Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Comment - The Danone Wahaha legacy

Source: just-drinks.com editorial team

Danone’s trademark dispute with Wahaha may have ended, but the fallout from the one of the most long-running and high-profile disputes between joint venture partners in the drinks sector will not disappear so easily.

Danone and Wahaha said today (30 September) that they have agreed to end their dispute, after Danone agreed to ditch its 51% stake in the two companies' Chinese joint venture.

With allegations of copycat production and lengthy, not to mention costly, legal battles, it is a tale that contains some of the worst nightmares for western companies seeking partners in emerging markets.

There is already evidence that the Wahaha dispute has influenced Danone's strategy in these markets.

The French food and soft drinks giant announced in April that it would pursue growth in India, another key emerging market, on its own. The firm said it was pulling out of a turbulent 13-year joint venture with India's Wadia Group and would seek to grow its business "autonomously" in the country.

Having had its fingers singed, Danone appears skeptical about working with 'local' partners in emerging markets.

From the Wahaha side, it is clear the company believes the dispute with Danone could jeopardize the confidence of foreign investors in China.
China's Government took part in the peace talks between the two companies and its obsession with presenting a friendly face to outside investors is stamped all over today's official Wahaha statement.

"China is an open country. Chinese people are broad-minded people. Chinese companies are willing to cooperate and grow with the world's leading peers on the basis of equality and reciprocal benefit," chimed Wahaha Group chairman Zong Qinhou.

The statement is reminiscent of China's strenuous efforts to deny claims of "economic nationalism" after officials blocked Coca-Cola Co's takeover of Huiyuan Juice Group.

In the end, companies are not going to turn their backs on so-called 'emerging markets' - the clue, of course, is in the name.

Danone today reiterated its "longstanding commitment" to China. Shortly before Coca-Cola Co was bounced out of the Huiyuan deal, it announced a three-year US$2bn investment plan for China, which is now the soft drinks giant's third largest market in the world by volume.

Multinational drinks companies cannot afford to be totally absent from the likes of India, China, Russia and Brazil, because of the growth opportunities those countries hold.

But, the Wahaha example will not be lost on those who operate in such markets and it may lead some to rethink their approach.

Danone to Exit Joint Venture With China's Wahaha

Source: The Wall Street Journal by James T. Areddy

SHANGHAI – France's Groupe Danone SA will accept a cash settlement to relinquish claims to the name Wahaha, one of China's best-known brands, in a decision to exit a valuable consumer-products business after a rare public battle for control of it.

In a joint statement Wednesday, Danone announced a settlement with China's Hangzhou Wahaha Group Co. by saying its 51% share in existing joint ventures that make soft drinks and related products will be sold to the businesses' Chinese partners. "The completion of this settlement will put an end to all legal proceedings related to the disputes between the two parties," the statement said.

No financial terms were announced. A person familiar with the matter said the settlement amount is "slightly below" the figure Danone has cited in previously published financial accounts as the value of its Wahaha holdings: 381 million euros, or about $555 million.
The Wahaha brand is among the most famous in China. It ranked No. 16 among domestic brands and is worth $2.2 billion, according to a recent report by Shanghai research firm Hurun Report, which uses qualitative and quantitative measures to arrive at brand values. In recent years Wahaha has sold more drinks in China than even Coca-Cola Co., according to some reports.
Over the past two-plus years, a public feud over control of the Wahaha empire offered a rare peek into the breakup of a major Sino-foreign joint venture. And Danone's strategy to publicly confront its partner, and Wahaha's to respond with its own accusations, marked a bold break with prevailing business theory that problems in China are best settled with face-saving, private negotiations.

Whether one side won or lost is less clear to analysts, who agreed the case served to reinforce how difficult it is to operate a partnership in China. "That's a key lesson: To build a [brand] business in China you need to build from the ground up," said Jonathan Chajet, China managing director for consultancy Interbrand.
In 2007, Danone went public with stunning allegations against its partner of more than a decade, Zong Qinghou, Wahaha's founder and a Chinese folk hero entrepreneur.
The French company charged that Mr. Zong had for years produced and sold Wahaha-branded drinks using a network of operations that he owned and which mirrored the joint ventures. Danone said that cut it out of the 51% in earnings from anything carrying the Wahaha name that it was entitled to under contracts signed in 1996.
Moreover, Danone said Mr. Zong reneged on a late 2006 agreement that would have settled the matter amicably.

For his part, Mr. Zong never denied he established Wahaha-branded businesses outside the ventures but said it was done with the blessing of Danone. A colorful figure, brilliant marketer and active blogger, Mr. Zong argued the original agreements were outdated and unfair, written when he was a regional player and Danone was one of the world's largest companies.
In rabble-rousing speeches, he claimed to represent China's long-term interests, while dismissing Danone as a company hungry for short-term profits.
"One of the most successful alliances in China" degenerated into a case study of a relationship that "was not sustainable in the long run," according to Teng Bingsheng [surname: Mr. Teng], a professor of Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing.
Deep distrust and loss of face on both sides, Mr. Teng said, made Danone's eventual exit likely. "For the simple reason Mr. Zong is the one who runs the show," he said.

Mr. Zong founded the Wahaha group in the late 1980s, pricing soft drinks cheaply and pushing them with widespread distribution, some of China's first television advertisements and a catchy name that roughly translates as "laughing baby." In 1996, he and Danone began establishing joint ventures to sell drinks under the Wahaha name.
Eventually Danone owned 51% of around 40 joint ventures, but left Mr. Zong to run them with virtually no oversight.
Over the past two years, the companies traded accusations through the press and filed dueling lawsuits in courts around the world, some of them directed at individuals at the center of the ventures. At one point, Danone estimated its losses from Mr. Zong's ventures at $100 million, while Mr. Zong responded that "the French" had no claim on a business he built into a multibillion dollar empire.
As the heat built up, the leaders of France and China even addressed the dispute at a 2007 presidential summit.

In some of the legal actions, Mr. Zong appeared to prevail, particularly in Chinese courts, while Danone chalked up successes on foreign soil. The case went beyond the companies: Mr. Zong's family members were investigated by U.S. tax authorities over their financial ties to the joint ventures.
Until the settlement signed Wednesday in Beijing witnessed by Chinese Commerce Ministry officials and the French ambassador, an internationally binding arbitration was expected to emerge from Sweden on the case within weeks.
Now, the settlement is subject to approval by Chinese authorities. It is expected to be competed before year end.

Danone, which reported Wahaha business generated about 10% of its global revenue in 2006 but has since adjusted how it accounted for Wahaha, said it expects no impact on its income statement from the Wahaha settlement. In China, it will be left with a much smaller footprint and is essentially starting over, pushing its Bio-brand yoghurt through a recently launched, wholly-owned business that has none of the distribution might as Wahaha controls.
"We are keen to accelerate the success of our Chinese activities," Franck Riboud, chief executive officer and chairman of Danone said in the statement. He said he is confident Wahaha will "continue to be highly successful."
For the closely held Wahaha, its one-time appeal to consumers on nationalistic grounds has worn off and it is faced with following through on plans to extend its reach overseas without a sizable international partner, analysts said.
"Chinese companies are willing to cooperate and grow with the world's leading peers on the basis of equality and reciprocal benefit," the statement quoted Mr. Zong as saying.

New equities market may play starring role in movie funding

Source: Shanghai Daily by Min Lee

THE chief executive of one of China's leading filmmakers says the company's upcoming initial public offering will help other studios tap new funding for their productions.

Huayi Brothers hopes to raise 620 million yuan (US$91 million) by listing on a new board for smaller companies that's expected to launch on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange next month. Chinese securities regulators approved the company's initial public offering and listing application last Sunday.

Huayi Brothers co-founder and general manager, Wang Zhonglei, told The Associated Press yesterday he hopes the share sale will open up new funding sources in an industry that usually takes a longer time to recover initial investments.

Wang said the lack of capital is the biggest challenge for the booming Chinese entertainment industry.

Government statistics show the Chinese box office surged from 920 million yuan in 2003 to 4.3 billion yuan in 2008, compared with US$9.8 billion in the United States last year.

"There are many good entertainment companies in China that want to follow our lead and enter the capital markets. Once they have entered the capital markets, they can enjoy strong capital backing," he said.

