Singapore’s state-owned investment firm Temasek will continue seeking long-term investment opportunities in China, especially in the technology sector, the company’s China head said in a keynote speech at TechNode’s Beyond Expo in Macau on Thursday.
Temasek spent more than RMB 500 billion (around $78.47 billion) on investing in the Chinese market in the fiscal year ended on March 31, or 27% of its global investment volume, said Wu Yibing, Head of China at the Singaporean state investment firm.
Wu’s remarks came amid media reports that Temasek is shying away from China’s tech sector due to the country’s regulatory climate.
In November, Nikkei Asia reported that Temasek was “holding off on new investment in Chinese tech companies for the time being due to uncertainty over Beijing’s crackdown on the sector.”
The same month, Bloomberg reported that Temasek had sold shares of several Chinese tech companies including Alibaba and Didi Chuxing. The investor cut 16% of its stake in Alibaba and 11% of its shares in Didi, according to Bloomberg.
Wu, who joined Temasek as its China head in 2013, told the Beyond Expo that the holding firm had had a long position in China since it entered the country more than 20 years ago, and that it will continue to do so.
However, Wu said Temasek is experiencing a transitional period in its China investment from bankrolling the country’s major internet and consumer tech players such as Alibaba, to funding startups in what he called the “new tech” and “new economy” sectors. He said the focus of Temasek’s investment strategy in China would be technological innovation.
Temasek will look at digital transformation as a key trend when investing in China tech, Wu said. The company has been investing in areas such as marketing tech, artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and semiconductors as part of the trend, he added.
China’s declared aim of being carbon neutral by 2060 is creating a trillion-dollar investment opportunity in sectors like electric vehicles and low-carbon manufacturing, said Wu.
“As China pushes for carbon neutrality, it is about to usher in a huge change in the energy industry,” said Wu. “China’s decarbonization goal will also promote a series of significant changes in green energy, electric vehicles, green manufacturing and other industries.”
]]>China’s July crackdown on Didi has had knock-on effects for the wider ride-hailing market, as investors scurry to fund competitors cranking up efforts to steal market share from the ride-hailing monopoly.
Remarkably, this time it is not seasoned venture capital funds but state-owned investors including Citic that are pouring billions of RMB into promising up-and-comers. The leading beneficiaries so far are automaker Geely’s Cao Cao and T3, a ride-hailing service backed by three other domestic automakers. The investments follow more than three months of speculation that Chinese regulators could impose heavy fines, break up the company, or even demand a complete takeover by the state. Didi was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in late June but, less than one week later, cybersecurity regulators forced the removal of Didi’s app from online stores.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.
Bottom line: Venture capitalists are bullish that upstarts can catch up with the longstanding leader in China’s ride-hailing industry because Didi has been losing momentum ever since its app was suspended. However, the challengers still have to tackle the same regulatory problems Didi has faced.
T3 and Cao Cao gained traction: Dominating China’s ride-hailing market with a 90% share, Didi has had no serious competitors for more than five years. But now investors believe that Beijing’s cybersecurity investigation of Didi may put some ride-hailers backed by automakers in a better position to prosper.
Founded by auto majors FAW, Dongfeng, and Changan back in 2019, T3 is being thought of as one of the most promising challengers to Didi.
The multi-million dollar investments are the latest to follow in the Chinese ride-hailing space which is witnessing investor interest running high over the possibility that two or even more companies could thrive after being a winner-takes-all market since Uber left China in late 2016.
Have they solved Didi’s problems? One of the biggest regulatory hurdles Didi has faced is compliance with regulations governing operating permits and licenses for drivers. Didi acknowledged in its initial public offering (IPO) filings that many of its drivers in China had not obtained the license legally necessary to provide ride-hailing services.
Didi’s pain is rivals’ gain: Another competitive advantage rivals have over Didi is that they can accept new app user registrations, while Didi still can’t.
The Didi saga is “a window of opportunity” for rivals, Chen Liteng, an analyst with Hangzhou-based consulting firm 100ec.cn, told TechNode. But Didi still maintains a “significant lead” in China’s ride-hailing market and up-and-comers “would be struggling in their attempts to shake Didi’s position over the short term,” Chen said.
]]>READ MORE: Didi app ban ignites race for ride-hailing market share
One of the biggest trends in China’s tech industry in recent years is that “Chinese entrepreneurs and startups are being born global,” David Aikman, former chief representative officer, Greater China, World Economic Forum, shared his thoughts on the current state of China’s tech development and innovation during TechNode’s Emerge 2021 conference held in Beijing on Sept. 19.
“Maybe 10 years ago, you had some Chinese startups that were very focused on a domestic play,” said Aikman. “And nowadays, I see a lot more companies who are saying that we’re starting in China, or maybe we’re starting in multiple locations, but the world is our market.”
Aikman also warned that the growing regulatory pressure Chinese startups face is a major challenge for them to expand overseas. “We’ve seen in recent months questions about delisting Chinese companies from the US markets. We’ve seen then responses on the Chinese side. Unfortunately, I don’t see the landscape getting better in the short term for tech companies in the space,” he told TechNode in an interview on the sideline of the event. “So I would say the biggest risk facing tech companies is this geopolitical or regulatory risk,” he said.
]]>The biggest challenges that Chinese investors should be well prepared for when investing in startups overseas is tightened regulations around the world, said Zhu Bin, a former director of Greater China investment advisory, at Business Sweden.
Corporates and investors who are looking to do outbound investment should try to engage or at least touch base with some advisors who are familiar with these regulators and the newest developments as they are constantly changing, Zhu told TechNode’s Emerge 2021 conference in Beijing on Sept. 19.
Chinese companies’ overseas investment activities are facing increasing regulatory pressure recently, especially in high-tech industries like semiconductors and sectors concerning privacy like social media. In late June, the US government halted a Chinese investment firm’s acquisition of South Korean chipmaker Magnachip.
In 2019, The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS) forced Chinese gaming company Beijing Kunlun Tech to sell gay dating app Grindr, which is popular in the US, citing privacy concerns. The sale finally went through in March 2020.
“CFIUS is increasing scrutiny of Chinese investment in the US. European countries are also on their way to produce their own regulations of what can be done and what should not be recommended in terms of investment,” said Zhu.
“These regulations are constantly evolving,” he said. “Unless you are a real expert and you are working on these areas on a daily basis, otherwise, you will be shocked perhaps every three months by how things have changed.”
Recent changes to US laws, including the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (FIRRMA), expanded CFIUS’s ability to block investments that it deems a threat to US national security.
READ MORE: CFIUS doesn’t mean Chinese companies can’t invest in the US
Chinese tech giants invested heavily in the US between 2010 and 2018, but quickly scaled back investments in US startups beginning in 2019, TechNode reported last year. The drop-off is partly explained by increased scrutiny in 2018 when CFIUS was given more power to review investments in US companies.
Since then, new Chinese investments in American startups have fallen dramatically. Contributions in the first quarter of 2020 dropped to $400 million, down by more than a third compared to the same period in 2019.
READ MORE: Before the bans, China tech investment turned away from US
“You have to satisfy governments,” agrees Edison Chen, director of investment at Plum Ventures at the Emerge panel with the theme “Cross-border investment in a global context”. “Entrepreneurs have to understand how America works and how China works.”
“If you can understand both of them[the US and China], you can be very successful in entrepreneurship,” said Chen.
]]>Philanthropy is shifting from a “nice to have” initiative to a “must have” commitment for Chinese tech giants.
Chinese internet firms ramped up their donations for the public good over the past few months, giving away billions of dollars to causes ranging from technology innovation to bridging income inequality. The move is widely viewed as an effort to placate a state that lately seems to be scrutinizing their every move.
Bottom line: Under intensifying regulatory pressure, Chinese tech companies are scrambling to show their willingness to operate and invest in compliance with the state’s broad goal of “common prosperity.” The change forced these tech titans, many already suffering selloff pressure due to tighter state reins, to seek a balance between shareholder interests and the higher operating costs due to huge donations.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.
Brief timeline: Tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent are already active donors through their corporate funds. The companies’ billionaire founders are also writing large checks for charity from their personal foundations. Alibaba’s Jack Ma topped Forbes annual China charity list with nearly $500 million in donations in 2020. Tencent’s Pony Ma came in third with about $402 million, and ByteDance’s Zhang Yiming was fifth with $189 million. Pinduoduo’s Colin Huan topped the Hurun China Philanthropy List 2021 with donations totaling $1.9 billion.
Unlike previous donations that tended to be sporadic initiatives by individual companies, there’s a newfound generosity from nearly every major tech company over the past few months.
Compared with previous donations, tech firms’ burst of generosity over the past months was mainly directed towards the goal of public welfare and reducing inequality, a goal made explicit in the company’s five-year plan released this March.
The donations are mainly directed to fields like technology innovation, poverty alleviation, welfare of low-income groups, agricultural/rural development, education, basic science/research, healthcare, and small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME) support.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Tech in the five-year plan
When former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping ended the country’s planned economy and embraced a free market in the 1980s, he said allowing some people and regions to get rich first would speed up economic growth and achieve the ultimate goal of common prosperity. Now, the priority seems to be shifting to the latter.
The changes also came as income inequality becomes an increasingly pressing problem in Chinese society.
While donating tens of billions of dollars for social initiatives out of their profits, the Chinese tech companies, mostly listed, face the double pressure of convincing investors that they are making the right decision to sacrifice short-term profits for long-term growth prospects.
But the efforts raise other questions: Will these philanthropic displays be enough to ease the wrath of regulators? Norris thinks there’s little chance internet platforms can avoid regulation through their social impact investments.
The government’s attention to areas like tech innovation, agriculture, education, and basic science means opportunity for tech companies. By entering these strategic areas, they could expect returns from those donations, or investments, if they have aligned their business with the broader strategic goals properly. But the time for such returns may be long.
China has lagged when it comes to charitable efforts, partly due to China’s tradition of passing fortunes through a family line. Back in 2010 when Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and billionaire investor Warren Buffett invited Chinese moguls to a dinner to discuss philanthropy, lots of them turned down the invitation for fear of being asked to make a donation.
However, there’s been a significant change in charitable giving, especially since 2008, when donations struck a chord with larger groups due to the Sichuan earthquake. Donations for fighting the COVID-19 outbreak and helping victims of the recent flood in Henan peaked as tech firms tried to fulfill their social responsibilities, a concept specified in the country’s corporate law.
Chinese tech billionaires still have a long way to go to be on track with philanthropic models comparable to western counterparts like Gates.
]]>Global venture capital (VC) seems to be hedging its bets on Chinese tech startups as a sweeping regulatory crackdown continues. On Aug. 10, Alibaba-backer SoftBank said it would pause investing in China until “the situation is clearer.” SoftBank funds are also major investors in Beike, Bytedance, Didi Chuxing, and Zuoyebang, among other Chinese startups.
But the latest data shows 2021 so far hasn’t been a bad year for VC investment in China. Are US dollar funds really pivoting away from the massive market?
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.
Bottom line: There are signs that foreign VCs are adjusting their investments in China because of recent regulatory changes. But venture capitalists we talked to on the ground said they are optimistic, arguing that stricter regulations can be an “opportunity,” even as they expressed worry.
Signs of a retreat: Multiple reports have suggested that international funds are planning to reduce their investment in China as a result of the crackdown.
Numbers show little change: VC investment this year in Greater China, which may include Taiwan and Hong Kong, totaled around $67 billion, the “highest level seen in recent years,” according to Preqin.
Fewer unicorns: However, the creation of unicorns—startups with more than $1 billion in valuation—seems to be slowing down in China.
Reasons to worry: There are reasons for investors to worry. Chinese tech companies enjoyed a laissez-faire environment before regulators moved to rein in the sector last year. The firms were rarely restrained by privacy laws or antitrust laws despite repeated public outrage. Now, the situation is changing rapidly.
No exit? One of the regulatory areas that could hit overseas VC funds the hardest is China’s July regulation on data security and overseas IPOs: It requires companies that control data of more than 1 million users to seek permission from regulators before filing for IPOs overseas.
US flows falling: This is not the first time we asked how politics affect VC investment. In August 2020, we asked venture capitalists and analysts whether the US-China tech war had affected dollars floating into Chinese tech startups. The answer we got was “no,” because money was “not political.”
What VCs say: Venture capitalists already invested in China seem to be optimistic.
Chinese chipmaker Wingtech said on Monday that it had closed a deal to buy Newport Wafer Fab (NWF), the UK’s largest chip fabrication plant. The deal was closed after the UK government initially considered blocking it.
Why it matters: The UK government’s clearance on the deal is a breakthrough for Wingtech, which quickly established its dominant position in China’s car chip industry through overseas acquisitions since 2018. But the single approval doesn’t mean Chinese chip firms looking to buy chip plants abroad will enjoy a smoother regulatory environment.
Details: The UK government gave Wingtech the green light to take over NWF’s parent company on Aug. 12, according to a Wingtech filing (in Chinese) to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
Context: The NWF deal, conducted through Nexperia, was previously subject to a national security investigation by the British government following backlash from some UK lawmakers.
For China’s chip companies with money in hand, acquiring foreign chip firms has always been a shortcut to obtaining talent and technology. However, acquisitions are facing more resistance overseas, as deals to buy NWF and Magnachip are likely to be blocked.
Around 86% of the 57 semiconductor merger and acquisition (M&A) deals by Chinese firms between 2015 and 2019 targeted foreign firms, making the country the primary buyer of international chip companies, according to Deloitte China. Now, Western countries are increasing scrutiny of those deals.
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Two blocked acquisitions: On July 7, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said his government will review an offer by Nexperia, a Dutch firm wholly owned by China’s Wingtech, to buy the UK’s largest chipmaker, Newport Wafer Fab (NWF).
In late June, the US government halted a Chinese investment firm’s acquisition of South Korean chipmaker Magnachip. Nevertheless, Chinese regulators subsequently gave the deal a green light.
Change of attitude: Neither the UK’s NWF nor South Korea’s Magnachip is a leading player in the semiconductor industry, and it’s likely both deals would have gone through easily a few years ago. The investigations are clear signs that Western governments are changing their view of Chinese firms buying their chipmakers.
A spree in STAR listing of chip firms: In what Chinese media called a “sprint” of chip listings, Shanghai’s STAR Market accepted a record 13 semiconductor companies in June and July out of the 34 companies it approved in the two months.
China chip production hits a record high: On July 15, the South China Morning Post reported that China produced 30.8 billion wafers in June, citing government data.
