headlines are buzzing about a new joint venture between wireless carrier China Telecom (HKEx: 728) and Internet company NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES), in one of the bigger media frenzies I’ve seen in quite a while for this kind of tie-up. But everyone loves a good contest, and this particular joint venture offers just that with a major new challenge to Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) hugely popular WeChat mobile instant messaging service, known in Chinese as Weixin. Just to make sure everyone understands what this story is about, China Telecom and NetEase have even given their new service the name of YiChat or Yixin in Chinese, which both sound quite similar to the English and Chinese names Tencent’s service. Read Full Post…

Unicom Sides With Tencent WeChat

Unicom favors market approach for WeChat

A new memo that has been reportedly leaked from China’s second largest mobile carrier, China Unicom (HKEx: 762; NYSE: CHU), shows the nation’s 3 telcos may not be nearly as united as many may think in their approach to Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) popular WeChat mobile app. This revelation, if true, doesn’t surprise me at all, since industry giant China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) has been leading the assault on WeChat from the very beginning, complaining the popular mobile instant messaging app uses huge amounts of its networking capacity. But it’s far from clear if the nation’s other 2 mobile carriers, Unicom and China Telecom (HKEx: 728; NYSE: CHA) share China Mobile’s discontent. Read Full Post…

Govt, Rivals Assault Tencent WeChat

WeChat under all-around assault

In the space of just a half year, Internet giant Tencent’s (HKEx: 700) popular mobile messaging WeChat app has gone from obscurity, to red-hot rising star, to its latest position as a target of attack from just about everyone. The popular app has come under assault in the last 3 months from the nation’s 3 telcos, which complain that WeChat users are taking up a growing share of their network capacity. The trio have found a potent ally in the nation’s telecoms regulator, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), which has stepped in to help “mediate” the dispute. On top of all that, a wave of envious rivals with copycat products is quickly appearing on the scene. Read Full Post…

China Mobile Muscles Tencent Into Talks 中国移动与腾讯进行营收共享协议谈判

Just a couple of weeks after telecoms heavyweight China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) complained that Internet giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) was stealing its text messaging business, we’re getting word that the 2 companies may have started talks for a revenue sharing agreement to resolve the dispute. China Mobile’s discontent involves Tencent’s popular mobile instant messaging service WeChat, better known by its Chinese name Weixin, which has soared to prominence in the last 2 years and recently passed the 300 million registered user mark. (previous post) The service allows people to send text messages back and forth over the Internet, letting them circumvent traditional text messaging that is one of the biggest revenue sources for China Mobile and the nation’s other 2 big telcos.

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China Mobile, Tencent Spar Over WeChat 中国移动与腾讯就微信展开口水战

It seems that Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo isn’t the only company worried about the rapid rise of WeChat, the wildly popular mobile social networking service (SNS) operated by leading Internet company Tencent (HKEx: 700). That’s my interpretation of the situation, following a recent war of words that has broken out between Tencent and China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL), China’s dominant mobile carrier. But in this new tussle, Tencent needs to move very carefully since China Mobile is not only a competitor but is also in the powerful position of being able to limit or even completely cut off its more than 700 million mobile subscribers from access to WeChat, more commonly known by its Chinese name of Weixin.

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Sina Weibo: Losing Its Edge? 新浪微博:正失去其优势?

I have to admit that I’m becoming just a little bit confused by all the user data coming from China’s top 3 microblog operators, which seems to paint a slightly different picture from the one that Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) would like everyone to believe about the dominance of its popular Sina Weibo service. My attention was first drawn to the subject by a new media report in which NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) says its microblogging service now has more than 260 million registered users, up sharply from 180 million just 2 months earlier. (English article) That number seemed to be a big narrowing of the gap with Sina Weibo, which had 360 million registered users at the end of June.

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Tencent Wechat Wows Mobile IM 腾讯微信主导移动即时通讯

The fight for dominance in of China’s mobile Internet is producing some interesting global shifts, with big names like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Alibaba facing aggressive, younger competitors as they try to translate their dominance of the older desktop Internet to the mobile space that will become a key growth driver in the next decade. But one company that seems on track to maintain its dominance is Tecent (HKEx: 700), China’s largest Internet company by market value, which rose to prominence a decade ago with its highly popular QQ instant messaging product. Now it seems that Tencent’s mobile instant messaging product Wechat, better known by its Chinese name of weixin, is facing little or no opposition in its rapid rise to become China’s dominant mobile IM product. (previous post)

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Watch Out Weibo, Weixin Is Growing 新浪微博要小心腾讯微信要崛起

While most of the China Internet world has been fixated on the meteoric rise of Sina’s (Nasdaq: SINA) Weibo microblogging service, a rival offering from Tencent (HKEx: 700) called Weixin, which literally means “tiny letter”, has quietly gained momentum and could pose a serious challenge in the near term. The looming Weibo vs Weixin rivalry also casts an interesting spotlight on the broader issue of PC vs mobile Internet, as Weibo is the clear leader in desktop web surfing while Weixin has a number of features that make it more suitable for mobile Internet use. Domestic media are reporting that Weixin had 50 million registered users, 20 million of those active, at the end of November. (English article) Of course those number still pale with Weibo’s 200 million registered users that Sina reported at the middle of this year. But considering Weixin was just launched early this year while Weibo has been in business for over 2 years now, Weixin clearly looks like an interesting bet. Others have tried to take on Weibo, including search titan Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which shuttered its struggling microblogging service in May (previous post), and Renren (NYSE: RENN), which just recently joined the fray. (previous post) But Tencent has taken an interesting approach by developing Weixin as a product maximized for mobile microblogging, with features that, for example, allowing one’s phone to make a sound each time a new post is received and also allowing audio posts. Given that more and more of the Internet is going mobile, this initiative from Tencent, which has a strong track record of entering new business areas popularized by others, could have a good chance of success and pose the first strong challenge to Weibo. Meantime in the China Internet world, the cleanup of weaker US listed companies continues, with China CGame (Nasdaq: CCGM), a company whose market cap is just $4 million, reportedly being notified of its imminent de-listing from the Nasdaq — reports the company denies (Chinese article). Frankly speaking, I’m surprised this company hasn’t been delisted already, as it has traded below the $1 threshold required for continued listing since August. Such small companies have no business being listed on a big board anyhow, and the sooner this kind of company is purged from the big US exchanges the sooner investor confidence will return to this group of battered companies.

Bottom line: Tencent’s Weixin could soon pose a serious challenge to Sina’s Weibo microblogging service, drawing on its strong features aimed at mobile Internet users.

Related postings 相关文章:

Sina’s Weibo: Growth Engine or Growing Burden? 新浪微博:动力or负担?

Govt’s Microblog Shift Looks Good for Weibo 政府口风转变或有利於新浪微博

Baidu’s Latest Botch: Microblogging 百度“微博”的倒掉