Wang, who was promoting Huayi Brothers' new 100 million yuan spy thriller "The Message" in Hong Kong, said the company has received bank loans in the past, but "that's still a very complicated and difficult way of financing."

Founded in 1994 by Wang and his older brother, Wang Zhongjun, Huayi Brothers is best known in the West for its 2008 kung fu movie "The Forbidden Kingdom," a co-production with Hollywood that was the first on-screen collaboration between action stars Jackie Chan and Jet Li.

The studio had five movies among China's top 10 locally made hits from 2006 to 2008, or a 12 percent market share. The country's leading state-run film company, China Film Group, enjoyed a 17 percent market share in the same period.

It's too early to say if any institutional investors will take a large position in the company through the share sale, but top executives are confident that public interest is strong, Wang said.

The Wang brothers currently own 46 percent of the company. Jack Ma, the founder of Chinese e-commerce portal Alibaba.com, has an 11 percent stake.

"Everyone is interested in this new kind of stock. We shouldn't have any problems raising funds. We're very confident," Wang said.

Huayi Brothers said in its prospectus it plans to use the 620 million yuan to fund an ambitious slate of six movies and 20 TV drama series in 2009 and 2010.

The new Shenzhen exchange is designed to nurture private companies that struggle to get financing in a system favoring big state enterprises.

China Wants Citigroup to Expand

Source: The Wall Street Journal by James T. Areddy

In Frank Talk, Senior Regulator Says Other Foreign Banks Need to Bulk Up in This Populous Nation

SHANGHAI -- A top banking regulator in China said Citigroup Inc.'s local operations "absolutely" should expand in the country, suggesting the U.S. government's big stake in the bank isn't troubling Chinese regulators.

Citigroup's China unit was "very prudent and careful" amid the global financial crisis and now should be "expanding, absolutely," Yan Qingmin, director of the Shanghai branch of the China Banking Regulatory Commission and one of the top regulators for foreign banks in the country, told The Wall Street Journal in an interview.
Showing an unusual willingness by a regulator to comment on an individual company, Mr. Yan offered a glimpse into how China views the recent overhaul of the U.S. financial system and said Citigroup should take advantage of growth in the Chinese economy and expand in the world's most populous nation.
He signaled a view that despite the shock of seeing an "aircraft carrier" of the U.S. financial industry fall into the government's arms, Washington's support for Citigroup was the correct decision and that the result has done little to alter how Chinese policy makers regard the financial-services giant.

"Regarding the U.S. government bailout of Citigroup, I think the American government measures were urgently needed," he said. "They were very timely. At that moment, what we needed most was confidence."
Sitting in a gilded chair in the CBRC's Shanghai headquarters, the 48-year-old Mr. Yan said the crisis that erupted last year with the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and led to massive bailouts of major financial firms may give rise to "new economic theories or schools of thought" regarding governments' role in market-based financial systems. He didn't elaborate.
The comments suggest that Washington's 34% stake in Citigroup, amassed after offering $45 billion in support this year, isn't a worry for Chinese regulators, and perhaps is a source of comfort. China's own banking industry is controlled by the state, with a Communist Party appointee at the helm of major institutions.
Even as Citigroup's global operations lost $27.68 billion in 2008, its business in China remained healthy. Net profit from its China operation, which includes stakes in local banks, nearly doubled last year to the equivalent of $191 million.

Over the past year, Citigroup has expanded in China, but not as much as other foreign banks, Mr. Yan said. At the end of June, its loan-to-deposit ratio of just $6 in loans for every $10 in deposits was among the most conservative in the industry, he said.
A Citigroup spokesman in Shanghai declined to respond to the regulator's views. Instead, the firm issued a statement saying that "China remains one of Citi's top priority markets anywhere in the world. Our business in China is performing strongly and we continue to pursue growth across all lines of business."
Speaking more broadly, Mr. Yan said foreign banks in the country need to build more substantial operations to attract customer deposits.
However, Chinese rules governing expansion are complex, and so far there is little evidence to suggest that foreign banks are making more money as they extend their networks. Mr. Yan acknowledged that foreign banks have been profitable only in certain areas, such as the trading of Chinese government bonds and currencies, and less so in traditional retail banking, where they continue spending more on new branches than they earn from them.

A natural brake on foreign banks' ability to expand is a requirement that they set up new, virtually standalone operations that are legally incorporated in China. Before foreign banks can offer customers cards to access to automated teller machines, for instance, they need to build a full technology center in China, rather than route transactions through their global computer systems.
Mr. Yan described such requirements as a "risk management" policy. It provides regulators a better look at the business and offers a necessary layer of protection for China's financial system and its consumers, he said.
Regulators want foreign banks to put down deeper roots to strengthen their China entities, including recruiting more top-level staff from overseas and giving China-based teams mandates to operate more independently of headquarters, he said. "We still ask the banks to localize risk management," he said.
Mr. Yan said the biggest lesson from the global financial crisis is that foreign banks in China need to work harder to attract customer deposits and improve the capital structures of their Chinese businesses. Foreign banks now rely too heavily on borrowing from Chinese banks to fund their local operations, he said. That money can dry up, as last year's financial crisis showed.

After the collapse of Lehman Brothers, big Chinese banks all but cut off funding to foreign banks, in particular U.S. institutions, Mr. Yan said. He personally telephoned top officers at each of the country's five biggest banks to press them to lend to their foreign counterparts.
Foreign banks will need time to scoop up more consumer deposits, he said. Some foreign banks also need to improve their reputations after the complex financial products they peddled to Chinese investors in previous years lost money during last year's crisis.
"Getting deposits relies on expanding the network. It depends on marketing with clients. It takes some time to realize," Mr. Yan said.
To boost their capital bases in China, U.K.-based HSBC Holdings PLC and Hong Kong-based Bank of East Asia Ltd. have indicated that they hope to sell shares in their China units on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. Mr. Yan said he is unaware of interest by any U.S. bank in doing the same. Mr. Yan said the regulatory agency will support foreign banks that want to sell yuan-denominated bonds, as HSBC and Bank of East Asia have done this year.

Africa Pressures China's Oil Deals

Source: The Wall Street Journal by Benoit Faucon and Spencer Swartz

LONDON -- China's search for large stakes in some of Nigeria's richest oil blocks comes against a backdrop of problems in other African countries where the Asian giant has oil operations.
On Tuesday, Nigeria's oil minister and a presidential spokesman said state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp., or Cnooc, is in advanced talks with Nigeria to take over blocks that are owned by Royal Dutch Shell PLC and other companies, but are underutilized.
An official with Nigeria's state oil company said about 20 onshore blocks were on offer and that negotiations were at a late stage with some companies, including Cnooc. He said he wasn't sure exactly how much crude Cnooc was vying for, but that targeted investment would run into several billion dollars.
Cnooc officials couldn't be reached for comment.

The news of the Nigeria talks followed setbacks for China this month on deals in Angola and Libya. On Sept. 8, Libya vetoed a $462 million bid by China National Petroleum Corp. for Libya-focused Verenex Energy Inc. Days later, Angola's state-owned Sonangol said it wanted to block the sale of Marathon Oil Corp.'s 20% oil-field stake to Cnooc and China PetroChemical Corp., or Sinopec.
The setback in Angola -- China's largest African partner -- is in stark contrast with the enthusiastic reception it found there five years ago, when China was launching a quest for African resources to feed its economic boom. It made a spate of resource acquisitions in the form of oil-for-infrastructure deals.
In 2004, Sonangol chose Sinopec over India's Oil & Natural Gas Corp. for the sale of an oil-field stake by Shell. The deal came just after China's Export-Import Bank had granted Angola a $2 billion loan.
In the first half of 2008, Angola became China's largest oil supplier, covering 18% of its needs. China's commerce ministry reported Sino-African trade hit a record $106.8 billion for the year, up 45% from 2007.