No bailout for troubled chip champion: A major semiconductor conglomerate that owns many of China’s leading chip companies was forced into bankruptcy proceedings. On July 9, Tsinghua Unigroup, a state-backed chipmaker, said a creditor of the company has proposed bankruptcy proceedings for the company over bond defaults. It’s a sign that Beijing is willing to let national champions fail, even if they’re working on semiconductors.
China’s biggest chipmaker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), posted strong revenue and profit growth in earnings released on Thursday.
Why it matters: SMIC posted robust growth despite being banned from importing US technology. The company attributed the growth to strong domestic demand and rising chips prices due to a global semiconductor shortage that began early this year.
Details: SMIC’s net profit jumped 63% year on year to $405 million in the quarter ending in June, according to a Thursday earnings report (in Chinese). Revenue grew 43% year on year to $1.34 billion. On Friday, SMIC’s share price opened 8.6% higher than the previous day’s close price and soon lost most of its gain. At the time of writing, the stock was up 0.9%.
Context: Shanghai-based SMIC is backed by the Chinese government and state-owned investment firms. The company is China’s largest contract chipmaker, manufacturing chip designs for companies including Huawei and Qualcomm.
]]>A Wednesday judicial interpretation released by China’s highest court sets boundaries on how businesses in China can use facial recognition technology.
Why it matters: The interpretation prohibits businesses from forcing people to accept facial recognition applications on apps to access services. In public spaces, businesses could infringe personal rights if their use of facial recognition violated “related law and regulations,” said the interpretation.
Details: On Wednesday, the Supreme People’s Court, China’s highest court, released a judicial interpretation (in Chinese) to address facial recognition technology issues in civil trials. Businesses have to acquire users’ consent before collecting their facial information.
Context: The interpretation is one part of a regulatory overhaul on privacy and personal data collection. China is finishing drafting a law on personal information protection. The Data Security Law, passed in June, will take effect in September.
]]>Tencent’s popular super app WeChat said Tuesday it has temporarily suspended new user registrations, attributing the decision to “related laws and regulations.”
Why it matters: This is the first time Tencent has suspended new user registration for the ubiquitous app in China, which many people rely on for communication and other life services such as paying utility bills and shopping online.
Details: WeChat said in a Tuesday social media post (in Chinese) that the app is not accepting new individual users and public accounts to comply with “related laws and regulations.” The company calls the suspension a “technical security upgrade.”
Context: Earlier this month, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) banned ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing from registering new users while launching a cybersecurity review into ride-hailing app Didi Chuxing.
If you care about China tech, it’s time to get to know the country’s main tech regulators. 2021 started with the country tightening antitrust regulations on big technology players, shaving billions of dollars off their market caps.
The crackdown reached a new high this month when the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) launched a security probe into ride-hailing platform Didi Global just days after its New York listing, sending shock waves among investors around the world.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, published in the subscriber-only TechNode Distilled newsletter.
It’s normally exclusive to TechNode subscribers, but we’re making this issue free as a sample of our work. Sign up here to get access to every issue.
These crackdowns aren’t new—for the past few years, regulators have been subjecting tech firms to stricter data and privacy rules. Understanding who they are and what they do is becoming more important than ever for investors in and watchers of China tech. Below are the top three Chinese tech regulators you should know.
Bottom line: Dozens of agencies regulate China tech, but the current crackdown is driven by three key regulators: the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) polices content, privacy, and cybersecurity. The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) is in charge of markets and consumer protection, and has led the recent anti-monopoly campaign. The People’s Bank of China (PBoC), China’s central bank, is the key organization for financial regulation, and has been the most important player in writing new rules on lending, payments, and the “rectification” of Ant Group.
The CAC was created in 2011 as part of the State Council Information Office but its powers have mushroomed over the past few years. The agency is in charge of areas like online content, privacy, and data security.
When it was created, the agency was only an online content moderator: The CAC’s duties included online content moderation, online news regulation, and “online propaganda work,” state newspaper Guangming Daily (in Chinese) reported in 2011 when the agency was founded.
A reshuffle made it a regulator: In 2014, the CAC joined the Office of the Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission, a body of the ruling Chinese Communist Party.
Now, it’s about more than just content: Over the course of the last ten years, the CAC has expanded its reach beyond content moderation, taking on responsibility for privacy regulation and cybersecurity, among several others areas.
It may also have a say in who can go public: Earlier this month, the CAC proposed an overhaul of China’s cybersecurity review process, requiring companies holding data on more than 1 million users to seek permission from regulators before filing for initial public offerings (IPOs) overseas.
Related regulators: The CAC works with government agencies like the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) and the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) to regulate privacy and data issues.
SAMR is China’s top market regulator. It is the main regulator in China’s antitrust campaign against tech companies.
Until 2020, dealing with the CAC was often the top priority for Chinese tech companies’ government relations departments. But ever since the Chinese government launched an antitrust crackdown on the sector in November, SAMR has become another major regulator that has left government relations staff scratching their heads.
China’s antitrust regulators have largely left tech companies alone. The situation changed dramatically in November, when SAMR proposed guidelines targeting anticompetitive behavior, specifically including internet companies. The new rules widen the reach of antitrust, which previously only applied to the physical economy.
Next, SAMR took direct aim at big tech players like Alibaba and Tencent, punishing them for minor violations of China’s Anti-Monopoly Law, such as unreported merger and acquisition deals from years before. In December, the agency launched an anti-monopoly investigation targeting Alibaba. The probe ended in April when SAMR issued Alibaba an RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine for antitrust practices including “forced exclusivity.”
Most recently, SAMR blocked a merger deal between Tencent-backed game streaming platforms Huya and Douyu.
New broom: SAMR was established in March 2018 during a structural reshuffle of the State Council, China’s cabinet. It absorbed three ministry-level government agencies and inherited antitrust authority from three other central government bodies, under a government reorganization plan (in Chinese).
Top trustbuster: China’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law identified an antitrust commission under the State Council as being responsible for the coordination and supervision of China’s anti-monopoly regulation. The commission, like the others, was also merged into SAMR in the 2018 reshuffle.
Price regulation: Inheriting powers from the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, SAMR regulates companies’ pricing strategies, per the nation’s 1997 Price Law (in Chinese).
The PBoC, the country’s central bank, is the major regulator for fintech. The financial regulator oversees China’s online payment sector, supervising companies like Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay, which combined have more than 1 billion users.
The bank has been involved in high-profile moves against China’s tech sector, leading the investigation into fintech giant Ant Group after China halted the company’s plans for a mega IPO in November.
Ruling online payments: The PBoC became a fintech regulator in 2015 after it issued regulations (in Chinese) governing the online payment sector, requiring companies that provide digital payment services to be subject to its oversight. Ant Group’s Alipay is China’s largest mobile payment service, followed by Tencent’s WeChat Pay.
It doesn’t like cryptocurrencies: The bank and online payment regulator is also use its power to crack down on cryptocurrencies. In June, the central bank summoned several commercial banks and Alipay, asking them not to provide financial services to cryptocurrency traders, according to state news agency Xinhua (in Chinese).
See also: Finance is also governed by two specialist regulators. The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) is also responsible for online banking and insurance products.
And if you like IPOs: The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) regulates stocks, and appears to be taking an increasingly important role in approving the listings of all Chinese companies.
Beijing unveiled new rules on Saturday on the country’s private education sector, barring after-school tutoring companies, including edtech companies, from earning profits, raising capital, or going public and imposing new limits on extracurricular study.
Why it matters: The new rules will end IPO hopes for online education startups like Yuanfudao and Zuoyebang, and limit fundraising for the already listed. Companies that cannot comply with new rules could be forced out of business.
Details: Top-level party and government bodies released on Saturday a directive (in Chinese) to “reduce the burden of students enrolled in compulsory education.” The directive requires private tutoring companies to re-register as non-profit organizations, bars local authorities from approving any new companies, and orders local authorities to re-examine previously registered online education companies.
‘Worst case’ for investors: Rumors of a crackdown on after-school education had been around for months, said Ted Mo Chen, a Shanghai-based edtech entrepreneur and TechNode contributor. But the new policy is “the worst-case scenario expected by the market,” he told TechNode.
Relief for parents? Ding Zhe, a father of a five-year-old in Shanghai, said he expects the new rule to ease financial pressures for parents. Ding pays a combined RMB 40,000 ($6,175) per year after-school courses for his daughter, including English, math, and painting. Ding said he will continue to pay for some after-school courses, but he will worry less because other children won’t be studying extracurricular programs.
Context: Investors have rushed into the online education sector since 2016, and many doubled down last year as the sector boomed during the Covid-19 outbreak.
]]>READ MORE: The Chinese gaming startup outperforming Tencent overseas
On Saturday, China’s top market regulator ordered Tencent to end exclusive music licensing deals within 30 days from Saturday, writing that the action was “the first case” of “necessary measures to restore market competition” in a Saturday statement (in Chinese).
Why it matters: The punishment may create openings for other music streamers in China. And the government says it is only the first.
Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) fined Tencent RMB 500,000 ($77,100) for violating market concentration rules with a 2016 acquisition of China Music Corporation. The regulator said that Tencent “illegally concentrated a market,” citing China’s Anti-Monopoly Law.
SAMR said the deal gave Tencent control of more than 80% exclusive music libraries in “related market share,” allowing the company to “eliminate and restrict competition.”
Tencent wrote in an online statement the same day that it will “comply with the regulator’s decision” and “contribute to healthy competition in the market.”
]]>READ MORE: The Chinese gaming startup outperforming Tencent overseas
China’s securities regulator on Thursday approved China Telecom to list on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, two months after the state-owned telecommunications company was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).
Why it matters: China Telecom’s domestic listing comes as US-China rivalry spreads to the equity sector. The US has set stricter rules for Chinese firms listing on US stock markets, and China has in recent months increased scrutiny on companies seeking overseas listings.
Details: The China Securities Regulatory Commission said in a Thursday announcement (in Chinese) that it had approved China Telecom’s plan to issue shares in Shanghai, without providing a listing date.
Context: In May, the NYSE delisted three state-owned Chinese telecom operators, China Telecom, China Mobile, and China Unicom.
Three months after a sweeping crackdown on “forced exclusivity,” Chinese regulators are moving to take more control over Chinese e-commerce companies’ pricing. The latest target of Chinese market watchdogs is price discrimination.
The Big Sell is TechNode’s ongoing premium series on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode subscribers.
China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) indicated that it would take a tougher stance on price discrimination when it proposed regulations on consumer pricing practices on July 2. Price discrimination is a kind of personalized pricing, where companies charge customers different prices for the same product or service by analyzing purchasing habits.
An online travel agency might hike up the price of an airline ticket for a user who is a regular big spender or has a history of last-minute purchases. Platforms even appear to charge their most loyal customers higher prices, who they think would be willing to pay more.
Meituan came under fire in late December after a viral WeChat post accused the food delivery giant of charging its paid members higher delivery fees than its free users. The writer of the post said that he was charged RMB 4 ($0.6) more for a delivery fee than a free user, even though he ordered from a member account for which he paid RMB 6 to RMB 15 per month. Meituan said the extra charge was made in error. TechNode could not independently verify the writer’s claims.
Research conducted by Fudan University shows that ride-hailing apps charge an “Apple tax” to iPhone users, a group that is generally considered as premium in China. The report shows that iPhone users are more likely to get the pricier “chauffeured rides” and receive less of a subsidy compared with Android users.
The new regulations would also punish price fixing, price dumping, and price fraud. Included in the 12 pages of proposed rules is a section on the pricing strategies of China’s tech economies, or companies using “new business models,” to use the regulator’s term.
SAMR is seeking public comment on the draft rules through Aug. 2.
Companies operating under these “new business models” would be subject to a fine equivalent to 0.1% to 0.5% of their sales if they are found to charge different prices for the same product or services by leveraging big data and other technological means to predict users’ willingness to pay. The draft also forbids businesses from dumping products at low prices to create a monopoly.
Illegal gains would be confiscated and companies could be required to suspend their business operations during a rectification process. For serious violations, they could even lose their business licenses.
Under Chinese law, price discrimination is already illegal. But Chinese regulators have largely tolerated these practices for the past two decades.
Amazon first experimented with price discrimination back in 2000, when the global e-commerce titan charged different prices to individual customers for the same DVDs. The company stopped in response to swift consumer backlash and still avoids the practice two decades later.
But Chinese online businesses are widely believed to employ the revenue-boosting tactic. Platforms deny that they charge different prices to different customers—but few consumers believe it.
User complaints about the practice flood social networks and mass media. As of the end of June, there were over 1,300 submissions about price discrimination on Sina’s Black Cat consumer platform alone. The complaints concern nearly all major tech names in China, from e-commerce giants Alibaba, JD, and Pinduoduo, to food delivery apps Meituan and Dianping, to online travel platforms Ctrip, Qunar, and Alibaba’s Fliggy, to ride-hailing apps like Didi.
While price discrimination exists across industries, it is more prevalent in areas that offer services than those that sell physical and standardized products. “Sectors like online travel and ride hailing are more vulnerable to the practice compared with e-commerce and food delivery, which offer standardized physical products at steady costs,” said Zhang Yi, consulting CEO and chief analyst at iiMedia Research.
Denials from companies haven’t boosted user trust. Most consumers still believe price discrmination is ubiquitous in China. Results from a consumer report conducted in 2019 show that an overwhelming 88% of those surveyed believed online platforms leverage user data for personalized pricing to make users pay as much as possible. Meanwhile, nearly 60% said they have experienced the phenomenon.
Ctrip and Alibaba declined to comment when reached by TechNode.
A woman surnamed Hu, a membership user of Ctrip, sued the online travel platform for price discrimination last year. She had reserved a hotel room for RMB 2,889 a night in July 2020 but, on checking out, she discovered the price of the room was only RMB 1,377. A court in Zhejiang province ruled in favor of Hu, requiring Ctrip to pay RMB 4,777 in compensation.
Although many users believe they face price discrimination, it’s difficult to prove—and its been going on for centuries.
In some ways, companies are bringing back an old way of pricing. People haggled over prices for most of our commercial history until the Quakers invented the “fixed” retail price tag in the mid-19th century. If people pay different prices for the same products, it’s difficult to tell whether it’s a discount or an overcharge.
Users believe that a variety of user data such as birthdate, educational background, occupation, geographic location, past purchases, web visits, and social media “likes” are used to feed the pricing strategies. The fact that personal data is freely traded on Chinese black markets for tiny sums has made the problem worse.
“As a matter of economics, there are both scenarios where price discrimination benefits certain categories of consumers and promotes overall consumer welfare and efficiency and also scenarios where it does not,” Nathan Bush, a partner with multinational law firm DLA Piper, explained to TechNode.