But some in Africa are starting to find the Chinese embrace too tight. The formula of bartering oil for infrastructure initially had given China's oil concerns a competitive advantage against Western companies, whose investors were largely unwilling to fund such projects. But those same projects have become a key factor in China's setbacks. In particular, China state companies' insistence on keeping local hiring to a minimum has brewed resentment.
In 2006, Cnooc bought a 45% stake in Total SA's Akpo field for $2.3 billion. The field is now the company's biggest overseas asset, with a production capacity of 175,000 barrels a day.
But more than $10 billion of contracts with Nigeria signed in 2006 -- including renovation of a railway, the refurbishment a refinery and the launch of a satellite -- didn't produce results. That is partly because of a change of administration the following year but also because of commercial and technical pitfalls.
Chatham House, a U.K. think tank, this year published a study on how deals by Asian oil companies with the Nigerian government in 2004-05 in exchange for bankrolling infrastructure projects had generally failed. It concluded that the main reason was the Nigerian government's lack of "follow-up mechanisms to enforce the deals."

It is unclear whether Cnooc is offering to fund and build more nonoil projects in the latest round of contract negotiations.
Angola may not need China as much as it used to. On Tuesday, the IMF signed a tentative agreement with Angola that could lead to new loans from Western banks. And when Sonangol sought $1 billion of financing this month, the loan was 50% oversubscribed -- thanks mostly to European banks.
The U.S. has promised to ramp up investment in both oil and agricultural projects. As a result, China will likely have to pay more for its African oil push.
"China and African nations are now in the process of tailoring the high expectations raised over the last few years to the realities of any maturing relationship," said Christopher Alden, senior lecturer at the London School of Economics.

Tesco: Introducing a Zero down Payment Business Credit Card Installment

Source: CCFA

Recently, Tesco launched in Shanghai, the "zero down payments" credit card installment business, to provide more convenience for customers while helping customers to make financial management. At Tesco stores Shanghai if customers buy goods valued over 1,500 Yuan or more, they can enjoy the credit card installment, and no down payment.

Any customers who have the credit card of China Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Bank of China, China Construction Bank and Bank of Communications could enjoy this service. Tesco is also offering customers a 6-month, 12 months and 24 months, three kinds of installment options.

"Zero down payments" credit card installment business is another value-added service which Tesco provided customers, especially for the young consumer groups in the provision of new payment options. At the same time it can also help them save cash flow, easy financial management. Tesco plans to extend the value-added services to more areas spreading across the country in order to facilitate more customers. At present, Tesco has started cooperation with Bank of Communications throughout the country. And cooperation with the rest of the three banks is also expected in the near future.

Vast Quantities of Methane Hydrate Discovered in Northwestern China

Source: (Caijing.com.cn) By intern reporter Zhang Yanling

Deposits of flammable ice in China are estimated to be 35 billion tons in oil equivalent; extraction is expected to be possible in 10 to 15 years.

Methane hydrate, also known as flammable ice, has been found for the first time on land in China, below the country's northwestern tundra, said Zhang Hongtao, director-general of the China Geological Survey.
Stable only at low temperatures and high pressure, methane hydrate is made up of crystalline solids. It has a high energy density and one cubic meter produces as much energy as 164 cubic meters of natural gas, according to Zhang. The frozen gas is being contemplated as a possible replacement to fossil fuels such as coal, petroleum and natural gas. It is regarded as the most promising strategic resource in the 21st century.
Gas hydrates exist in large quantities either in the seafloor or below the tundra at high latitudes, at twice as much the combined volume of coal, petroleum and natural gas. In 1965, reserves were found for the first time by the Soviet Union below its permafrost in the Siberian region.

China has the world's third largest area of tundra, which covers 2.15 million square kilometers. Samples of gas hydrate were successfully collected from the South China Sea in 2001, making China the world's fourth country to find reserves of flammable ice in the seafloor, following the United States, Japan and India. Chinese scientists estimated that the potential volume of the gas hydrate in China exceeds 35 billion tons in oil equivalent.
China's gas hydrates detected around continental slopes have a methane concentration as high as 99.8 percent. Those found on land are buried in rocks and the methane is mixed with ethane, propane and carbon dioxide.

Zhang argued that there is greater commercial viability in extracting flammable gas from the tundra than from under the seafloor. The geologic setting of seafloor drilling causes a release of high pressure, potentially damaging marine ecosystems. Zhang estimated that undersea commercial-scale production in China will be possible in 30 years, while land extraction is expected to be possible in 10 to 15 years.
Due to the fragile environment of the Qinghai-Tibet plateau where gas hydrates exist, Zhang added that environmental costs must be accounted for in commercial scale plans. Furthermore, reserves of flammable gas were found where there are coal mines, raising the issue of optimizing different resources without causing waste.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Premier's visit might revive nuke talks

Source: By Zhang Haizhou (China Daily)

Premier Wen Jiabao is set to visit the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) early next week on a trip that analysts hope may help revive the stalled six-nation talks.

Commentators pointed out that China would be unlikely to send such a high-profile visitor if it had not received some sort of assurance from Pyongyang that the talks - in limbo for nearly half a year - might be saved.
The Foreign Ministry said in a brief dispatch yesterday that Wen will pay an "official goodwill visit" to the DPRK between Sunday and Tuesday.
"Wen will meet with DPRK leaders and exchange views on furthering China-DPRK ties and other issues of concern to both countries," said ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu.
The premier will attend activities marking the 60th anniversary of bilateral ties and commemorate the China-DPRK Friendship Year, she said.

The impending visit was also confirmed by the DPRK's Korean Central News Agency.
Neither country is saying much more about the visit, which comes after Pyongyang made a series of conciliatory gestures toward the Republic of Korea (ROK) and the United States following months of tension after the DPRK conducted nuclear testing and missile launches earlier this year and after resulting sanctions.
In April, the DPRK formally withdrew from six-nation talks on decommissioning nuclear weapons on the Korean Peninsula. Since then, China has been seen as crucial to getting the DPRK back around the table.
Earlier yesterday, the ROK's Yonhap news agency reported that DPRK leader Kim Jong-il may announce some concrete denuclearization measures during Wen's visit.

Yonhap, citing unidentified diplomatic sources in Beijing, reported that China may also offer fuel aid to the DPRK.
"There probably will be significant talks between Wen and leader Kim Jong-il, not only on their relations but about events throughout the Korean Peninsula and nuclear arms," said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the ROK's University of North Korean Studies.
The DPRK had been insisting on one-on-one talks with the US, instead of the Six-Party Talks that involve the DPRK, ROK, China, Russia, US and Japan.
Washington, which had demanded Pyongyang return to six-nation talks before any one-on-one dialogue, is believed to now be considering direct talks as part of its efforts to restart the six-party process.

But Wang Fan, from China Foreign Affairs University, said it is unlikely Wen will discuss with Kim any "such concrete issue" as when the Six-Party Talks will reopen.
Wang said while Kim is not likely to offer concrete commitment, he may express a willingness to resume talks.
China and the DPRK held a reception in Beijing yesterday to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties. DPRK ambassador Choe Jin-su said it was a consistent policy of the DPRK to develop friendship with China.
Last month, Kim reportedly expressed a willingness to engage in "bilateral and multilateral talks" during his meeting with Chinese presidential envoy Dai Bingguo in Pyongyang.
Meanwhile, Washington's second most senior diplomat is set to meet Chinese leaders in Beijing in an attempt to see the resumption of Six-Party Talks. US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg will reportedly meet Vice-President Xi Jinping and State Councilor Dai during the visit.

China Inc. Looks Homeward as U.S. Shoppers Turn Frugal

Source: The Wall Street Journal by Andrew Batson

SHUNDE, China -- With the longtime engine of global growth, the American consumer, pummeled by recession, some of China's hugely productive exporters are eyeing a new market: the Chinese.

Bicycle manufacturer Tandem Industries has long supplied big overseas retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. But Tandem's American sales have tumbled 40% since September 2008, the month a U.S. credit squeeze turned into a credit panic. So Tandem is about to offer its bikes to riders in its home province, Guangdong, under its own brand and at its own stores.

"China's ability to consume has now reached a fairly high level. It's at a turning point," says Tandem's general manager, Tom Tseng. Incomes are rising in China and people can afford more high-quality goods, he says, while "in the U.S., people now only want to buy cheap things."

Chinese businesspeople like Mr. Tseng are adapting to what they believe will be a lasting consequence of America's deep recession. Savings by suddenly frugal U.S. households soared to an annualized $566 billion in the second quarter, more than quadruple the rate at the start of 2008. While that is important to rebuilding U.S. financial health, it is also sucking demand out of the world economy. China's exports, after growing for years at a steady 20%-plus rate, recorded a year-over-year drop last November. They kept falling, and in August were down 23% from a year earlier.
Spending by Chinese consumers, meanwhile, is holding up pretty well, partly because of heavy stimulus spending by a government flush with cash. Urban household spending in China was up 9.2% in the first half of 2009, not far off the country's average overall growth in recent years.
This shifting dynamic shows how the global economic turmoil is pushing China, the world's second-largest exporter after Germany, to become a more inward-focused economy. Even once world growth gets back on track, China is likely to run into limits on how much more it can expand its export market share, economists say. The World Bank expects that slower export gains in the future will shave about two percentage points off China's historical growth rate of 10%.

With the recession, Chinese exporters have been taught the dangers of a narrow business model. "The lesson we learned from the financial crisis is not to put all your eggs in one basket. We relied too much on the U.S. market," says Mr. Tseng, a 42-year-old native of Taiwan. "If we had started domestic sales earlier, our business wouldn't have declined so much this year."
Chinese domestic demand isn't a panacea for exporters. For one thing, domestic demand itself can suffer to some extent when exports decline, because the jobs of so many Chinese are linked to export industries. In addition, China's consumers simply don't have the money to drive the global economy in the same way as big-spending New Yorkers and Parisians.

The consumers of the U.S. and Europe each pump more than $9.5 trillion a year into the global economy, even at their current recession-diminished pace. China's much poorer households spent in aggregate just over $1.5 trillion last year. Per-capita disposable income in the U.S. was $35,486 in 2008, versus $2,270 in China. So even such a huge and growing country is in no position to replace the U.S. and Europe as an engine of global growth.
But with prospects for exports remaining weak (although U.S. imports rose in July), and with Chinese incomes continuing to rise, domestic consumer spending is becoming a bigger part of China's own growth story. Among the exporters giving the local market a try are, besides the bike maker, a firm that is seeking to sell Chinese parents a talking doll that knows when it is being spoken to.
There's even a chance the trend could have an effect on the piracy problem. Foreign companies selling in China have long complained that patent violations and copying are rampant, but they have gotten little sympathy in local courts. That attitude could shift if more Chinese manufacturers selling in China start to make the same complaint.

Since American consumers are hesitant to spend at levels they once did, economists have said Asian consumers can help make up the difference and serve as new markets for U.S. companies.
Tandem has been making bicycles since 1992, when much of the area around its home base of Shunde was rural and the local government was eager to attract new businesses. Tandem became one of thousands of small businesses in southern China that learned to thrive on a bare-bones business model: using low-cost labor to assemble products on contract for foreign distributors and retailers. The focus on pure manufacturing let these companies concentrate on keeping costs down and volumes up, without the distractions of design or marketing.
The foundations of that model have weakened in recent years. Empty land is filling up; Tandem's 124-acre operation butts up against other factories and the few tiny farms that remain. In addition, Mr. Tseng says it has been getting harder to find good workers, leading him to install robotic welding arms to assemble frames. Then came the downturn in overseas demand.
Mr. Tseng saw the first signs of that in July 2008, when the orders at local electronics factories started to slip. Tandem didn't feel the full brunt until the credit crisis struck the U.S. hard late last year and frightened consumers. "I went to the U.S. in December and saw that car dealerships in San Francisco were empty," he says.

Some of Tandem's directors opposed trying the domestic market, worried about distributors who wouldn't pay their bills, unscrupulous competitors who would flood the market with knockoffs, and steady downward pressure on prices. But Mr. Tseng, convinced the U.S. consumer downturn wouldn't reverse quickly, argued for giving domestic sales a try.
He says Chinese are becoming more receptive to the alloy-frame racing and mountain bikes Tandem makes for abroad. "The way people use bicycles is changing," he says. Bicycles were traditionally just a utilitarian form of transport in China, which was called the "kingdom of bicycles" before the recent takeoff of car buying. Today's urban consumers are more likely to see bike riding as a form of leisure or exercise, Mr. Tseng argues: "Their ideas are gradually changing. China's consumers are becoming more like other countries' consumers."
Driving his sport-utility vehicle through downtown Shunde on a recent day, Mr. Tseng saw domestic consumer demand all about. He pointed to vehicles filling the parking lot of a shopping center. "How much does one of those new cars cost? Where is the lack of consumption?" he asked. "Every car company in the world comes here because of the domestic demand."

Tandem's board gave final approval in July to begin domestic as well as export sales. The shift has made the company, which had sales of $114 million last year, more of a normal business, with goals and problems not so different from the multinationals that sell to the Chinese.
Changing course hasn't been simple. There were bureaucratic barriers. Tandem has been registered as what is called a "processing trade" company. That legal status allows it to import materials duty-free, process them and assemble them into final products -- which must then be exported. But processing-trade firms are essentially cut off from China's domestic economy. To be able to sell locally, Tandem had to register a new "normal trade" company with separate accounts. The legal maneuvering should be completed by November.
Other challenges await, like branding and distribution. A business long focused on making a product to order for other companies needs a change in mind-set and organization. "For us, manufacturing is the easy part. We've been doing this for 17 years," says Vincent Chen, a manager. "Now we are designing the product ourselves, without outsourcing."

Tandem's interest in this market may be new, but competition in many consumer goods is intense in China, with multiple foreign and domestic brands crowding store shelves. Big companies like Giant Manufacturing Co. of Taiwan already have a strong presence in the high end of the domestic bicycle market, where Tandem's products would fall.
So, Tandem is targeting a niche first: children's bikes, where Mr. Tseng thinks local producers are more vulnerable. "They approach kids' bikes like toys. We start off from making bicycles, so our quality and safety will be much better," he says.
There isn't much need to redesign products. Mr. Tseng's showroom is already full of colorful children's designs, from a shocking-pink Barbie brand bike to flame-emblazoned bikes with names like Firestorm and Striker. "Like kids in the U.S., Chinese kids like bikes that are thick and solid looking. And the colors they like are not very different," Mr. Tseng says.
The company won't try to sell in existing Chinese stores, dubious that either distributors or retailers would push its products, and concerned about spending a lot on a marketing effort that might fall flat. Instead, it plans to build its own bicycle stores, starting with one in Shunde.

"To build stores and pay for advertising is a lot of money, and you won't necessarily get a result at first. That's why we're starting small and building up slowly," Mr. Tseng says. "We have to pay our tuition first."
This means domestic sales aren't going to make a big difference for Tandem this year. "We will still do exports -- I can't give up that business. But we're going to work more on domestic sales. We have to have both," Mr. Tseng says.
The bicycle maker's strategy wouldn't work for every export business, by any means. China's biggest exporters use the country as a base to manufacture for the global market, and most of their exports are electronics and machinery, not consumer goods.
Nonetheless, China's government is increasingly encouraging those exporters that can to look at the domestic market, just as for years it offered financial incentives to ship goods abroad. Domestic subsidies for purchases of cars and home appliances, such as tax breaks and coupons for discounts, have helped boost local sales of those products in recent months.

Economists say a more vibrant domestic consumer market in China will require changes that enable people to benefit more from the country's growth, such as liberalizing the financial sector.
Tandem is steeling itself for the near-certain prospect that its products will be knocked off by local competitors. "We haven't seen pirated goods yet, but expect to once we start selling domestically," Mr. Tseng says.
Worries about copying didn't deter doll-maker Mei Ye Plastic Products Co. from launching last year what it hopes will be a blockbuster: a talking doll with voice-recognition technology so it can respond when a child speaks to it. The company, based in the Guangdong province city of Shantou, says the doll is the result of more than three years of research.
It shipped the first models to Russia in June of last year. But the global downturn dashed its hopes of big export sales.

So, factory boss Chen Guoliang decided to look at the domestic market. He ordered the dolls programmed with English and Chinese -- enabling the company to pitch them to ambitious Chinese parents as a language-learning tool for their children. The first shipments went out to domestic distributors in December.
In the first half of this year, exports at Mei Ye, which makes many other kinds of dolls as well, were down about 40% from a year earlier. Mr. Chen says domestic sales are replacing about three-quarters of the decline.
The company had some initial hiccups. For the domestic market, the designers' first instinct was to make the dolls with yellow-toned skin and black hair, to match their Chinese owners. The response wasn't so good: It turned out many Chinese girls preferred dolls with pink skin and blond hair.
The switch was made, and Mei Ye continues to refine the product. The next generation of talking dolls should hit the Chinese market in October.