A platform generally applies the practice to charge higher prices to customers who it concludes will be willing to pay more, mainly targeting premium members. These companies charge their lowest prices to users about whom they have the least data, raising prices once they see evidence of loyalty.
From a seller’s point of view, the goal is to charge each customer the highest price he or she is willing to pay. Regulators and consumers see it as an unruly, unfair practice that does not benefit consumers.
The Chinese term for the concept, “shashu,” literally translates as “killing someone you know,” underlining the fraudulent aspect of the practice by which platforms take advantage of the customers who use or trust them the most.
While there are laws forbiding price discrimination on the books, Chinese regulators rarely examined e-commerce platforms’ pricing strategies before 2020. Things started to change late last year as regulators waged a war on anti-competitive practices in the online world.
The 1997 Price Law (in Chinese) says merchants should price their products and services based on “production and operation costs and market supply and demand conditions.” It forbids merchants from “implementing price discrimination” when providing “the same products or services.”
The country’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law (in Chinese) also forbids practices such as “implementing differentiated treatment in transaction conditions such as the price” for the same goods. The clause, however, only applies to companies with a “market-dominant position,” or companies that enjoy more than 50% of a “relevant market.”
“Whereas the Anti-Monopoly Law treats price discrimination and predatory pricing as potential ‘abuses’ by dominant firms, the older Price Law contains much broader rules against price discrimination and predatory pricing that are not limited to dominant firms,” said Bush.
“Perfect” price discrimination—when a business charges a different price on every sale in an effort to get the highest possible price every time—is rare in conventional markets, but e-commerce makes it possible for companies to try, Wu Weiming, senior partner at Shanghai-based Allbright Law Firm, wrote in a note (in Chinese).
“On the internet, differentiated pricing for different consumers becomes possible. It is difficult for consumers to notice from their own web pages or mobile terminals even if their prices are different from other consumers,” Wu wrote.
In November, SAMR proposed a set of antitrust guidelines targeting internet platforms. The guidelines for the first time pointed out that pricing products or services differently according to customer purchasing power, consumption history, or user preference is considered monopolistic behavior.
The guidelines, formalized in February, call for stricter regulation of unfair pricing practices. But the supplement to the Anti-Monopoly Law once again only applies to companies with dominant market positions. So far, SAMR has only deemed Alibaba a dominant player in China’s e-commerce market, fining the e-commerce giant $2.8 billion for “forced exclusivity” in April.
However, SAMR’s July 2 draft provision on illegal pricing activities is a major step closer to cracking down on price discrimination by all online marketplaces, because it also applies to non-dominant marketplaces like JD.com and Pinduoduo.
Even though the state is issuing tough regulations to crack down on price discrimination practices, there are more hurdles to overcome when it comes to execution.
The unpredictability and uncertainty in pricing as a result of peak or low seasons and hours, among other factors, may lead to big price fluctuations. Therefore, it’s difficult to collect evidence to prove that the companies have boosted prices based on an individual customer’s characteristics.On top of that, regulating the practice will need the companies to share, at least with monitoring authorities, their recommendation and pricing algorithms, Chen Wenming, a lawyer with Zhejiang Xiaode Law Firm, told local media. This is a prime obstacle to regulating the practice, since most companies will be reluctant to offer this critical information, Chen said.
]]>Chinese game streaming platforms Huya and Douyu announced on Monday that they would terminate a merger agreement after antitrust regulators blocked the deal on Saturday. The decision dealt a new blow to Tencent, leader of the merger.
Why it matters: This is the first time Chinese regulators have blocked a merger in the tech sector for antitrust reasons. In other recent cases, Chinese regulators have fined companies retroactively up to RMB 500,000 (around $77,318) over unreported merger and acquisition deals. However, companies have been able to keep these closed deals.
Details: Huya and Douyu announced Monday they would terminate the merger agreement. Both companies said they “fully respect” and would “abide by” the decision made by the Chinese State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR).
Context: Tencent, Huya, and Douyu announced the merger plans in August 2020, and filed for antitrust review in November.
]]>READ MORE: The Chinese gaming startup outperforming Tencent overseas
Daojia, a Chinese platform offering on-demand housekeeping services, filed for an initial public offering in New York on July 2. In Chinese, Daojia means coming to homes.
Why it matters: The IPO application comes as Chinese regulators increase scrutiny of Chinese tech companies that collect extensive data from Chinese users and seek US IPOs.
Details: Daojia said it plans to go public on the New York Stock Exchange, but did not disclose the date of the listing and price range of its IPO, according to a prospectus filed to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Context: The Chinese government recently announced a series of investigations to examine potential data-security risks posed by Chinese tech firms listing in the US. Since July 2, China’s cyberspace regulator has launched investigations into Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi, transport companies Huo Chebang and Yun Manman, and job recruitment platform Boss Zhiping. All went public in the US in June.
China approved a Chinese firm to acquire South Korean chipmaker Magnachip in late June, a week after the US government paused the acquisition for review and the South Korean government initiated a deal review. Wise Road Capital, a Beijing-based private equity firm, received approval from Chinese regulators to acquire Magnachip on June 21.
Why it matters: Magnachip is a world-leading manufacturer of driver chips in smartphone displays, producing circuits controlling other components like organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays. The acquisition has raised concerns in South Korea that the country may lose its chipmaking advantage to China.
China’s approval: The antitrust bureau of China’s State Administration for Market Regulation said in a Wednesday statement (in Chinese) that it had “unconditionally approved” the deal between Wise Road Capital and Magnachip.
US and South Korean reaction: The US blocked the deal on June 15. In South Korea, the deal was met with public pushback, prompting a review from the government.
Context: In 2004, Magnachip was spun off from South Korean memory semiconductor company SK Hynix and purchased by US firm Citi Venture. The company went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2011.
On June 21, Nuclei System Technology, a Shanghai-based RISC-V chip designer, closed a Series B of more than RMB 100 million (around $15.5 million). The financing round was the firm’s third in the past year, according to local media reports. Backers of the company included state-owned China Electronics Technology Group and smartphone maker Xiaomi.
Founded in 2018, Nuclei System Technology is one of the largest Chinese companies designing chips using RISC-V, an open-source chip architecture that is gaining popularity among Chinese companies. While the basic RISC-V architecture is free to use, Nuclei’s designs are customized based on real-world needs and are ready to be manufactured. The company’s products are already being used by some of the country’s most popular payment systems, like Alipay and UnionPay.
In Focus: Semiconductors is an ongoing premium series, tracking China’s semiconductor boom in charts and deep-dives. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
Nuclei is just the latest example of a rush into the RISC-V space in China. RISC-V is an alternative to mainstream architectures like x86 and Arm, which are proprietary. It was long considered a “hobbyist architecture.” Now, China’s semiconductor industry is taking RISC-V seriously. Alibaba and some of the country’s largest chipmakers are joining the bandwagon, rolling out RISC-V-based processors.
That’s because RISC-V has given Chinese chip designers an alternative to the two dominant architectures: US chipmaker Intel owns x86, and Japan’s SoftBank owns Arm Holdings, Ltd.. An open-source architecture could free chipmakers from relying on other architecture designers and spending high licensing fees.
For now, RISC-V remains something of a hipster architecture. But major companies are already experimenting with it for smartphones, and experts say it could be mature within a decade.
A lightweight architecture, RISC-V is expected to appear first in devices on the internet of things (IoT). It also has potential in data centers, especially those for the purpose of machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI), because of its ability to modify source code. Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has made a phone prototype based on RISC-V that can execute simple tasks, though it is still an experiment.
But most importantly, China’s chip industry is embracing RISC-V due to fear that its access to foreign-owned architecture might be blocked in geopolitical conflicts. The move coincides with the Chinese government’s push to replace foreign-made software, operating systems, and infrastructure for the public services and key industries(notably banking) , with homemade solutions—which are often based on open-source projects.
Nuclei said in a marketing blurb on its website that one of its advantages is that it’s “homegrown and self-reliant.”
“At present, the copyrights of mainstream architectures like x86 and Arm belong to US company Intel and Japanese company SoftBank, respectively,” said Wu Di, an analyst at Changsha-based brokerage Chasing Securities. “There is a growing risk of being restricted from using the architectures as the US strengthens its grip on Chinese tech companies.”
RISC-V, created in 2010 by a group at University of California, Berkeley, is something like Linux for chips. But RISC-V is not a piece of software or hardware. It is an abstract model of a computer often referred to as an instruction set architecture (ISA). ISA, as David Patterson, vice chair of the board of the RISC-V Foundation, told Wired, is the language that hardware and software use to talk to each other.
Unlike many other ISA designs, including the popular Arm and x86, the RISC-V ISA is available under an open-source license, meaning that anyone can use the architecture to develop implementations of computers, like central processing units (CPUs), without any fees.
Compared to the two dominant architectures, x86 and Arm, RISC-V has been designed to be lightweight and low-power. Thus, RISC-V is a better fit for small computing gadgets like the internet of things (IoT) devices, argued Fang Zhixi, chair of the RISC-V Foundation China Advisory Committee.
Another feature that distinguishes RISC-V from Arm and x86 is its business model. RISC-V’s open-source license is called Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International. That means anyone can put it into commercial use, modify its code, and distribute copies without cost.
By comparison, both x86 and Arm are proprietary architectures. Currently, there are only three companies licensed to manufacture x86-architecture processors: US companies Intel and AMD and Taiwanese chipmaker VIA. UK-based Arm Ltd. has adopted a looser commercial license system, giving chipmakers worldwide the ability to design processors based on the architecture. As of September 2020, Arm had issued licenses to more than 150 Chinese chipmakers, including Chinese telecommunications equipment giant Huawei, according to local media reports (in Chinese).
Being open-source also means that RISC-V is not subject to export controls. In May 2019, Arm told staff to stop working with Huawei after the Chinese firm was hit by a US sanction. In March, Arm said it will “potentially” be able to license its latest generation of the Arm architecture to Huawei.
Huawei’s two-year-long drama with the US government leaves Chinese companies feeling that they can’t count on access to foreign-owned proprietary ISAs.
RISC-V is still new to China’s chip industry and most companies in the sector are startups. Here are four Chinese semiconductor companies that are working with the architecture.
Nuclei System Technology is a semiconductor design company and provider of commercial RISC-V processor IP.
GigaDevice, one of China’s largest manufacturers of nonvolatile memory (NVM), in 2019 launched a general-purpose microcontroller based on RISC-V. A microcontroller is a device that is widely used in IoT.
Rivai, a Shenzhen-based startup, is a fabless chipmaker that designs RISC-V processors for IoT devices and artificial intelligence applications like robots and smart speakers.
E-commerce giant Alibaba’s chip unit, T-Head, in July 2019 released its first RISC-V-based processor design, Xuantie 910. The company said it can be applied to the design of chips for fifth-generation (5G) wireless networks, artificial intelligence, as well as autonomous driving.
Despite the promise, only a few Chinese companies have so far mass-produced processors based on RISC-V. Most of those processors are used in IoT devices, like surveillance cameras and smart refrigerators, rather than more sophisticated devices like smartphones and personal computers.
GigaDevice, a Chinese memory chipmaker, in 2019 launched its GD32V-series processors based on RISC-V. The company said the processors are mainly for devices like vehicular Global Positioning System (GPS) trackers, alarm systems, and point of sale (POS) devices, according to its website (in Chinese).
In January, T-Head, Alibaba’s chip unit, said it had tested the Android mobile operating system on its RISC-V-based processor. However, the prototype system could only run simple apps like the clock and mail apps, but not complex operations like games.
RISC-V is not coming to smartphones and laptops any time soon, but Chinese experts say RISC-V could emerge as a major ISA within the next decade.
One of the biggest problems for the 11-year-old architecture is the lack of an ecosystem, both in hardware and software. That includes systems on a chip (SoCs), developer boards, design tools, and the operating systems running on the chips.
Wu, the analyst at Chasing Securities, used the Android operating system as an analogy to argue that an ecosystem will not be a problem for RISC-V.
“The RISC-V architecture is simple, efficient, free, and open, which also gives it a competitive advantage. In the face of the proprietary Symbian operating system, Android became one of the major OSs for mobile devices in the following decade by taking advantage of its open-source features,” he said, referring to a once-might mobile operating system on Nokia phones.
However, RISC-V is still a niche in China’s semiconductor market. Around 95% of Chinese-designed chips were based on the Arm architecture as of September 2020, according to a local media report.
Even if a RISC-V ecosystem readily arises for IoT devices, there are bigger obstacles to widespread RISC-V adoption. “The hardest market to establish an ecosystem for is actually mobile, followed by desktop and server,” Allan He, vice chairman of China Software Industry Association’s Embedded Systems Association, told local media in 2019.
It will take a concerted effort (in Chinese) by chip designers to build up RISC-V’s ecosystem, said Hu Kangqiao, chief executive of Hexin Hulian, a Beijing-based company that designs home appliance chips based on RISC-V. “When the number of manufacturers designing RISC-V chips is in the same order of magnitude as ARM, it means that the RISC-V’s ecosystem is mature,” Hu said in 2020.
“That will take approximately five to 10 years,” he predicted.
]]>Chinese short-video app Kuaishou said it would end a controversial weekend work schedule starting from next month, local media reported on Thursday, in a sign that employers are reconsidering extreme schedules like 996. Kuaishou’s current work schedule, known as “big and small weeks,” requires employees to work every other Sunday. Other Chinese tech companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, also use the schedule for many workers.
Why it matters: Kuaishou is one of a few Chinese tech companies beginning to cut back long working hours. This ongoing shift comes amid increased scrutiny on tech companies, both from the public and the Chinese government.
Details: Kuaishou told staff in an email on Thursday that it would stop the “big and small week” schedule starting from July 1, Chinese media Time Weekly reported.
READ MORE: Beyond 996: a beginner’s guide to China big tech culture
Context: Kuaishou asked all workers to start working every other Sunday in January, which many viewed as a final sprint for the company’s subsequent plan to go public in Hong Kong.
Douyin, ByteDance’s Chinese version of TikTok, launched a web version of the short video app on Monday. The mobile-focused content giant is seeking more growth on desktop.
Why it matters: Douyin is hitting the ceiling in user numbers. In September 2020, the short video app’s daily active users reached 600 million, which is more than 60% of China’s overall 986 million mobile users in the same period.
Details: Douyin’s web version lacked a couple of crucial features that may have laid the groundwork for its success on mobile. For example, the mobile app starts playing videos automatically as soon as it is opened. While on the website, users need to click on the video for it to start playing.
Context: ByteDance said last week that the company booked RMB 236.6 billion ($36.8 billion) in revenue in 2020, up 111% from the previous year, Chinese media Yicai reported.