Toyota Plans Smaller Cars for Chinese Market

Source: The Wall Street Journal by Patricia Jiayi Ho

BEIJING -- Toyota Motor Corp., which has been hurt in China by a failure to anticipate the demand for affordable, no-frills cars, said it plans to increase the proportion of smaller cars it sells in the country.

Beijing-based spokesman Niu Yu said Tuesday the Japanese car maker is taking the step to improve sales.

Chinese consumers have been snapping up smaller cars, especially after the government in January cut sales taxes on cars with engines of 1.6 liters or smaller. However, Toyota, whose product mix has been focused on larger cars, reported flat China sales in the first half from a year earlier.

Toyota's sales have since picked up, rising 43% in August from a year earlier to 67,000 units, Mr. Niu said. Sales in the January-August period rose 9% from the same period last year to 415,000 units, he said.

The sales slump has been a blow to the world's biggest auto maker because China is the only major global auto market still growing and its major rivals have reported sharp sales gains.
In addition, Toyota plans to increase the number of dealerships it has in China to around 590 by year-end from about 500 in early August, Mr. Niu said. It also plans to increase the number of China dealerships for the Lexus, its premium brand, to 60 by the end of the year from 50 in early August, he added.

CNOOC bids for big stake in Nigerian oil

Source: Agencies

China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) is in talks with Nigeria to buy large stakes in some of the richest oil blocks in the world, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

The value of the potential deal was not disclosed, but details suggested a figure of around $30 billion, the report said.

CNOOC, the third largest oil and gas producer and an offshore specialist, is bidding for 6 billion barrels of oil, equivalent to one in six pumped by Africa's second largest oil producer, according to the paper.

Yang Hua, president of CNOOC Ltd, the listed arm that has been the main vehicle for the firm's overseas investment, declined to comment.

CNOOC's spokesman Xiao Zongwei said he had never heard of the development reported in the paper.

If the bid is successful, it could place the company in competition with major western oil groups like Total, Shell, Chevron and Exxon Mobil, which operate the 23 blocks under discussion, the newspaper said.

The report said the deal was detailed in a letter it had seen from the office of Nigeria's president, Umaru Yar'Adua, to CNOOC's representative Sunrise.
So far the largest investment CNOOC has made in Nigeria was a $2.69 billion stake purchased in 2006 in deepsea oil block OML-130, which operator Total said in March has started pumping oil to reach 175,000 barrels a day this summer.
Tanimu Yakubu, the Nigerian president's economic adviser, said in the FT report that China may not secure "anything close" to the 6 billion barrels it is seeking, saying: "We want to retain our traditional friends."

He added, however, that the Chinese "are really offering multiples of what existing producers are pledging (for licenses). We love to see this kind of competition."
In a recent Chinese acquisition of Nigerian oil assets, No 2 oil firm Sinopec Group paid $7.24 billion for Swiss oil and gas firm Addax, which operates in Nigeria and other African states.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Love and Marriage Since Liberation

Source: China Youth Daily / Translated by womenofchina.cn

Changes in the Chinese approach to love and marriage since the foundation of the People's Republic of China have taken place at certain characteristic stages.

Post-Liberation

The first marriage law of the People's Republic of China, issued in April, 1950, specified free marriage and an end to polygamy. It signified a new system of marriage conventions displacing those based on traditional, outdated principles, and establishment in the Chinese consciousness of the concept of personal rights protection.

Liu Qiao'er, main character in an opera of the same name, rejected an arranged marriage and demanded the right to choose her own husband. A role model for Chinese women in the new era, Liu Qiao'er also expressed the common desire to be one half of the era's idealized model couple.

Marriage Amid Cultural Revolution

Life during the 1966-1976 decade bowed to the concept of "revolution," whereby Chinese men and women met, married and divorced with "a common revolutionary objective."
Emotional love was regarded as a bourgeois concept and not mentioned. If ever a couple actually did fall in love, they kept quiet about it.

Reform and Opening-up

Most significant of the first amendments to the Marriage Law of 1980 was that permitting divorce on the grounds of loss of mutual affection because it acknowledged individual among collective wishes.
The "cultural revolution" over, Chinese men and women again desired free marriage based on mutual affection and compatible personalities.
Social development encouraged even more people to find nuptial bliss. After the first "personals" ad appeared in the Market Daily in 1981, marriage ads became a main matchmaking medium.

In ads of the early 1980s, when each newlywed couple started married life equipped with the "three wheels and one speaker" – bicycle, sewing machine, watch and cassette recorder – college graduates with "literary leanings" were the most sought-after spouses. By the mid-to-late 1980s, China's booming economy had created a more practical marital approach. A TV, fridge and washing machine replaced the "three wheels and one speaker," and career, family background and place of registered residence became main criteria in the search for an ideal mate. Privately owned small enterprises were a frequent and popular feature of mid-to-late 1980s marriage ads.
Chinese people's conception of love and marriage underwent another sea-change in the 1990s. Young men and women began to date publicly, walk hand-in-hand on the street and sit close together at the cinema. Eight-minute TV speed-dating and intercultural marriages soared in the mid-1990s, and many Chinese married and settled abroad.

The New Millennium

The second Marriage Law amendments of 2001 included fundamental principles highlighting fidelity and aimed at curbing domestic violence.
The new Marriage Registration Ordinance of 2003 dispensed with the need to produce certificates of marriage or divorce from the related unit, and also made pre-marriage physical checkups voluntary.

By this time newly-weds had begun buying their own apartments and vehicles – now indispensable features of urban life – and many became "housing slaves" in the process.
The growing popularity of the Internet in the new millennium has brought about so-called, "Cyber" love and dating. Many young couples meet in real life months after becoming acquainted in cyber "chat rooms." The Web is the new matchmaking medium
Young Chinese people today are busier and under far greater study and work pressure than those of just 20 years ago. They consequently harbor much higher requirements of marriage, which is why many marry relatively late.
But whatever changes there may have been in the Chinese people's approach to marriage, the common objective of a happy, harmonious union remains the same.

China to unveil new missile types on National Day: official

Source: Xinhua

BEIJING: A senior Chinese military commander said Sunday that Thursday's National Day parade in Beijing will feature previously undisclosed technologies in the 108 missiles on display.

Yu Jixun, Deputy Commander of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Second Artillery Force and Vice Commander-in-Chief of the joint headquarters for the military parade, made the statement ahead of the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China on October 1.
Yu said all the missiles to be displayed were new models or upgraded models never before made public.
They included two types of surface-to-surface conventional missiles, a land-based cruise missile, surface-to-surface intermediate and long-range missiles that could be equipped with either nuclear or conventional warheads, and nuclear-capable intercontinental missiles, he said.

Yu said the conventional missiles could launch precision strikes in all weathers and directions, while the land-based cruise missile boasted long-range and low-altitude flight, precision targeting, and quick emergency response from concealed places, he said.
The new-type surface-to-surface intermediate and long-range missiles were "major weapons in winning information-based warfare, " Yu said.
He said the nuclear-capable intercontinental missiles were "remarkable symbols" of China's defense muscle.
"The land-based cruise missiles and the new-type surface-to-surface intermediate and long-range missiles will make their first appearance."

The 108 missiles would form five groups that would rumble past the Tian'anmen Rostrum for a review by top leaders and foreign guests, he said.
"All five types of missiles are solid-fueled, with smaller bodies," Yu said. "In the past, missiles were mostly liquid-fueled and their bodies were huge," limiting their maneuverability.
"The missile arsenal includes both solid-fueled and liquid-fueled missiles of different ranges, capable of carrying various types of warheads and conducting nuclear counter-attacks," he told Xinhua.
"These show the PLA's latest developments in strategic deterrence and medium and long-range precision strikes," he said.

It will be the PLA strategic missile troop's third appearance in a national military parade since their debut at a National Day parade in 1984.
Only intermediate, intermediate-and-long-range, and long-range surface-to-surface conventional missiles were displayed at the 1984 parade.
He said two types of conventional missiles, and intermediate-range and long-range nuclear missiles were displayed at the 1999 parade.
Yu said cadets of the PLA Second Artillery Force studying in the Wuhan-based Second Artillery Command College, the Xi'an-based Second Artillery Engineering College and a sergeant school in Shandong Province would also march goose-step through Tian'anmen Square on October 1.

Tian'anmen closes as countdown begins

Source: (China Daily)

The Forbidden City and other popular tourist venues will begin closing to visitors from Tuesday, just two days out from National Day holiday.

Iconic venues including the Forbidden City, Tian'anmen Rostrum, and the Great Hall of the People will close tomorrow at 3 pm, and reopen on Friday at the earliest, the Tian'anmen Square managing authority told METRO.
Tian'anmen Square will be closed on Wednesday and Thursday.
President Hu Jintao, along with other State leaders and VIPs, will watch a two-hour military and civilian parade from the rostrum on Thursday at 10 am.
A gala event organized by Olympic ceremony director Zhang Yimou and fireworks designer Cai Guoqiang will be staged later that night.

Beijing police expect tens of thousands of tourists to visit the square when it reopens on Oct 2. The authority is yet to announce the exact time when the square will reopen.
Many visitors were expected to watch the regular flag raising ceremony at Tian'anmen on Thursday.

METRO has also learned the Great Hall of the People will be closed four days longer than other venues in Tian'anmen Square. It will reopen to visitors on Oct 6.
Meanwhile, the newly renovated China National Museum on the east side of the square, which has set up an observation deck for visitors to enjoy Tian'anmen Square's decorations, will reopen its doors to visitors free of charge on Oct 3.
The Forbidden City Museum will be reopened on Friday morning. The museum's ticket office said in order to ensure the safety of visitors, the south gate will be used as the entrance and the exit will be two gates in its east and west wings.

Meanwhile, security is tight in Beijing, with police officers citywide and in nearby provinces being mobilized for the operation. The city's 1 million security volunteers, including expatriates living in Beijing, will work full-time starting today.
On Wednesday, the capital's 7,000 traffic police, equipped with GPS devices, will be in charge of clearing a path for thousands of servicemen and women, armed vehicles and 200,000 performers for the parade.
A command center has been set up at the Imperial Ancestral Temple, just east of Tian'anmen Square, to monitor security during the celebrations. From there, military, police and officials will monitor live footage from 40,000 cameras in Beijing.
Major hotels along Chang'an avenue, where the parade will be held, will be closed from Monday until Friday.

Focus Media Cancels Acquisition Deal With Sina In China

Source: China Tech News

It was almost too good to be true for Focus Media Media Holding — they thought they had found a buyer for their lackluster digital out-of-home advertising networks.

Today Focus Media jointly announced with Sina Corporation, owner of the Chinese Internet portal Sina.com, that the companies have jointly reached a decision to not extend the deadline of the agreement announced on December 22, 2008, by which the company agreed to sell substantially all of the assets of Focus Media's digital out-of-home advertising networks to Sina. The agreement was set to expire if approval from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce was not received by September 30, 2009.

"Although we still believe that the acquisition of Focus' out-of-home advertising networks can provide strong synergistic effect to Sina's online advertising platform and significantly enhance Sina's leading position in the new media space, the delayed consummation of the transaction has negatively impacted the business operations of both sides. Consequently, after due consideration, we have decided with Focus' management that the best course of action from here is allow the current agreement deadline to expire," stated Charles Chao, president and CEO of Sina Corporation.

Under the agreement first announced in December 2008, Sina planned to acquire the assets under Focus Media's LCD display network, poster frame network and in-store network. The related business of the acquired assets combined accounted for approximately 52% of revenues and approximately 73% of gross profits for Focus Media for the nine months ended September 30, 2008. Sina planned to issue 47 million newly issued ordinary shares to Focus Media Holding as consideration for the acquired assets. Focus Media Holding would then distribute Sina shares to its shareholders shortly after the closing.
Jason Jiang, chairman and CEO of Focus Media, stated, "The recently launched special zone for Focus Media's advertisers on the portal of Sina has preliminarily proved the synergy our business might have with Sina. Although we will not move forward with the merger, we will continue further and more intensive strategic cooperation with Sina in the long run, to give full play to the advantages and strengthen the competitiveness both Focus Media and Sina enjoy in our respective media spaces."
Both companies need as much help as possible. Net revenue for Focus Media for the quarter ended June 30, 2009, for continuing operations, which does not include any services that were planned to be sold to Sina, was USD82.1 million, increasing 23% from USD66.7 million for the first quarter of 2009 but declining 23% from USD107.2 million for the second quarter of 2008. Net revenue for discontinued operations, which were the services planned to be sold to Sina, was USD89.2 million, a sequential increase of 39% from USD64.4 million for the first quarter of 2009 but a decline of 15% from USD104.5 million for the second quarter of 2008.

Likewise, the same quarter ended June 30, 2009, Sina.com reported total revenues of USD90.3 million, compared to USD91.3 million in the same period in 2008 and USD73.8 million for the first quarter of 2009. Advertising revenues decreased 11% year over year to USD57.8 million, while non-advertising revenues increased 23% year over year to USD32.5 million. GAAP net income decreased 41% year over year to USD13.3 million.
However, today Sina did announce a new infusion of capital. The company has entered into a definitive agreement for a private equity placement of its ordinary shares with New-Wave Investment Holding Company Limited, a British Virgin Islands company established and controlled by Charles Chao, Sina's Chief Executive Officer, and other members of Sina's management. At the closing, Sina will receive gross proceeds of USD180 million, and New-Wave will receive approximately 5.6 million ordinary shares in Sina. The closing of the financing is subject to customary conditions. The shares issued to New-Wave will be subject to a six month lock-up and will have customary registration rights pursuant to a registration rights agreement entered into between Sina and New-Wave. Sina expects to use the proceeds of the financing for future acquisitions and general corporate purposes.
"We are pleased to have entered into this significant private placement, which will enhance Sina's liquidity position and ability to execute on strategic undertakings. This management-lead investment is a vote of confidence in Sina prospects and strategy," stated Yan Wang, chairman of Sina.

Alibaba to buy controlling stake in HiChina

Source: Xinhua News Agency

China's Alibaba.com Limited is to pay 540 million yuan (79.06 million U.S. dollars) for a controlling stake in China Civilink (Cayman), which operates in China as HiChina Web Solutions, Alibaba announced on Monday.

According to the purchase agreement, Alibaba will acquire HiChina for cash in two phases, said a statement on the Alibaba.com website. The first phase will see Alibaba acquire 85 percent of HiChina for a cash consideration of 435.42 million yuan (63.75 million U.S. dollars).

The additional 14.67 percent retained by the founders of HiChina could be sold to Alibaba for an additional 104.56 million yuan (15.31 million U.S. dollars) dependent upon HiChina reaching certain performance targets, according to the agreement terms.

HiChina, founded in 1996, is devoted to providing comprehensive Internet infrastructure services to enterprises, covering domain and hosting services, enterprise e-mail systems, website building and e-commerce consultation.

The deal is the largest-yet investment by Alibaba, a global leader in business-to-business e-commerce. It was founded in 1999 in east China's Hangzhou City.
Alibaba will get the large customer base, new applications, automated "do it yourself" website construction technology and management and operating team of HiChina, according to the terms of the agreement.
The investment is expected to be completed by the end of 2009. HiChina will keep its brand and independent operation. HiChina's products and services will be part of Alibaba.com's Information Technology Business Unit, which is focused on small businesses.

"HiChina is an Internet company that has great profitability and healthy financial conditions," said Wu Wei, Alibaba's chief financial officer. "Both sides thought the price of the deal was within a rational range."
The investment will make the most of the advantages of Alibaba and HiChina in their own fields and provide more comprehensive and better products and services to China's small businesses, he said.
The takeover would not involve lay offs of HiChina employees because it did not involve a merger or restructuring, said Zhang Xiangdong, founder and president of HiChina.

China starts sale of RMB treasury bonds in HK

Source: Xinhua News Agency

The Ministry of Finance started selling Renminbi bonds worth 6 billion yuan (878.5 million US dollars) in Hong Kong on Monday.