China’s top legislature on Thursday passed a comprehensive data security law that stipulates how data is used, collected, protected, and developed in China. The law will affect a broad range of industries, including tech, telecommunication, transportation, finance, health, and education.
Why it matters: China is moving from one of the world’s least regulated data environments to one of its most. In the past year, China has drafted several laws to regulate tech firms’ collection and use of personal data and limit anti-competitive practices.
Details: The Data Security Law of China focuses on data that is high-level and crucial to national security, calling it “core state data,” according to a full text of the law published by state news agency Xinhua (in Chinese).
Context: The new data security law is a step forward in China’s push to keep important data within its borders. The 2017 Cybersecurity Law requires firms to store data collected in China locally.
ByteDance, the owner of the viral video platform TikTok and Douyin, briefly attacked Chinese tech giant Tencent in a long, strident online post on Friday. The tussle between two Chinese tech heavyweights comes amid increased governmental scrutiny on anti-competitive behavior in the tech sector.
ByteDance criticized Tencent’s practice of blocking links to its products on messaging platforms WeChat and QQ in an online post, attaching a 59-page PDF file chronicling the blocking activities in the past three years. The company has since deleted the post and the file.
“More than 49 million people were stopped from sharing Douyin content to WeChat and QQ every day on average,” said ByteDance’s post. The company didn’t specify how they calculated the number.
ByteDance complained that Tencent has been blocking links to its short-formed video apps Douyin, Huoshan, and Xigua, for three years, “affecting more than 1 billion users.”
ByteDance’s high-profile complaint came as Chinese regulators crack down on tech companies’ anti-competitive behavior. ByteDance could benefit if regulators take action against Tencent’s link blocking practice. The company competes with Tencent on multiple fronts, including news aggregation and online games.
In March, Reuters reported that China’s top antitrust regulator was looking into Tencent’s WeChat for monopolistic practices, and how the popular messaging app had possibly squeezed smaller competitors.
ByteDance declined to comment on the situation when reached by TechNode. Tencent also declined to comment. Chinese media saved a copy of ByteDance’s post.
Tencent is not the only company that tries to stop users from clicking into rival ecosystems. Tencent has banned links of ByteDance’s Douyin and productivity tool Feishu on WeChat. It also prohibits users from opening links to e-commerce giant Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall online marketplaces.
Alibaba also bans (in Chinese) merchants from listing their WeChat contact information on the platform.
In August, ByteDance’s Douyin said it would ban links to third-party e-commerce sites, including Taobao and Tencent-backed JD.com, on its live-streaming channels in October. However, it also relies (in Chinese) on selling ads with links to those e-commerce sites for its short video feature.
ByteDance wrote that the post was a response to a comment made by Tencent executive Sun Zhonghuai last Thursday at an industrial forum. Sun compared short-form videos to food for pigs.
Sun, a Tencent vice president and chief executive officer of the company’s online video department, said short-video apps were feeding users vulgar content. “Because the personalized recommendation [algorithms] are so powerful, if you like pigswill, all you see is pigswill, nothing else,” Sun said.
Sun is responsible for Tencent’s video-streaming platform Tencent Video and short-video app Weishi, according to Chinese media reports.
ByteDance defended short videos in the post, saying Sun’s remarks were “arrogant and unfair.” “As a new form of communication, short videos help countless ordinary people record and share their lives, allowing more people to see a larger world.”
ByteDance also hinted in the post that Tencent’s criticism of short videos was insincere, pointing out that Tencent had tried various times to make short video apps while calling them “pigswill.”
In the attached PDF file (in Chinese), ByteDance listed evidence that Tencent had blocked links to ByteDance’s short-video apps Douyin, Xigua, and Huoshan on WeChat, while allowed Tencent-backed Kuaishou and Weishi to share links on the social media platform.
The file mainly consists of annals of news coverage of Tencent and ByteDance’s conflicts from 2018 to 2021 and ByteDance’s summary of those events.
“We see this pamphlet as a standing reference to the [link] blocking and monopoly. It always reminds us that time may erase memories, but time cannot erase facts,” wrote ByteDance in the now-deleted post (our translation).
ByteDance sued Tencent in February for blocking Douyin’s content on WeChat and QQ, citing China’s Anti-Monopoly Law.
Bytedance accused Tencent of violating Anti-Monopoly Law and “misusing a market-dominant position,” “excluding and restricting competition.”
The lawsuit is still awaiting a first hearing date at the Beijing Intellectual Property Court. Tencent has requested (in Chinese) the case be transferred to a court in Shenzhen, where the company is headquartered.
In 2019, a Chinese lawyer sued Tencent for blocking Alibaba’s Taobao links. He dropped the case in early 2020 for “a lack of evidence.” But since then, anti-monopoly enforcement has taken off.
Zhang Zhengxin, the lawyer who sued Tencent, told TechNode in December that his odds to win the case would “increase by a lot” if the case had gone to court then.
In December, China fined a batch of tech companies over antitrust violations for the first time. A month before that, China’s top antitrust regulator proposed new guidelines targeting anti-competitive behavior to include internet companies.
]]>Chinese tech giants like Alibaba and Tencent have long had the reputation of being some of the most active investors in China. They are behind a host of unicorns, from ride-hailing giant Didi to edtech platform Yuanfudao.
Now, they’re looking inwards, pledging to reinvest the money they make into new ventures ranging from supply chain digitization and grocery delivery, even if it means hammering their profits.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, published in the subscriber-only TechNode Distilled newsletter.
Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said in an earnings call in May that the company will invest all its incremental profits into core strategic areas. These funds include the difference between the company’s current year profits and those of the previous year.
Tencent has made a similar pledge, aiming to sharply increase investments this year. Meanwhile, Pinduoduo said it will boost investments in logistics infrastructure and agricultural science.
In some cases, these pledges represent up to 15% of these companies’ annual incomes, according to analysts.
“While we don’t expect to see significant [returns] in the short term, we believe these investments will create sustainable long term profit growth for investors,” Esme Pau, analyst at China Tonghai Securities, told TechNode.
Bottom line: Chinese tech majors Alibaba, Tencent, and Pinduoduo have all promised to up their investments as their users change behavior in the wake of the pandemic and stricter regulations weigh on tech firms’ businesses.
Alibaba will invest all of its “incremental profits” in 2022, after a hefty $2.8 billion antitrust fine triggered its first quarterly loss in nine years. The company didn’t specify an amount, but Bloomberg has estimated that the total amount could reach RMB 25.8 billion this year, or 15% of the company’s RMB 172 billion non-GAAP net income for 2021 fiscal year.
Focused spending: A source with knowledge of the matter told TechNode that livestreaming, Alibaba’s Pinduoduo competitor Taobao Deal, and Cainiao Logistics will be the focus areas of these investments.
Tencent will plow a larger portion of its incremental profits this year into investments, as China’s internet industry undergoes “a heavy investment phase,” the company said in its first-quarter earnings report.
Pinduoduo, which claims to have a larger user base than Alibaba, plans to increase spending in areas along the agriculture industrial chain, where typically digitalization remains low. At the same time, the company is narrowing in on logistics, an area requiring massive, long-term investments.
We haven’t seen the other tech majors making such a fuss about investment, but here’s what we know.
Meituan: In March, Meituan warned about losses due to heavy investment in its community group buy service Meituan Select, which CEO Wang Xing called the company’s “best opportunity in five years.”
JD: The company didn’t say much in its recent filings or in response to TechNode’s queries. JD continues to invest in new opportunities in cooperation with suppliers and brands, Chief Financial Officer Sidney Huang said in the company’s first-quarter earnings call.
Hit to profits: Huge investment promises will mean less short-term profits.
Long-term vision: The investments imply that these tech giants see big post-pandemic opportunities.
“This focus on reinvestment comes as China’s leading internet companies double down on capital-intensive growth opportunities,” said Michael Norris, senior analyst at AgencyChina.
“Whether it’s reimagining retail, facilitating same-day or next-day delivery, or building out cloud computing infrastructure, it’s not cheap,” he added.
Tightened regulation is also likely a factor, as companies align their businesses with current government priorities, such as basic science, rural revitalization, food/energy/water provision, carbon neutrality, and technology for senior citizens.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Tech in the five-year plan
“Tightened regulation is likely to create a healthier ecosystem and a more competitive market, which might reduce the moat of these giants and slow down their growth,” said Pau from China Tonghai Securities.
These investments reflect a change in how digital giants see their role in the economy, Norris said.
“When they first burst onto the scene, China’s digital giants tended to be a thin, interfacing layer between consumers, products, services, and attention. Now, as China’s digital giants work on digitally transforming entire industries, that layer becomes thicker and more capital intensive,” he added.
Subject to crackdowns? Tech firms’ vast investment plans may meet with regulatory roadblocks as Beijing tightens antitrust grips on their anti-competitive practices, especially with unreported mergers and acquisitions (M&A) coming under scrutiny.
China is also cracking down on the so-called disorderly expansion of capital, vowing to prevent firms from growing their businesses into every sector of the economy and forming monopolies.
For those tech giants seeking to grow even bigger via investment, this could be a warning sign.
]]>READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Antitrust push in China tech
Chinese telecommunication giant Huawei announced major updates to its self-developed operating system HarmonyOS at a launch event Wednesday night. The proprietary system is now being used on phones for the first time, achieving an essential goal for the company.
Why it matters: Huawei has long relied on the Android system, but it lost access to key services thanks to US sanctions in 2019. Huawei is aiming to build a new mobile ecosystem independent of Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS. However, the company chose to focus on promoting the system’s versatility across smartwatches, tablets, and other device at the launch event.
Details: HarmonyOS is available on Huawei’s Mate 40 and Mate X2 smartphone models, as well as smartwatch Huawei Watch 3 and tablet MatePad Pro, the Shenzhen-based company announced Wednesday evening.
Context: HarmonyOS was widely seen as an alternative to Google’s Android mobile operating system, but it has taken Huawei about a little less than two years to deliver the system to phones. Huawei first deployed the system on smart televisions in August 2019 and then on smartwatches in September 2020.
In 1965, American engineer Gordon Moore predicted that the number of transistors on a microchip doubles approximately every two years. This rule of thumb has largely held, and defined the state of the art of computer technology for decades. But as increasingly microscopic transistors run into fundamental physical difficulties and increasing costs, people have started to talk about a “post-Moore” industry.
For the semiconductor world, this is a huge challenge. But senior Chinese officials see opportunities.
Moore’s law has been a sore spot for China’s semiconductor industry. The country has plenty of good chip design and “packaging” companies. But as chips grow smaller, Chinese-owned chip fabrication plants are a consistent generation or two behind the cutting edge.
In Focus: Semiconductors is an ongoing premium series, tracking China’s semiconductor boom in charts and deep-dives. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
Over the past month, the concept of the post-Moore era has been a major talking point, permeating the highest levels of China’s government and the chip industry.
“In the post-Moore era, we have a great room for innovation and catching up,” Wu Hanming, academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering and a former vice president of Semiconductors Manufacturing International Corporation, told an industrial forum on May 12.
On May 14, a Chinese State Council technology commission led by Vice Premier Liu He discussed what it called “potential disruptive technologies in integrated circuits (IC)” in a post-Moore world, according to a statement (in Chinese) published on China’s central government website.
Beijing has bet on a wide range of technologies that it hopes will make the country a leader in some of the cutting-edge areas of semiconductors. But experts say it is an open question whether Moore’s Law is really coming to an end soon, and whether China will have any advantages in a post-Moore world.
Quantum limits or no, components are still getting smaller. The size of transistors in microchips has dropped as the law predicts—the most advanced chips mass-produced by TSMC now have minimum feature sizes of 5 nanometers. On May 6, American tech company IBM said it is developing 2-nanometer chip technology which would fit “up to 50 billion transistors on a chip the size of a fingernail.”
However, the process of cramming more transistors into chips is facing physical roadblocks. One of the most critical problems is electrical leakage, which makes chips less energy-efficient and generates more heat as transistors get smaller than 10 nanometers.
There are also economic limits. New processor technologies often require new machinery, and the price increases as the transistors get smaller.
The cost of setting up a 3-nm chip production line is around $31.4 billion, which is more than twice that of a 5-nm chip production line and four times of a 14-nm one, according to a report (in Chinese) by brokerage Kaiyuan Securities.
Moore’s Law “is coming to an end for industries that do not have the necessary volumes to be able to afford the skyrocketing costs of cutting-edge chip design and manufacturing,” Jan-Peter Kleinhans, a global semiconductor value chain expert at Berlin-based Stiftung Neue Verantwortung (SNV), told TechNode.
The cost of developing a cutting-edge 5-nm chipset is “only economically viable in markets with high volumes, such as consumer electronics,” he said.
Kleinhans expects the trajectory of scaling the number of transistors may continue for another 10 years. “But most companies will not be able to afford it if they don’t have the necessary high volumes,” he added.
In the post-Moore world, semiconductor industry experts have discussed three potential routes that industry insiders call “more Moore,” “beyond silicon,” and “more than Moore.”
More Moore suggests that the shrinking predicted Moore’s Law will continue, just slower, with fab advances continuing to drive the industry.
“Beyond silicon” seeks breakthroughs to continue the Moore’s Law trend, looking at non-silicon materials such as gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC). A shift from silicon might be crucial for the chip-making industry so it can build smaller devices, Intel’s former director of technology strategy, Paolo Gargini, said back in 2006.
“With innovations on the material level, these compound semiconductors can be significantly more performant and efficient than purely Silicon-based chips—especially for power and radio frequency semiconductors,” said Kleinhans.
Finally, the “more than Moore” approach focuses on increasing the computing power of microchips by improving chip design and the performance of software running on the system.
“Chip design is increasingly important to develop application-specific processors such as artificial intelligence accelerators that are significantly more power-efficient than general-purpose processors for machine learning tasks,” said Kleinhans.
Other possible breakthroughs in a post-Moore world include novel ways to make chips at current sizes, such as stacked ICs, which stack silicon wafers so that they behave as a single device to improve performance.
China’s showiest post-Moore plan is quantum computing technology, which seeks to harness the principles of quantum mechanics to supercharge processing power. Quantum computers are made of quantum circuits that run quantum bits, or qubits, which are similar to the bits in traditional silicon-based wafers.
In October 2020, China’s top leaders held a “study session” exploring quantum technology, during which Chinese President Xi Jinping said that “developing quantum science and technology is of great scientific and strategic significance.” China is about as close to widespread use of this technology as other major countries: not close.