It is the first time the central government has issued yuan-denominated treasury bonds outside the Chinese mainland.

The sales period of the bonds will run from Sept. 28 to Oct. 20. Interest will be paid half a year based on its issuance date of Oct. 27, said the ministry.
An interest rate of 2.25 percent will be paid for the two-year bond, 2.7 percent for the three-year bond, and 3.3 percent for the five-year bond.

Web video piracy war heats up

Source: By Wang Xing (China Daily)

The competition in China's video sharing market has intensified recently with a Chinese YouTube copycat being sued for piracy by a group of online video copyright owners.

On Sept 15, the Chinese news portal website Sohu.com filed a lawsuit against one of the country's larger video-sharing websites, Youku.com, for broadcasting unauthorized videos of 503 Chinese movies and TV dramas.

The company, together with video websites Joy.cn and Voole.com, formed an anti-piracy group that pledged to file a series of lawsuits in coming months against companies including Tudou.com and Xunlei, which were also accused of streaming unauthorized videos on their websites.

Charles Zhang, CEO of Sohu.com, said at the launching ceremony of the China Online Video Anti-Piracy Alliance on Sept 15 that the group has started collecting evidence of illegal streaming of about 1,000 films and episodes of television programs.

The alliance also filed a lawsuit over beverage giants PepsiCo and Coco-Cola for posting advertisement on a page of the Youku.com website where pirated video allegedly was available.
Unlike their foreign counterparts, Chinese video-sharing websites rely heavily on videos such as films and soap operas, partly because comparatively fewer Chinese users record and post their own video clips on the Internet.
That has made Chinese websites more prone to copyright disputes and in direct competing with legal video streaming websites.
Youku.com, whose founder Victor Koo was the president of Sohu.com in 2004, said the company respects legal contents and hopes to cooperate with copyright owners.

The company has formed partnerships with many local television stations in China and spends about $10 million every year on purchasing copyrights of popular movies and television dramas, the company said.
According to figures from domestic research firm Analyses International, market revenues of China's online video industry reached 122 million yuan in the second quarter of this year - up 57.2 percent from a year earlier.
Due to China's rampant piracy, copyright owners in the country gain most of their income from movie theaters and domestic television stations and very little from DVD sales.

That has led them to work actively with Internet companies to promote their business online.
Google China, for example, has launched a legal music service in China by partnering with major label companies such as Universal and EMI. The service, which is the first around the world, is free, funded by online advertisements.
Encouraged by the success of companies such as Youku.com and Tudou.com, Sohu.com has significantly increased its investment in recent years in the online video business.

Hong Kong grows its Disneyland

Source: By Yu Tianyu (China Daily)

Hong Kong Disneyland, the world's fifth Disneyland theme park, is going to provide guests more adventure with plans to expand the attraction.

With an HK$6.25 billion investment, the recently announced expansion will be under way by the end of this year and take about five years to complete, said Andrew Kam, managing director of Hong Kong Disneyland.

After the expansion, the Hong Kong special administrative region government will hold 52 percent of shares in Hong Kong Disneyland, with Walt Disney Co holding the remaining 48 percent.

Under the plan, three new theme areas will be added to Hong Kong Disneyland, increasing the size of the park by 23 percent, or 5 hectares, from its current 22.4 hectares.

Three new theme parks

The three new themed areas are "Grizzly Trail", "Mystic Point" and "Toy Story Land", which will increase the number of attractions from 30 to more than 100, Kam said.
"Grizzly Trail" will bring guests to an abandoned gold mining town in the Old West of the United States. One new ride, the Big Grizzly Mountain Coaster, will travel through fake forests and mountains.
"Mystic Point" will be set in a fake tropical rainforest. Visitors will be able to visit a place called Mystic Manor, which will contain rare antiques collected by its owner, a lonely adventurer.
"Toy Story Land" will be based on the popular Disney film, Toy Story. At this attraction, guests can walk past life-sized toys or take a ride on the Toy Soldiers Parachute Drop, which is about 25 m high.
Kam said that "Grizzly Trail" and "Mystic Point" will be exclusive among the Disney theme parks, while "Toy Story Land" is limited to parks in Asia.

"The planned new attractions will be focusing on young people ages 18 to 25. Although Disneylands across the globe always place an emphasis on children and family interaction, we noticed that an increasing number of young people are very much interested in theme parks and have much potential as consumers," Kam said.
Since it opened in 2005, more than 17 million tourists have visited Hong Kong Disneyland.
Tourists from the mainland account for 33 percent of those visitors, and overseas tourists account for about 60 percent, according to statistics released by Hong Kong's government.
Hong Kong Disneyland brought the region HK$30 billion in economic benefits and created more than 10,000 jobs during the past four years.

"It is estimated that the expanded theme park will bring Hong Kong net economic benefits totaling around HK$64.7 billion to HK$117.3 billion over a 40-year period," Kam said.
Hong Kong Association of Travel Agents Chairman Michael Wu previously said that Disney's expansion will not dramatically increase the number of visitors to the city, but it will help the city's tourism sector remain competitive.
Many Chinese enterprises, are aggressively looking for opportunities in theme park construction and operations, Kam said.
"Disney has gained lots of popularity through its quality cartoon movies and vivid cartoon characters. Storytelling is the DNA of Disney dreams, and it is Disney's major advantage," he said.

"We tend to use various methods to bring guests to a cartoon world and to be a part of their favorite cartoon films," Kam said. "That's a unique element which visitors cannot find in other parks, and it also cannot be replicated."
A planned Disneyland theme park in Shanghai is reportedly awaiting approval from the central government.
Kam said that economic growth will boost the theme park market as mainland residents spend more time and money on entertainment.
He added that Hong Kong Disneyland is an international park targeting guests from Southeast Asia in addition to the mainland visitors.
However, investments in theme parks can take a long time to produce profits.
Since 2005, Hong Kong Disneyland reportedly is operating at a deficit.
But Kam said the expansion and growing numbers of visitors make him confident that the park will balance its expenses and revenues by 2014.

China's Wind Farms Come With a Catch: Coal Plants

Source: The Wall Street Journal by Jing Yang

SHANGHAI—China's ambition to create "green cities" powered by huge wind farms comes with a dirty little secret: Dozens of new coal-fired power plants need to be installed as well.

Part of the reason is that wind power depends on, well, the wind. To safeguard against blackouts when conditions are too calm, officials have turned to coal-fired power as a backup.

China wants renewable energy like wind to meet 15% of its energy needs by 2020, double its share in 2005, as it seeks to rein in emissions that have made its cities among the smoggiest on Earth. But experts say the country's transmission network currently can't absorb the rate of growth in renewable-energy output. Last year, as much as 30% of wind-power capacity wasn't connected to the grid. As a result, more coal is being burned in existing plants, and new thermal capacity is being built to cover this shortfall in renewable energy.

In addition, officials want enough new coal-fired capacity in reserve so that they can meet demand whenever the wind doesn't blow. This is important because wind is less reliable as an energy source than coal, which fuels two-thirds of China's electricity output. Wind energy ultimately depends on wind strength and direction, unlike coal, which can be stockpiled at generators in advance.
Further complicating matters is poor connectivity between regional transmission networks, which makes it hard for China to move surplus power in one part of the country to cover shortfalls elsewhere.

China may not be alone in having to ramp up thermal power capacity as it develops wind farms. Any country with a combination of rapidly growing energy demand, an old and inflexible grid, an existing reliance on coal for power, and ambitious renewable energy-expansion plans will likely have a similar dilemma. What marks China out as different is the amount of new coal-fired capacity that needs to be added.
The China Greentech Initiative, a group made up of more than 80 mostly large Western companies and organizations with interests in the environmental sector, said in a report earlier this month, "China's increased focus on renewable energy exerts yet greater demands on China's electric power infrastructure. Power generation based on renewable energy sources ... necessitates greater use of intermittent generation management and storage."
"China will need to add a substantial amount of coal-fired power capacity by 2020 in line with its expanding economy, and the idea is to bring some of the capacity earlier than necessary in order to facilitate the wind-power transmission," said Shi Pengfei, vice president of the Chinese Wind Power Association.