The government is also supporting research into closer-range technologies, such as new materials and design techniques. On Jan. 28, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, an affiliate of the State Council, published a list (in Chinese) of technologies that it would fund in the “post-Moore Era.” They include new semiconductor materials, new design techniques and architectures, and high-density stacking IC packaging.
The funding project aims to “develop revolutionary basic devices, integration methods and computing architectures … and enhance China’s independent innovation capability and international status in the semiconductor field,” the foundation said.
Commentators regularly predict that China’s semiconductor industry will get a “fresh start” as Moore’s Law comes to an end.
“The Post-Moore Era is a great opportunity for China to outdo the world’s cutting edge in semiconductors,” Kaiyuan Securities analyst Liu Xiang wrote in an investment note.
China can focus on what is beyond the current trajectory of semiconductor development, rather than play catch-up in current tracks of technology, Stewart Randall, Head of Electronics and Embedded Software at consultancy Intralink, told TechNode.
Randall agrees there will be a “fresh start” in a post-Moore world, and “everyone is starting from the same start line.”
But “I don’t think there is any specific area China has an advantage,” he said.
Peng Lianmao, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Science, told Chinese media in April that China could “overtake on a bend” by developing carbon-based semiconductor materials.
Peng said that China had “basically solved challenges faced by carbon-based integrated circuits” and commanded “a full set of carbon-based IC manufacturing technologies.”
Peng, who is also a director of Peking University’s Institute of Microelectronics, led a team studying carbon-based semiconductor materials, Chinese media reported in 2020. He said then that his team was developing a 90-nm carbon-based chipset that will have the equivalent capability of a 28-nm silicon-based chipset.
But Kleinhans of SNV doesn’t reckon that it would be easier for China to make more advanced chips, because “it needs even more collaboration across the three production steps: design, fabrication, and packaging.”
“It’s all about path-dependencies, so no one has a ‘fresh start,’” he said. “‘Post-Moore simply means that all other process steps besides fabrication have to step up their game to increase the performance and efficiency of chips. The slow-down of Moore’s Law is not a silver bullet to leap-frog to the top.”
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi said Wednesday a US district court has ordered the Defense Department to lift a ban on American investment in the company.
Why it matters: Xiaomi has evidently shaken off a geopolitical burden that have weighed down its shares since earlier this year. It is unlikely that the Biden administration will appeal against the decision.
Details: The US District Court for the District of Columbia issued a ruling ordering the US Department of Defense to remove Xiaomi from the CCMC list, said the smartphone maker in a filing (in Chinese) to the Hong Kong exchange on Wednesday.
Context: An executive order signed by US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in companies that it deemed owned, controlled, or affiliated with China’s military.
ByteDance co-founder and CEO Zhang Yiming said he will step down as the chief executive officer of the TikTok owner at the end of this year, according to a statement published Thursday. Company co-founder and head of human resources Liang Rubo will take his place.
Why it matters: Zhang’s departure comes after the Chinese internet upstart dodged a threatened US ban on TikTok amid geopolitical tensions last year.
Details: Zhang said in a letter addressed to the company’s to staff Thursday that he will focus on long-term strategy, corporate culture, and social responsibility.
Context: ByteDance reportedly planning to send its global hit TikTok public as it named former Xiaomi chief financial officer Shou Zi Chew as the app’s CEO.
Chinese internet giant ByteDance has decided to stop hosting TikTok and other overseas apps on Alibaba Cloud, Chinese financial media Caixin (in Chinese) reported. Global hit app TikTok has an estimated 700 million monthly active users worldwide.
Why it matters: The decision by ByteDance is a blow to the e-commerce giant’s cloud-computing branch. Alibaba saw a significantly slower quarterly revenue growth rate in the first quarter, which the company attributed to the loss of “a top-class customer in the internet industry.”
Details: ByteDance decided to move its servers for TikTok from Alibaba Cloud to Amazon Web Service and Oracle, Caixin reported last week, citing two anonymous sources.
Context: Alibaba is China’s largest cloud service provider, with more than 40% of the market, according to market research firm IDC (in Chinese). It is also the world’s third-larger cloud service provider after Amazon and Microsoft.
Last week, China released its once-a-decade census figures. The results are largely in line with predictions: The nation saw its slowest population growth in decades, and the proportion of older people continues to grow. Some have estimated that China’s population will start to decline in 2027. What do these numbers mean to China tech?
Bottom line: The demographic dividend that tech companies have enjoyed to fuel their growth in the past decades seems to be coming to an end. China’s population is growing older, which will pose challenges for both internet startups in Beijing and smartphone factories in Shenzhen. But there are also opportunities as the country moves to raise productivity and to upgrade its labor-intensive manufacturing sector into smart factories. Even as the overall population levels off, the urban and educated population is still growing fast.
Here are the key numbers:
Internet population: For many years, tech companies’ growth has relied on the ever-growing number of internet users.
Population aging: “Aging has become a basic national condition of China for a period of time to come,” said Ning Jizhe, the head of China’s National Bureau of Statistics, at the release of the census data.
Higher wages:
READ MORE: 996 and China speed—Slowing growth in the face of a changing workforce
Less innovation? Fewer young people may mean less innovation, argued Liang Jianzhang, a professor at China’s Peking University and a demographics expert.
The productivity market: As the so-called demographic dividend of China ebbs and labor costs rise, demand for productivity tools is surging. Enterprise service software became one of the hottest VC investment segments in China.
READ MORE: Chasing opportunity in China’s SaaS scene
Healthcare: Population aging also means investment opportunities in areas such as healthcare and elderly care, said analysts. As spending increases, both startups and big tech are rushing to digitize these industries.
READ MORE: High tide for healthcare apps?
Industrial upgrading in tech: To offset the impact of the aging of the country’s workforce, China has long been pushing for a transformation and upgrading of its manufacturing sector.
Growth in cities: Another good thing to look at China’s census data is how much the urban population has grown in the past decade—it grew more than 35% between 2010 and 2020. Most of China’s urban population growth in the past five years was in small cities, according to a report (in Chinese) by Evergrande Research.
Additional contributions by Julia Lu.
]]>Editor’s note: The ‘Techlash Tracker’ stopped updating from November as tech crackdowns became recurring in China. The topic is now part of TechNode’s daily news coverage.
Starting this week, TechNode is launching a new open resource. The “Techlash Tracker” is a database of major regulatory moves involving big tech in China, an open-source project to help make sense of a major trend defining China tech this year.
The tracker is a regularly and openly available updated set of spreadsheets, built in Airtable, recording events. Click here to view.
We invite anyone interested in China tech to use this resource for analysis, and to contribute to it.
In China tech, the word of the year is “antitrust.” Alibaba was fined a record-breaking $2.8 billion for “forced exclusivity” and other anti-competitive practices, while Meituan faces a probe by market regulators over the same practices. Tencent, Didi, and Baidu—to name only a few—have been fined lesser amounts for failing to submit M&A deals for review.
Or is it “de-risking”? The IPO of fintech pioneer Ant Group, slated to be the world’s largest, was abruptly axed late last year as regulators prepared a series of changes to its operations. JD Digits, a competitor, withdrew its IPO application voluntarily in the wake of the fiasco. This week, 11 other tech majors were summoned to Beijing to discuss changes to their fintech operations.
Some say it’s all about data. Beijing has moved in the past year to recognize the strategic importance of this resource, which it has called ”the new oil,” and hopes to prevent tech companies using walled gardens to monopolize access to it.
Related to data, the list continues: consumer rights, privacy, cybersecurity.
We can see the trend: Big tech is being regulated as never before. At TechNode, we’re seeing a big trend, and we’ve been wondering how to understand it—and what to call it.
It’s tempting to see it as the local vector of a so-called global “techlash” that embraces everything from the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) to US Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Or maybe it’s just “Jacklash”: both Alibaba and Ant were founded by Jack Ma, a flamboyant billionaire who annoyed regulators when he dismissed banking authorities as “old men” in a speech last year, and some commentators have interpreted many recent moves as personal attacks on him. But then, how to explain the broadening scope of the investigations?
When we don’t know where to start with a topic, we often approach it by just making a list. In our new “Techlash Tracker,” we aim to make a database of key events in big tech regulation. We plan to include enforcement actions, fines, and announcements of new laws and regulations. We will track private antitrust lawsuits in another sheet.
We’ve chosen an intentionally vague name, “techlash,” rather than “antitrust” or “crackdown,” to indicate uncertainty about an interpretation.
The tracker is intended as a living document: we aim to update the list at least once a week with new events, if applicable. We’ll also continue to dig through our archives to add more previous events, and plan to create some visualizations to help understand the material as the list grows.
The material here is also a bit raw. Expect to see it in more digestible forms in our reporting in the coming months as well as, we hope, in the work of our friends and colleagues.
The Techlash Tracker is an open resource. In addition to making it free to use, we invite other analysts to use the data we’ve collected (but please do credit us if so). We’re also counting on our readers to help us catch events. Click here to submit more events for the tracker if you see something we’ve missed.
Thanks for your support, and we hope you’ll find the tracker useful!
Your techno-friends,
The TechNode team
]]>China imported $350 billion worth of semiconductors in 2020—more than the value of the crude oil it imported the same year, according to the country’s customs data. Importing semiconductors also accounts for the country’s largest categorical trade deficit, where the difference between what China imports and exports for this particular type of goods is the widest.
China has been the world’s largest importer of chips since 2005. As a result, global chipmakers and the governments in their home countries have grown obsessed with its plan to pursue independence on semiconductors for the past few years. They fear that China is looking to build a domestic chip supply chain and decrease its reliance on imports that have proved profitable for certain economies, most notably South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States.
It is true that China is determined to increase its domestic chip production. But the goal is not to make China a silicon locavore, entirely independent from global supply chains. Making a chip is a hugely complicated process involving hundreds of companies that specialize in different steps, and no country does it all. China is trying to bring the highest value-added steps in the process, like chip design and manufacturing, on shore, but no matter how well this goes the country will remain dependent on the industrys’ global supply chains.
It’s been widely reported that Beijing is determined to produce 70% of the semiconductors it uses by 2025. This has global suppliers worried, but on closer inspection it may be a myth.
In Focus: Semiconductors is a monthly in-focus newsletter, tracking China’s semiconductor boom in charts and deep-dives. Available to TechNode Squared members.
The actual source of the 70% figure is hazy—in fact, it may have been invented for television. It was first mentioned by China Central Television in August. Citing “relevant data from the State Council,” the state broadcaster said that China will realize a “self-sufficiency rate of 70%” in semiconductors by 2025. But there is no support for such a claim in any Chinese official document. Media reports cite the country’s Made in China 2025 initiative, first released in 2015, as the source of the 70% goal, which is misleading. The plan did call for improving domestic chip-designing ability, but it did not set a specific timeline for self sufficiency or a figure.
Beijing certainly wants to bring more semiconductor manufacturing on shore—but its goals appear to be relatively realistic.
China’s semiconductor imports surged to an all-time high in March to stockpile against the threat of a global chip shortage. That month, the country imported 58.9 billion semiconductor units worth $35.9 billion, according to data released by China’s General Administration of Customs, the South China Morning Post reported.
In 2020, China spent more money on semiconductors than on crude oil, according to the data. In fact, semiconductors were China’s largest imports last year as well as the country’s largest categorical trade deficit. In 2020, China booked an overall trade surplus of $570.4 billion, while semiconductors ran at a trade deficit of $233.4 billion. By comparison, the trade deficit within crude oil was $185.6 billion in 2020.
China’s trade deficit in semiconductors is getting deeper, increasing 15.3% in 2020 from the previous year and surging nearly 150% compared with 2014.
One of the reasons for China’s push for self-reliance on semiconductors is to “develop high value-added manufacturing and service industries and help reduce the country’s largest source of trade deficit,“ wrote insurance firm Euler Hermes in a report (in Chinese) in February.
China needs chips, but chip makers around the world also need China. The country accounts for a huge part of their revenue—56% for Qualcomm and 26% for Intel. Numbers for the industry as a whole were not available. The US-China decoupling on technology has been bad news for them and we’ve seen they have lobbied for less restrictions on chips exports to China.
China is the world’s largest buyer of semiconductors, but most of what China buys isn’t consumed at home. Instead, chips are used to make other products and then exported. The chips are incorporated into end products like smartphones, personal computers, and telecommunications equipment, which are then exported to other markets.
Market research firm IC Insights estimated that 60% of semiconductors sold in China in 2020 were components for export products.Making gadgets out of imported semiconductors is a low-margin business. Semiconductor revenue earned by companies headquartered in China only accounted for 5% of global semiconductor sales in 2019, according to data from the Semiconductor Industry Association, a US-based industry body.
China has been involved in the global semiconductor supply chain for a few decades, allowing companies to nurture the talent and skills to move up the value chain and reap greater economic benefits.
China has seen Taiwan improve its standing in the semiconductor industry over the past 60 years. The island has moved steadily up the value chain since the 1960s when American companies began setting up assembly plants there. Today, the island is the world’s second-largest semiconductor manufacturer behind South Korea, and home to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s largest contract chipmaker. Chip manufacturing now contributes to more than 56% of Taiwan’s semiconductor industry.
For China, the push for self-reliance in semiconductors is not only about making semiconductors at home. It is about pushing the industry upstream on the value chain—making chips rather than using chips, designing chips rather than packaging chips.
While this has already been in process over the past two decades, Beijing’s call for self-reliance on semiconductors is likely to accelerate the pace. The following chart shows the decrease in low-value activities for China and an increase in activities higher up the value chain, specifically chip design.
China’s ambitious semiconductor autonomy plan is about improving the proportions of chip designing and chip manufacturing in the industry, the Euler Hermes report said.
By doing so, the country has increased investment in the segment. This newsletter mentioned in March that cash flowing into China’s semiconductor firms surged more than fourfold in 2020 compared with the previous year. One of the biggest underwriters is the state.
The country’s National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the Big Fund, manages more than RMB 340 billion ($52.5 billion). Around 84% of the Big Fund’s investment went into chip manufacturing and design firms. The rest went mostly into chip packing and testing firms, lower-value inputs necessary to the ecosystem.
Meanwhile, provincial governments have set up guidance funds totaling more than RMB 300 billion to support local semiconductor industries.
The numbers seem massive, but the state is not throwing its support behind chip firms at any cost, support that some of China’s biggest firms have enjoyed in the past. In November, the government allowed Tsinghua Unigroup, a major state-owned semiconductor manufacturer, to default on a RMB 1.3 billion bond.
“Tsinghua Unigroup is one of China’s largest and most advanced semiconductor firms,” wrote Euler Hermes. “Tsinghua Unigroup’s default sends a signal that China probably won’t provide funds to its leading companies at all costs.”