Largely due to its reliance on coal, China is the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases in absolute terms. Last year, the country accounted for more than 85% of global growth in coal demand, according to BP PLC's statistical review of world energy.
Facing pressure from abroad over the pace of China's emissions growth, President Hu Jintao used a speech to the United Nations last Tuesday to stress his country's commitment to tackling climate change. He said China will lower energy intensity as the country grows, while raising output of renewable energy and nuclear power. China aims to cut carbon dioxide emissions per unit of gross domestic product by a "notable margin" by 2020, Mr. Hu said, without setting a concrete cap.
The city of Jiuquan, in the flat and arid northwestern province of Gansu, shows the complexities that crop up when implementing such plans. The city is meant to showcase the strides China is making in renewable energy. Wind turbines with a combined capacity of 12.7 gigawatts are due to be installed there by 2015—more than the country's present nuclear-power capacity.

But the Jiuquan government wants to build 9.2 gigawatts of new coal-fired generating capacity as well, for use when the winds aren't favorable. That's equivalent to the entire generating capacity of Hungary.
Construction of these thermal power plants is pending approval by Beijing, an official with the Energy Department under the Jiuquan Development and Reform Bureau said Tuesday.
The heavy reliance on coal-fired power plants to add to the power supply from large wind farms in order to meet minimum power demand is essential to grid safety, said Mr. Shi of the Chinese Wind Power Association.
To be sure, any kilowatt hour of wind power consumed by end users ultimately replaces a kilowatt hour of electricity generated by other, possibly dirty, sources such as coal, and the huge power supply expected from the new wind farms represents a major stride in China's clean energy push.

In addition to Jiuquan, there are plans for six other wind farms in China with a capacity of more than 10 gigawatts each, mostly in sparsely populated inland regions such as wind-swept Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang.
Several gigawatts of new thermal power capacity will need to be built at these sites as well, Mr. Shi said.
China has plenty of windswept plains and sun-baked deserts like the Gobi which can host turbines or solar panels, but these are often far from cities and existing infrastructure for shipping power. Sebastian Meyer, director of research and advisory services with clean-energy consultancy Azure International, says China needs a more modern and flexible grid if it wants to raise the share of renewable power in its energy mix.

So-called smart-grid technology aims to modernize the power sector by overlaying digital communications onto the grid, enabling utilities to manage supply more efficiently and compensate for any variance. But while the U.S. and many countries in Europe are lining up spending to exploit the technology, China is lagging behind.
State Grid Corp., China's monopoly power distributor in all but five provinces, says it wants to build a nationwide "strong smart grid." But while it is investing heavily in grid improvements, its immediate focus is the construction of ultrahigh-voltage lines linking China's coal production and hydropower centers in inland areas to the densely populated east.
A single such line can carry up to 6.4 gigawatts of power, which makes it even more important that generation at its starting point is stable and reliable.

China COFCO to Double Investment in Xinjiang

Source: Reuters

Beijing, Sept 28 - COFCO Corporation, China's largest grain trader and processor, will double its investment in the resource-rich Xinjiang region in the northwest, the company said in a statement.

"COFCO will double its investment in Xinjiang in the coming three to five years based on current investments and will continue to expand investment areas and production scale," said the company.

It did not say which areas the extra investment would go to.

COFCO has invested a total of 5 billion yuan ($732.5 million) in the region in food processing, mainly with listed arm COFCO Xinjiang Tunhe Co. Ltd.

COFCO has production facilities covering grains, edible oils and juice and recently invested in the country's leading dairy producer, Mengniu Dairy.

Company chairman Ning Gaoning said last week that China's dairy consumption was only 10 percent of that in developed markets, and therefore there was big potential for growth of dairy products.

The company also aims to expand sales of its products at domestic supermarkets to account for 3 to 5 percent of its sales, up from 1 percent. Last month it set up a website for online sales of its products.

COFCO also owns China Food Limited, China Agri-Industries Holdings Ltd and COFCO Property Co. Ltd.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Not Just Chinese Checkers: Shanda Games Preps IPO In USA

Source: China Tech News

Feeding an appetite in the West for Chinese Internet company stocks, a new initial public offering is ready to ignite.

Under the symbol GAME, China-based online entertainment firm Shanda Games plans to start trading on Nasdaq on Friday in what is planned to be the largest initial public offering in the United States this year.

Priced at USD12.50 per share, the company plans to raise USD1.044 billion. The company is a spin-off of its parent company Shanda Interactive Entertainment Limited. The parent will continue to hold 71% in Shanda Games and an ominous 96% of voting rights in the newly-minted IPO.

Shanda Games claims to have hit revenues of USD322 million and profit of USD98 for the half year ended June 30, 2009.

Shanda Interactive Entertainment Limited's consolidated net revenues for the second quarter ended June 30, 2009, increased 47.7% year-over-year and 11.8% quarter-over-quarter to CNY1.237 billion. Operating income increased 53.0% year-over-year and 12.7% quarter-over-quarter to CNY513.4 million.

Other Chinese online games are not doing as well, perhaps a sign that smooth revenues may be difficult to attain in China. Shanda's rival The9 posted a poor showing for the first half of this year.

Owing to its loss of the World of Warcrafts game to rival Netease.com, The9 had a CNY79.2 million net loss in the second quarter ended June 30, 2009. The struggling online game company announced its unaudited financial results for the quarters ended March 31, and June 30, 2009. Net revenues for the first quarter of 2009 increased by 4% quarter-over-quarter and decreased by 3% year-over-year to CNY426.2 million. Net loss for the first quarter was CNY46.8 million, a 70% decrease from net loss of CNY158.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2008, and a decrease in earnings of CNY122.4 million compared with the net income of CNY75.6 million in the first quarter of 2008.

Chinese firm races to grab 'Lightning'

Source: By Tym Glaser (China Daily)

A Chinese company has offered sprint star Usain Bolt a staggering deal that could see the Jamaican reap more than $115 million in the next five years.

Ajani Williams, chief executive officer with Anza Marketing Group (AMG), yesterday confirmed that the organization, which has the sole rights to market Bolt in China, received the offer after "Lightning" struck twice at last month's Berlin World Championships - winning both the 100 m (9.58) and 200 m (19.19) in world-record times.

While Williams was reluctant to reveal the 23-year-old's potential suitor, he said the offer could not only change the face of track and field but sport in general.

The potential deal is understood to include a base salary "in the teens (between 13 and 19 million)" plus a licensing deal that could see Bolt reap $60-70 million during the five years.

Also, Bolt would get the opportunity to set up his own branch of the unnamed firm, which would put him in the stellar range of sports entrepreneurs that includes basketball's Michael Jordan and golf's Tiger Woods.
"This is unprecedented in terms of (track and field) base salary and the licensing deal and could change the whole landscape it's a trailblazer," said Williams, who is a former NBA player and the current president of the Jamaica Basketball Association.

"We (Anza) have done our bit; we have handed in a 15-page evaluation and it's now up to Usain - he's the boss - and the people around him," he said. "I would not like to put a betting figure on whether he accepts it or not but it is a great deal and very hard for other companies to match."
Before signing on the dotted line with the Chinese company, Bolt will have to find a way out of current sponsorship deals with companies including Puma, Gatorade, Texaco and Digicel.
"Although I don't want to reveal the name or nature of the company, there may be possible conflicts and legal ramifications," Williams said. "However, this very well-established company in China has stated it is willing to buy out current sponsors."

While the AMG boss was upbeat, "Team Bolt" remains coy and issued a statement saying, in part: "The Management wishes to make it clear that it respects the terms of the valid contract which it has with Puma, wherein its terms restrict the Management from having any direct contact with a competitor of Puma - the shoe contract sponsor, until after 2010 when the present contract ends."
He said the Chinese company may be willing to wait.
"(The company) came to me after his second race in Berlin with the offer. There have been no negotiations. I am waiting on word from Usain and his people and then, if they are interested, I will go forward with a counter proposal," he said.
According to reports in Jamaica, that reply could double the original figures.
Also potentially adding to the Olympic medalist's fortune is a possible deal with sina.com, host of one of the biggest blogs in China.
While no official deadline has been set for the "major" Chinese deal, Williams believes the company wants an answer by the end of next month.