]]>Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei reported Wednesday that its revenue for the first quarter fell 16.5% year on year, in the company’s largest quarterly top-line decrease since US export restrictions took hold.
Why it matters: The decrease in revenue reflects the toll that US sanctions have taken on a company that was once the world’s largest smartphone maker.
Details: Huawei said in a statement Wednesday that its revenue for the first quarter of this year was RMB 152.2 billion (around $23.5 billion), a year-on-year decrease of 16.5%.
Context: Huawei said earlier this month that its revenue for 2020 reached RMB 891.4 billion, up 3.8% year on year, but slower than the annual growth rate of 19.1% in 2019.
Chinese internet giant Tencent’s investment in Japanese tech firm Rakuten will be “monitored for national security implications,” Japanese government officials told their US counterparts prior to the meeting between the two nations’ leaders on Thursday, Nikkei reported.
Why it matters: Chinese tech companies’ overseas investment activity faces increasing scrutiny as the US pushes for a tech alliance with allies.
Details: Japanese officials briefed the US National Security Council on Tencent’s March investment in Rakuten, a Japanese e-commerce and telecommunications service provider, Nikkei Asia reported on Thursday.
READ MORE: Before the bans, China tech investment turned away from US
Context: Rakuten is an online retail company founded by Japanese billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani. The company also runs a telecommunications business. It launched its 5G service in September.
China’s months-long investigation of Alibaba for anti-competitive practices concluded on Saturday as the e-commerce heavyweight was slapped with a record RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine for violating the Anti-Monopoly Law for a variety practices, most importantly “forced exclusivity.”
The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top market regulator, defined Alibaba’s dominant market position in a 24-page decision released on April 10. Alibaba’s annual revenue from e-commerce services accounted for more than 70% of the combined revenue from China’s top 10 e-retail platforms, while its overall turnover represents more than 60% of China’s online retail sales during 2015 to 2019, according to SAMR.
The regulator determined that Alibaba had been “abusing” its market dominance by imposing “forced exclusivity” on merchants, a practice in which platforms force merchants to sell their wares on only one company’s platform or services.
“I think this is a good thing to bring more competition, both for the market and for the long-term growth of Alibaba itself. Alibaba’s high gross margin and its high pay to employees are to some extent determined by the company’s monopolistic position,” (our translation) Song Peijian, a professor at the Business School of Nanjing University, told TechNode.
The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.
“It’s like the platform is collecting taxes from the merchants. There are cases when merchants are recording hundreds of millions of RMB but still can’t make money from their business. That’s unimaginable in the traditional industry,” Song added.
What impact will the penalty and the ban on forced exclusivity have on Alibaba? And what is forced exclusivity—the main violation authorities cited in their decision—and why was forced exclusivity so important that Alibaba kept going despite multiple warning signs?
The fine Alibaba received is the largest in the history of Chinese antitrust law, breaking a record set by a fine imposed on US chipmaker Qualcomm. In February 2015, Qualcomm agreed to pay a fine of $975 million to settle a 14-month investigation into its anti-competitive practices led by the National Development and Reform Commission of China.
The Alibaba fine is also the second-largest antitrust penalty worldwide for a single company, according to a research note by the law firm Dentons China. The largest fine in history remains the European Union’s EUR 4.34 billion (around $5.2 billion) fine on Google in 2018 for using its Android mobile operating system to illegally “cement its dominant position” in search.
While the RMB 18.2 billion penalty, 4% of the group’s 2019 revenue, is China’s largest for antitrust violations, the sum is small compared to Alibaba’s more than RMB 312 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of 2020. The 4% penalty is also well short of the maximum 10% permitted in the antitrust law.
Alibaba shares in Hong Kong and US both jumped on news of the conclusion of the investigation—regarded as a major source of uncertainty for the e-commerce platform—despite the fact that the penalty was double the rumored sum of $1 billion.
“Determination of the penalty means Alibaba’s antitrust case has come to an end. A series of negative events has dragged Alibaba’s market cap near to a historic low. As long as it is slightly favorable, the stock price will usher in a rebound,” Wang Shan, an analyst at Tiger Brokers, told TechNode (our translation).
Michael Norris, research and strategy manager of Agency China, said that immediate market response to the fine reflects “a belief the regulatory overhang over Alibaba will conclude shortly.”
“It’s highly arguable the regulatory uncertainty over anti-trust investigations has done more damage to Alibaba’s share price than the fine for ‘forced exclusivity’,” he added.
The record-breaking fine against Alibaba is a direct sign that China has become a major antitrust regulator internationally, said Deng Zhisong, a partner at Dentons China.
While pledging full compliance with the administrative decision, the company played down its impact, saying that it expected no material impact on its business from the end of forced exclusivity, according to Chairman Danial Zhang during the Monday briefing. In addition, management said Alibaba will spend billions to lower merchant costs, responding to allegations that they’ve been overcharging merchants.
Many Chinese tech giants have been accused of different forms of ‘forced exclusivity,” also known as “choose one of two.” Alibaba’s version forces merchants to sell exclusively on its marketplaces, such as Taobao and Tmall. Changing to a multi-platform format means its merchants can now sell on rival platforms like Pinduoduo and JD.com.
Vendors already operating on multiple platforms are prohibited to join rivals’ promotional events, such as the June shopping festival known as “618” and year-end shopping spree Singles Day. Merchants who don’t comply face punishment such as reduced marketing resources, decreased search result rankings, and even bans from Alibaba’s marketplaces.
Forced exclusivity practices exist in other platform industries too. Restaurant owners are also pressured to take sides with food delivery platforms like Meituan and Ele.me. Those willing to list exclusively on one of the food delivery platforms enjoy a lower commission fee. Similarly, drivers on ride-hailing platforms benefit from lower commission rates if they only work using one app.
Alibaba Chairman Zhang said eliminating forced exclusivity would have no material impact on Alibaba’s business. But if the practice didn’t matter, why did the company keep it so long in the face of lawsuits and pressure from regulators?
Alibaba, China’s top e-commerce platform for decades, had faced intensifying competition from rivals like Pinduoduo, JD, and more recently, mini programs on Tencent’s WeChat and short video apps including Douyin and Kuaishou. Forcing exclusivity on its merchants helped fend off rivals, making it harder for them to offer competitive selections of goods.
“It’s a crucial measure in the early development of online marketplaces, but not so important for a business as big as Alibaba (our translation),” said an analyst who asked to stay anonymous for sensitivity of the matter.
Despite forced exclusivity, the SAMR report showed that Alibaba’s market share has been gradually declining over the years. Its annual revenue accounted for 86.0% of earnings from China’s top 10 e-retail platforms in 2015. The figure has been dropping by single-digit percentages each year ever since to 71.2% in 2019. Its overall sales volume in proportion to China’s online retail sales declined to 61.8% in 2019 from 76.1% in 2015.
In March, Pinduoduo overtook Alibaba as China’s largest online selling platform in terms of number of users. Pinduoduo reported that it reached 788.4 million annual active buyers in 2020 compared with Alibaba’s 779 million annual active buyers during the same period.
Although Alibaba’s core e-commerce business still outperforms Pinduoduo in other key metrics, including revenue, gross merchandise volume, and per-order sales, Pinduoduo’s growth in user base is a warning sign for the tech giant that has dominated China’s e-commerce for decades.
Norris said forced exclusivity may also have been a means to keep Alibaba merchants’ digital marketing spend with Alimama, Alibaba’s digital marketing arm, rather than spread across multiple platforms.
Before accusing Alibaba of monopolizing the e-commerce market, regulators had to answer a question: Is there any such thing as an e-commerce market? E-commerce giants from Alibaba to Amazon have argued that e-commerce is just one among many forms of retail, and that its biggest companies should be seen as reasonably sized players in a retail market that includes malls and supermarkets.
SAMR rejected this argument on Saturday, finding that e-commerce is a separate market, and for the first time laying out a definition of an online services market and a method to measure the market share of a player in such a market.
While SAMR has been pushing to revise laws and regulations to keep up with its antitrust campaign in tech, it relied on established law dating to 2009 in its Alibaba decision, suggesting that the recent tech antitrust push was possible under the old law.
SAMR’s analysis used an approach familiar from traditional antitrust cases, known as “demand-side substitution analysis.” It said that the functions of online marketplaces, such as Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall, are “non-interchangeable with offline marketplaces,” and that online marketplaces serve different merchants than offline marketplaces because the scope and costs of their services are different.
China’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law defines a player with more than 50% of a “relevant market” as a “dominant player.” In defining Alibaba as a dominant player in the online marketplace, SAMR cited data about Alibaba’s service revenue from merchants; China’s e-commerce market’s Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, a standard measure of market concentration; analysis of Alibaba’s leverage in negotiations with merchants; as well as Alibaba’s “strong abundant finance resources and advanced technological abilities.
Regulators are working on changes to antitrust law that may make it easier to prove monopoly status in future internet cases. In January 2020, SAMR proposed an amendment to China’s Anti-Monopoly Law, which will take into consideration factors such as network effects—services that rise in value as their user bases grow—as well as company size and data assets when determining whether a company is a dominant player. SAMR also in March finalized a set of guidelines helping regulators define relevant market share in the internet sector.
Alibaba clearly seeks to move on from the antitrust investigation. Vice Chairman Joe Tsai said on Monday during the conference call with investors, media, and partners that the company has “put this matter behind us.” Tsai added that he was not aware of any other investigations involving the company relating to the Anti-Monopoly Law, although the regulators continue to conduct a broad review of Chinese tech firms’ investment transactions.
Levying a sizable fine on one of China’s largest internet sites highlighted the state’s increased scrutiny of conglomerates, sending shivers down the spines of many Chinese tech peers.
Just two days after Alibaba’s fine, regulators announced a $180,000 penalty on Sherpa’s, a Shanghai-based English-language food delivery app targeted toward foreigners.
In the wake of the penalty, regulators summoned on Tuesday 34 of the country’s largest technology companies from various segments, including ByteDance, Baidu, JD, Pinduoduo, Ctrip, Bilibili, and Qihoo 360. The regulator warned every major internet firm in China to heed the Alibaba example.
Beijing gave Chinese online platforms a one-month window to rectify practices that were unfair to competition, such as forced exclusivity, user data leaks, and price discrimination. SAMR said those that failed to comply with regulatory requirements in follow-up checks will be “severely” punished.
Alibaba is already moving to respond to this pressure. For years, China’s tech giants strived to construct their self-sustained ecosystems in order to lock users in. But in a surprising move since mid-March, Alibaba took a step to open up its ecosystem by bringing Taobao Deal and re-commerce service Xianyu to Tencent’s WeChat. This may be a sign that the thick walls tech companies built against one another are beginning to crack.
]]>In the wake of a record-breaking $2.8 billion fine on Alibaba for abusing a monopoly position in e-commerce, regulators have announced a fine on a somewhat smaller Chinese tech firm: the food delivery app Sherpa’s, or as it’s known to insiders, “Big English-Language, Shanghai-based Food Delivery.” Local market regulators announced a fine of about $180,000 Monday that went lightly viral for the depth of its antitrust reasoning.
What’s a market? Antitrust cases often hinge on defining a market—in fact, until Saturday it was an open question whether there was such a thing as the Chinese e-commerce market. Now we know that there is both a Chinese e-commerce market and an English-language Shanghai food delivery market.
Geeking out: In the Sherpa case, local antitrust regulator Shanghai Municipal Administration for Market Regulation (SMAMR) cited polls of foreign residents, app design, and the interior decorating of restaurants to prove that delivering food to foreigners in Shanghai is a discrete market, in a statement of 15,727 Chinese characters and seven charts, and jam-packed with economic formulas.
Details: Sherpa’s was fined RMB 1.2 million (around $178,500), or 3% of the company’s revenue in 2018, SMAMR said in a statement (in Chinese) on Monday. The fine was issued in December 2020, it said.
Context: China’s tech antitrust spree started in November as SAMR imposed antitrust-related fines on three acquisition deals involving Alibaba, Tencent, and parcel service SF Express, a move that legal experts described as the country’s first batch of antitrust enforcements against tech firms.
South African telecom company Naspers said in a statement Wednesday that its tech arm had sold up to 2% of Chinese internet giant Tencent for $14.7 billion, cutting its stake in China’s most valuable tech firm to 28.9%.
Why it matters: Naspers’s block sale repeats a March 2018 trade in which Tencent’s biggest shareholder sold 2% of the world’s largest gaming company for $9.8 billion. Tencent’s stock fell by nearly 50% over the following six months.
Details: Prosus, the Dutch-listed international arm of Naspers that holds Tencent shares, said Wednesday that it had sold 191.89 million Tencent shares for HKD 114.1 billion (around $14.7 billion), reducing its stake to 28.9%.
Context: Tencent said last month that its profit for the fourth quarter of 2020 rose 175% year on year to RMB 59.3 billion (around $9.1 billion). The company’s revenue for the fourth quarter rose 26% year on year to RMB 133.67 billion.
On March 12, China’s top antitrust regulator said it had issued fines to 12 Chinese companies over 10 investment deals in the internet sector that were in violation of the Anti-Monopoly Law. The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) disclosed the 20 companies that were involved in those deals.
Nearly all of the companies mentioned were Chinese companies considered “big tech,” or their subsidiaries. They include Alibaba, Tencent, Didi Chuxing, Baidu, JD.com, ByteDance, Meituan, and Suning. Those firms were fined for failing to report merger and acquisition (M&A) deals in advance, which is considered a violation of China’s antitrust law.
Bottom line: The penalties—RMB 500,000 (around $76,095) each—were trivial for companies of such size. But the regulator’s move was a warning: China’s tech antitrust campaign, which began in November, has not ended and will only grow in scope and severity.
Most fines are about unreported deals: SAMR issued three rounds of fines to tech companies over anti-competitive practices. Except for the Vipshop case, the fines were all related to a clause in the 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law that requires companies to report investment or acquisition and merger deals that could create a “market dominant player,” or one that will hold more than 50% share of its relevant market.
SAMR is waiting for the law to catch up: The regulator is pushing for an overhaul of China’s Anti-Monopoly Law and other regulations—its punitive concentration on unreported M&A deals is evidence that it may lack the essential legal vehicles to rein in internet companies. It also may explain why the regulator dropped investigations into the Didi-Uber merger deal and the Tencent Music Entertainment case.
What’s next? Growing quickly by buying smaller competitors is a common practice in China’s tech industry. Giants created by merger deals include Meituan, which merged with rival Dianping in 2015; and classified advertising site 58.com, which merged with rival Ganji in the same year.
The worst is yet to come: While China’s antitrust regulators have been taking relatively mild measures against tech firms, signs show that more serious moves are on the horizon.
However, existing monopolies may not have to worry about being broken up. “There are no such provisions for breaking up monopolies in China’s antitrust law,” Deng Zhisong, an antitrust lawyer at Dentons law firm in Beijing, told TechNode in December. What the regulator can do is issue steep penalties and veto deals that don’t pass muster.
]]>China’s top antitrust regulator is looking into Tencent’s WeChat for monopolistic practices and how the popular messaging app had possibly squeezed smaller competitors, Reuters reported, citing anonymous sources.
Why it matters: The latest development in China’s antitrust campaign indicates that Tencent, the country’s largest social media and gaming company, might be the next tech behemoth to be targeted. The company had previously been sued by rivals for anti-competitive behaviors.
Details: Wu Zhenguo, the head of China’s State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR), expressed concern about some of Tencent’s business practices, and asked the firm to comply with antitrust rules when he met with Tencent founder Pony Ma this month, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing two people with direct knowledge.
Context: SAMR had previously targeted Tencent in its antitrust actions. It fined a Tencent affiliate in December over unreported acquisition and merger deals and punished Tencent earlier this month for the same reason.
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will begin charging smartphone makers royalties of up to $2.50 for each 5G-enabled handset they sell that uses its patented 5G technology, the company announced on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The plan means global smartphone makers like Apple and Samsung are likely to pay 5G-related royalties to Huawei, the owner of the world’s largest portfolio of 5G patents, potentially opening a new revenue stream for the company as its smartphone sales shrink.
Details: Huawei has set the royalty for its 5G SEPs to up to $2.50 for each device, said Ding Jianxin, head of Huawei’s Global Intellectual Property, at a press event on Tuesday. The royalty will be charged based on the sales price of the handset at a “reasonable rate,” Ding said.
Context: Huawei is losing its status as a smartphone powerhouse following US sanctions over the past two years. The company has been cut off from the global semiconductor supply chain and now relies on stockpiles to maintain production. But it remains a major standard-setter in 5G, meaning the world’s largest handset makers will still need to cooperate with the company to make 5G phones.
China on March 9 rolled out its own “vaccine passport” amid global controversy around potential equality and privacy issues of the health document.
China’s vaccine passport, the International Travel Health Certificate (ITHC), serves as an international version of China’s year-old health code system that helped the country resume domestic travel after the initial outbreak early last year. It contains information such as the holder’s coronavirus test results, vaccination records, and antibody test results, according to China’s foreign ministry (in Chinese).
To sign up, users enter their passport number in a foreign ministry-owned mini program on Tencent’s WeChat instant-messaging platform. Verify your identity using face recognition, and the certificate is instantly available. It is currently only available for Chinese nationals. China hasn’t revealed plans to issue the certificate to foreign nationals living inside or outside of the country.
The health code system began as a patchwork of different apps rolled out by local governments to track residents’ travel history and body temperatures, often with varying standards. It has since evolved into a nationwide database network of individuals’ health information. It appears that the newly launched vaccine passport also has access to the same data.
READ MORE: We read the technical standards for China’s ‘health code.’ Here’s what we learned.
Like the health code system, China’s vaccine passport may provide the world with a new option in the quest to resume normal international travel. China is promoting its standards for post-Covid travel documents. Experts have expressed concerns that the use of such certificates may exceed the scope of containing the coronavirus and empower governments to reinforce social control.
China joins a host of countries experimenting with vaccine-certificate systems. The EU and the G7 are developing a regional system that will allow vaccinated travelers between participating countries to cross borders without quarantines. Thailand is issuing single-country certificates to enter—a vaccine visa, if you will. Israel and Bahrain have deployed digital certificates for domestic re-opening. China, with mostly closed borders and a largely re-opened domestic economy, is deploying a one-country system to vouch for outbound citizens
Beijing hopes to persuade other countries to accept its system as proof of vaccination. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said at the announcement of the ITHC last Tuesday that the document “fulfills Chinese President Xi Jinping’s proposal to inter-recognize health codes internationally” (our translation).
Xi first made the comment about a “global mechanism” of the health code system to allow international travel at an online meeting at the G-20 summit in November. “We need to further harmonize policies and standards and establish ‘fast tracks’ to facilitate the orderly flow of people,” he said at the time.
A spokesman for China’s foreign ministry Zhao Lijian told reporters (in Chinese) on Thursday that the country had promoted and introduced the ITHC to “countries and relevant international organizations.” He added that some countries and international organizations had “expressed willingness” to cooperate with China, without naming them.
Nations are scrambling to set up standards for vaccine passports. The British government said last month that it would work with other countries through the World Health Organization (WHO) and the G-7 on “a clear international framework with standards that provide consistency for passengers and industry alike.” The European Commission said earlier this month that it would put forward legislation this month that will lay out the details on the format of a common EU vaccination certificate.
But unlike the EU and G7 nations, which are discussing regional vaccine passports that will allow people to travel freely, China seems to be unilaterally pushing for recognition of its vaccine passport for its citizens, said Nicole Hassoun, a professor at Binghamton University and the author of the book Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines for the Poor.
Hassoun suggested that China will need reciprocal arrangements. “They hope that other countries will eventually recognize their citizens’ certificates and allow them to skip quarantine, but right now China does not have a plan to let visitors skip quarantine,” she told TechNode.
It’s too early to say if China’s vaccine passport will be a success, but it used a similar health code system to tackle the virus and resume domestic travel. The effectiveness of the system and other key measures—including its strict mandatory lockdown in early 2020—is difficult to deny, as life within China nears normalcy while many other countries struggle to contain the virus a year later.
The eastern city of Hangzhou was the first city in China to roll out the health code system in January 2020.
The QR code-based system allowed people to travel inside China with greater freedom. A green code usually meant that the holder was a low risk for carrying the coronavirus and could thus be freed from quarantine after traveling. Accordingly, a yellow code meant medium risk and a red code, high.
In the early stages of the system, code colors were given based on individuals’ self-declaration of Covid-related symptoms, travel history, and body temperatures. Now, the system has become a nationwide network of databases that contains information like Covid test results and vaccination history.
For the past year, China’s domestic public transportation system, which was one of the busiest in the world, has relied on those codes to manage and track travelers.
Experts have warned that vaccine passports could deepen inequality as residents of countries with access to vaccines can now do things that others cannot, including traveling.
Michael Ryan, executive director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Programme, said on March 8 that “vaccine passports” for Covid-19 should not be used for international travel because of ethical considerations that coronavirus vaccines are not easily available globally.
“Immunity passports inherit all the inequity in vaccine distribution,” said Hassoun of Binghamton University. “Most people are not eligible because most people cannot access the vaccines.”
China’s vaccine passport also inherits the health code system’s privacy concerns. While the health code system is widely used to track the spread of the virus, it also captures data about people’s whereabouts on a vast scale.
In Beijing, people are now required to scan and register using health code mini-apps embedded in the WeChat and Alipay smartphone apps every time they enter a shopping mall or take a taxi. But in most Chinese cities, people are only required to show their health code at checkpoints, and their location information is not logged.
Nonetheless, governments around the world are introducing or considering such systems. Their attraction is that they “may provide validated clinical information to facilitate expanded social engagement including travel,” John Nosta, president of healthcare think tank NostaLab and a member of the WHO’s Digital Health Roster of Experts, wrote in an email. “The danger is that some assessments go beyond Covid-19 and reveal other clinical realities that the individual may not wish to reveal.” He also warned that countries may limit the entry of people with other conditions such as mental health issues.
A city in eastern China had sought to make the health code system the norm even beyond the pandemic, but was met with backlash from netizens. In May, Hangzhou revealed plans to “normalize” (in Chinese) the city’s health code, monitoring people’s medical records, physical examination results, and lifestyle.
Behaviors such as consuming alcohol would degrade the holder’s “health score,” while physical exertion such as long-distance walking would increase the score, according to local media reports about plans for the system. The plan was widely criticized on social media and has not been mentioned ever since.
“I’m fearful that once the toothpaste of a vaccine passport is out of the tube, there’s no putting it back,” Nosta said. “Other diseases and conditions may be flagged and establish new restrictions—from mental health to other infectious diseases—that can excessively empower governments for a new level of social engineering.”
]]>China’s top antitrust regulator said Friday it has issued fines to companies including social media giant Tencent, ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing, and search engine Baidu over 10 investment deals in the internet sector that were in violation of the Anti-Monopoly Law.
Why it matters: China has in recent months stepped up scrutiny of tech firms over antitrust regulations. Friday’s disciplinary action involves the largest number of companies so far and the fines issued were the maximum amount allowed by China’s existing legal framework.
Details: The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) said in a statement (in Chinese) on Friday that the deals include Tencent’s 2018 investment in edtech firm Yuanfudao, Baidu’s 2014 acquisition of smart home equipment maker Ainemo, and a joint venture set up by Didi and Japanese conglomerate SoftBank.
Context: In December, SAMR issued fines to Alibaba and affiliates of Tencent and logistics giant SF Express over three separate acquisition deals, a move that legal experts said was the country’s first batch of antitrust enforcements against tech firms.
China Telecom, one of China’s three biggest telecommunications operators, said Tuesday that its board had approved the decision to list its shares on the main board in Shanghai, following its suspension from trading in New York earlier this year.
Why it matters: The move comes after then-President Donald Trump in November signed off on adding China’s three state-backed telecommunication companies to a US investment ban. The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in January said it would delist the companies, which also include China Mobile and China Unicom.
Details: The China Telecom board approved on Monday a proposal to apply for listing the company’s shares on the main board of the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the company said in a filing to the Hong Kong exchange.
Context: China Mobile went public in 1997 and was one of the first Chinese state-owned companies to go public in the US, followed by China Unicom in 2000, and China Telecom in 2002.
As China’s legislature prepares to meet tomorrow, we’re bringing you a special edition of our Insights column: a preview of tech in the 14th Five-Year Plan. We’ve looked through the last plan, and the documents describing priorities for the new one, to give you our baseline expectations for key tech areas in the new plan.
Greetings from Beijing, where the weather is just turning to spring, the air this week feels like taking a bath in an ashtray, and, across town, about 3,000 people are getting together Friday to kick off the annual meeting of China’s national legislature.
This is one of the big meetings: This year, the National People’s Congress will approve China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, which will set out the government’s economic priorities for the next half-decade. The meeting lasts from March 5 to March 11, and in previous years the plan has come toward the end of the session.
Technology and innovation are sure to play a leading role. “Innovation-driven development” was one of the first topics addressed in the 13th Five-Year Plan, issued in 2016, and the phrase is equally prominent in previews of the new plan.
What is (likely) new is emphasis on another key phrase: “self-sufficiency.” As the US has used its control of key technologies as a weapon, China’s efforts to produce its own have a new urgency.
For people with tech projects, the start of a new plan period means opportunity. The “money spigot” for homegrown tech and innovation is likely to get even more generous, said Uny Cao, vice president at the Zhejiang University Intellectual Property Exchange Center and friend of TechNode.
What are we looking for when the new plan is published next week? What’s likely to get the most attention—and which will get less? Below, you’ll find TechNode’s roundup of key mentions of technologies we expect to see highlighted in the 14th Five-Year Plan.
Macro focus: Above all, five-year economic plans are strategic documents. The most important decisions will be macro goals for the economy as a whole: whether to set a GDP target and how high; how to pace the economy’s transition to meet a 2060 carbon neutrality goal; and how to balance such factors as imports, exports, investment, and consumption. We’re not going to cover all those issues below: You’ll find lots of sharper macro commentary from our friends and colleagues at other outlets.
Don’t expect details: A five-year plan gives you a 10,000-foot view of the government’s priorities, reflecting agreement on goals but probably not how to reach them. If you’re interested in a topic, look for more specialized plans issued by ministries and provinces for implementation.
Compare, compare, compare: Most important political documents don’t make much sense in isolation. To identify key decisions, policy analysts compare successive versions of the same plan to see what’s changed—additions, subtractions, or even changes in the order of topics may indicate shifting priorities. We’ve looked at the 13th Five-Year Plan (full text in English), which ended in 2020, to set a baseline for key technology issues.
Decisions, not surprises: You probably have already heard of most topics to be covered by the Five-Year Plan. Stakeholders across the Chinese political system have been advocating, piloting, and negotiating ideas for years in the hopes of influencing this plan. Much like a major plan in any political system, it bears the fingerprints of hundreds or thousands of political actors of all kinds.
Basis for our expectations: Last October, the Party’s Central Committee met in Beijing to discuss the upcoming five-year plan in a meeting called the Fifth Plenum. The most relevant of the reports that meeting produced was the Central Committee’s “Suggestions” or “Guidelines” for the 14th Five-Year Plan. Although much shorter—around three pages compared to three hundred—the structure of this document usually parallels that of the published five-year plan. We heavily relied on it to make the predictions below.
A new approach to data management will reverberate across tech industries. The next stage of China’s tech policy will shift from an emphasis on developing cybersecurity and big data, to building up the data economy.
Mentions in the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last five-year development plan focused on building up cybersecurity and control over data. But it also set goals to get government offices to share data with each other and industry.
READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Expectations in the 14th Five-Year Plan: In the Fifth Plenum guidelines, data has joined an impressive new crowd: “[We will] advance the marketization and reform of the economic factors of land, labor, capital, technology, and data.” When a Communist Party puts you on the same level as labor and capital, you know you’ve made it big.
The Fifth Plenum guidelines call for the development of a rules-based data economy. Or as they put it: Establish basic systems and standards for data property rights, transactions and circulation, cross-border transmission, and security protection to promote the development and utilization of data resources.
“Ensuring the fluid circulation of data is now an economic imperative,” said Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at Beijing-based strategic advisory firm Trivium. “In practical terms, that means that the overarching theme of China’s data policy over the next five years will focus on allowing data to be shared, transferred, bought, sold, and utilized,” Schaefer said. The plenum’s recommendations called for “systems and standards” in data property rights, market mechanisms for data, as well as cross-border data transfers.
So what? “The 14th Five-Year Plan will mark the beginning of a new era in China’s approach to data policy,” Schaefer said. China is stepping up from the securitization of data resources to developing a system in which data can be exploited as a resource. In the upcoming plan period, we can expect more support for trade in data alongside a continued crackdown on bad cybersecurity practices and insufficient privacy protections.
One of the biggest components of the 14th five-year plan deals with action to combat the environmental damage that followed years of rapid industrialization and economic growth. In the wake of a vow to set China on a path to carbon neutrality by 2060, economic planners will be under pressure to come up with big changes. China’s tech sector stands to benefit: To reach the country’s emissions goals, investment in clean technology could reach $16 trillion in the next 40 years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 2016 plan laid out targets to reduce carbon emissions by cutting the country’s carbon intensity—the amount of carbon dioxide produced for every unit of GDP. Through subsidies, state planners pushed prices in the solar industry so low that it effectively went from being a high-tech sector to a commodity business.
Expectations: The new plan will likely clarify how China will reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon net zero by 2060, goals laid out to the UN General Assembly by President Xi Jinping in September.
So what? The world is waiting to see how China plans to reach its emissions targets by 2060. We expect the plan to create more targets and pressure on local governments to improve carbon emissions, but details on how these will be implemented—and how cleantech investment will be affected—will likely be spelled out in lower-level plans.
A pillar of China’s economic growth, the automotive sector has long been dominated by well-established foreign brands, which hold more than 60% of the market share, while domestic automakers are concentrated in the low-end segment. But that is changing as China’s strength in electric vehicles is boosting its position on the global industry value chain, thanks to strong policy support over the past five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: When China’s cabinet in 2010 initiated a development plan (in Chinese) for seven strategic emerging industries, new energy vehicles (NEVs) was one of them. In 2016, Beijing set an ambitious target of 5 million sales of NEVs in the coming five years, a number which would mark the beginning of mass adoption. This initiative became part of Beijing’s larger goal of becoming the world’s next innovation powerhouse.
Expectations: NEVs were briefly mentioned as one of the strategic emerging industries in the fifth plenum guidelines, but with no detail about the growth outlook.
So what? China’s electric vehicle market staged a strong rebound after disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic last year and has remained the world’s biggest market since 2014. However, there have been bumps on the road, including electric car fires and the ongoing auto chip shortages.
China also lags the US in the vehicle autonomy competition, raising calls for more effort put toward core technology advancement. Pledging for quality growth amid rising superpower tensions in the next five years, Beijing would have to stay the course in boosting the sector, while realizing little near-term profit.
Chinese leaders have long vowed to achieve “self-reliance” in strategic technologies, and semiconductors are one of the priorities. The sector is expected to get major attention as China issues its development blueprint for the next five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The five-year plan ending in 2020 saw semiconductors, along with other high-tech sectors like robotics, smart transportation, and virtual reality, as “new areas of growth” for the nation’s economy, but didn’t make production of semiconductors a strategic priority.
Expectations: In 2015, China set a goal to make 70% of the chips it uses by 2025 as part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative. Now the question is how China will achieve that goal. The country only produced 6% of the semiconductors it consumed in 2020.
E-commerce falls under the broader concept of the digital economy, a major theme in the plan that also covers 5G, artificial intelligence, and big data. E-commerce is expected to play a greater role in driving China’s economic growth in the next plan period.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The development plan that ended in 2020 set out to expand the e-commerce sector by facilitating its deep integration with traditional industries and prioritizing its governance. China sought to integrate e-commerce into various areas including education, healthcare, culture, and tourism to drive innovation.
Expectations: China expects online commerce to continue supporting its macro strategies, notably poverty alleviation and the One Belt One Road initiative. E-commerce has become an important means for China’s rural dwellers to sell their agricultural products. With more free trade zones on the horizon, China looks to expand its cross-border e-commerce market in the next five years.
Blockchain could be a new item in the 14th plan. It’s had plenty of attention at top levels in the past year.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Zilch. Blockchain was not on top policymakers’ agenda back in 2016.
Push from the top: The technology had its breakout moment in Chinese policy in October 2019, when President Xi Jinping praised the technology at a Politburo study session.
No crypto: Chinese regulators are not big fans of one of the technology’s most popular applications: cryptocurrencies. The past year’s clampdown on unregulated cryptocurrencies “is meant to clear a path to regulated forms of digital assets, starting first with DCEP [the central bank’s R&D project that includes the digital RMB],” said Michael Sung, co-director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University, told TechNode.
Expectations: The technology was not mentioned in the 14th plan guidelines issued after the Fifth Plenum.
So what? China is already very interested in blockchain, but has not given the technology the same level of support as, say, electric vehicles. A name-check in the 14th plan would seal its status as a key technology and could pave the way for a national blockchain roadmap.
China has recently tightened antitrust regulations on tech companies. Regulators started at the end of last year to look at tech giants’ market dominance and to use anti-monopoly tools to limit them. The country also changed antitrust laws and rules to better rein in big tech. As top leaders of China repeatedly vow to “strengthen anti-monopoly” and “rein in disorderly capital expansion,” what has affected tech companies so far seems to be just the start of severer crackdowns.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 13th development plan mentioned breaking industry monopolies and rooting out market barriers. It also intended to establish an “efficient antitrust law enforcement system,” deepen international antitrust law enforcement cooperation, and check administrative monopolies.
Expectations: China is already on the move to rein in big tech with anti-monopoly tools. If the new plan pushes government agencies to impose stricter antitrust regulations and break monopolies, tech giants like Tencent, Alibaba, and Bytedance may feel a lot more pain.
Agriculture, the foundation for feeding China’s 1.4 billion population, is facing a new round of restructuring and modernization. The countryside is a growing focus for tech companies because it is home to a group of maturing consumers as well as being a lower-cost manufacturing hub. That makes aligning with rural developments a big goal for these internet firms.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last plan placed a high priority on continuous modernization of rural areas and the agricultural sector. The plan promoted integration of agriculture and e-commerce and encouraged the application of big data and internet of things tech in agriculture.
Expectations: China is expected to continue to focus on improving the quality, safety, and profitability of the sector, goals that require technological assistance.
Policymakers are counting on tech in a plan to improve both farmers’ output and their incomes, said Even Pay, an associate director at Trivium:
“Policymakers are preparing for a future where there are fewer farmers. Some of them may be older, and in need of equipment to make their jobs easier. They also hope to attract some young people back into farming by making the work easier and more interesting—like operating ag machinery or flying drones.”
“Another big reason the government is supporting agtech is the “dual circulation strategy”—which looks to make domestic consumption the main driver of China’s macroeconomic growth. Right now China’s rural areas have the greatest growth potential of anywhere in the country—provided farmers’ incomes go up.”
Fintech and the digital yuan might get a direct mention in the 14th plan.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Fintech was directly mentioned only once in the last plan. That plan called for a risk monitoring and crisis management system for all financial activity, including “internet finance.”
Fintech development: Since the release of the 2016-2020 plan, the use of fintech has skyrocketed, and an overwhelming majority of Chinese citizens now make use of some sort of digital finance, whether that’s for lending, investment, or insurance.
Digital yuan: China’s central bank has been working on a digital form of cash, the digital yuan, since 2014. If implemented, it will be the first state-backed digital currency by a major economy. The central bank appears to have accelerated the development of the currency in 2019 after Facebook announced its Libra project. Trials for the e-CNY started in late 2020 in four Chinese cities: Chengdu, Shenzhen, Suzhou, and Xiong’an.
Expectations: The guidelines directly called for the improvement of “the level of financial technology.” They also included language similar to the previous plan’s regarding inclusive and green finance, as well as on financial risk prevention and monitoring.
So what? China’s fintech industry will continue to grow, especially given a lift in the 14th plan. But incumbents will face more competition as a result of antitrust regulations and the opening up of payments systems that DCEP will bring. Tech companies dabbling in finance will also be increasingly brought under the fold of financial regulation.
]]>China is vastly increasing investment in semiconductors. In 2020, cash flowing into China’s semiconductor firms amounted to RMB 227.6 billion (around $35.2 billion) through the primary and secondary markets, a stunning 407% increase from the previous year, according to TechNode’s research.
In the premiere issue of our Semiconductors In-focus newsletter, we break down how this money is flowing into the sector, and where it’s going.
The rapid rise in semiconductor investment came as China realizes its dependency on foreign imported chips poses major risks as the country seeks to lead the world in high-tech areas such as artificial intelligence, supercomputers, and electric vehicles.
In Focus: Semiconductors is a monthly in-focus newsletter, tracking China’s semiconductor boom in charts and deep-dives.
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China is the world’s largest consumer of semiconductors, and the lion’s share of revenue from purchasing these chips go to foreign firms. China consumed $143.4 billion worth of wafers in 2020, and just 5.9% of them were produced by companies headquartered in China.
China has sought to make more of its own chips for years. In 2017, Chinese vice premier Ma Kai said: “We cannot be reliant on foreign chips.” Last year, President Xi Jinping called to “make technological self-sufficiency a strategic pillar of national development.” Beijing is expected to add “a suite of measures to bolster research, education, and financing” for the semiconductor industry to a draft of this year’s 14th five-year plan, China’s top-level policy blueprint for the following half decade, Bloomberg reported.
Concern over chip dependency has grown higher over the past two years as the US used semiconductors as leverage against companies like Huawei, a Chinese “national champion” which supports the country’s mission to lead the world in the next-generation wireless technology known as 5G.
The Trump administration banned Huawei from buying components from US companies in 2019 and cut the company off from third-nation suppliers that use American technology in 2020. The moves prompted Chinese business and political leaders to resolve to never again be put into such a situation.
China has massively increased investment in semiconductors over the past two years. The central and local governments have launched hundreds of policy funds, or guidance funds, to support the industry. The private sector also jumped onto the bandwagon. Venture capital investment into the semiconductors sector more than tripled in 2020 from the previous year. China also tapped its massive private capital market by opening up its financial market to let individual investors directly support high-tech firms that are not yet profitable. In 2020, 32 chip companies went public on China’s A-share market, up from 18 in 2019.
The National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the Big Fund, is the Chinese government’s main vehicle for semiconductor investment. The fund was first set up in 2014 by China’s Ministry of Finance and China Development Bank Capital, as well as several other state-owned enterprises, which together injected RMB 138.7 billion into the fund.
The Big Fund was established to invest in chip manufacturing and design, and promote mergers and acquisitions, according to China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), which supervises the fund.
It has shown a strong preference for semiconductor manufacturing companies, as China strives to produce cutting-edge 7-nanometer chips. The RMB 138.7 billion first Big Fund closed all of its investment projects at the end of 2019. Around 67% of its total investment went to semiconductor manufacturing firms, according to a report by Eastmoney Securities, a Chinese brokerage.
The first Big Fund had backed companies like Shanghai-based Semiconductors Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and Huahong Semiconductor Limited. SMIC is China’s largest contract maker of semiconductors. It was also added to a US export blacklist in 2020.
In October 2019, the Big Fund raised another RMB 204 billion in a new funding round from the finance ministry, state-owned enterprises, and local governments.
Meanwhile, provincial governments have set up guidance funds totaling more than RMB 300 billion to support local semiconductor industries.
In July 2019, China opened up a Nasdaq-style board on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The STAR Market is the first Chinese exchange to allow unprofitable companies to list., revamping China’s earlier stock market rules.
However, not every unprofitable tech company is welcome. The Shanghai bourse has said that the STAR Market prefers companies that align with the “Made in China 2025” blueprint, Beijing’s plan for self-sufficiency in strategic sectors such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence.
Of the 216 companies listed on the STAR Market, 36 are semiconductors firms, as of the end of January. They include SMIC, which debuted on the market in July 2020 and saw its shares jump more than 200% on the first day of trading.
The STAR Market’s appetite for semiconductors has spurred a rush of activity in the sector. More semiconductor companies went public in 2019 and 2020 than all of those from 2010 to 2018. In 2020, some 32 chip companies went public on China’s A-share market, raising a total of RMB 87.6 billion.
At the same time, private capital is quickly moving into the sector.
In 2020, the total amount of VC investment into Chinese semiconductor companies grew more than 366% from the previous year to RMB 140 billion, according to data from Itjuzi, a Chinese VC funding database. The total number of VC investment deals also nearly doubled in 2020 to 413.
Thanks to a robust stock market that gives investors more options to exit, later-stage rounds in semiconductors have seen steady growth. The percentage of investment deals after Series A had increased to 55.8% in 2020 from 33.1% in 2018.
Unlike government-led funds, VC firms prefer chip-design firms to manufacturing companies. Chip designers accounted for around 67.2% of VC investment deals in 2020.
Despite heavy investment from the government and private investors, experts have said that China will fall far short of its 2025 goal.
While China’s goal is to make 70% of the chips it uses by 2025, IC Insights, a market research firm, forecasted that China will produce only 20.7% of its chip consumption in 2024, growing only 3% from 2020.
The country not only needs to produce more chips, but it also needs to make sophisticated chips that can meet the demands of modern computing devices, such as high-end smartphones and supercomputers. However, experts said mainland China’s chip-making capability is “generations behind” the leading edge in Taiwan.
Though a complete value chain in five years may be a dream, China is making progress in the sector. Changxin Memory Technology, a state-backed semiconductor startup, started mass production of the country’s first locally designed dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) chip in September 2019. HiSilicon, Huawei’s chip-design branch, ranked among the world’s top 10 vendors of semiconductors in August for the first time.
But to emerge as a world-class semiconductor maker, analysts say, that China also needs to narrow a talent gap. It faces a talent shortfall of around 300,000 people, according to the China Semiconductor Industry Association.
How many of China’s top university graduates end up working for the domestic semiconductors industry? Where do Chinese chip makers find talent? Will the talent gap narrow as China continues to invest in the sector? We will dive into that topic in the next issue of this newsletter.
]]>A Chinese Apple user has sued the American tech giant over its higher prices for apps and services compared with Android marketplaces, citing China’s antitrust law, local media reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: China has recently tightened regulations on tech companies’ anti-competitive practices. While those moves mainly targeting local firms, the suit may thrust Apple into the spotlight.
Details: Jin Xin, an Apple user has accused the company of “abusing its market dominant position” for charging developers high commissions, and barring users from using payment methods other than Apple’s in-app purchase feature, local newspaper Southern Metropolis Daily reported Wednesday.
Context: China has recently formalized new antitrust guidelines targeting tech companies, which forbid online platforms from forcing merchants into exclusivity deals, and offering different prices based on user data.
Huawei on Monday unveiled its latest foldable phone as the embattled Chinese smartphone maker ramps up efforts to entice premium phone users in its home market.
Why it matters: Huawei is focusing its limited production capacity on high-end models after being cut off from the global chip supply chain. The new phone is priced starting at RMB 17,000 (around $2,785).
Details: The Mate X2 foldable phone features an 8-inch interior display when unfolded and has an additional 6.5-inch exterior display.
Context: Huawei, once the world’s largest handset vendor, is now ranked third globally after shipping 170 million units in 2020.
China produced a scant 5.9% of semiconductors it used in 2020, according to a report published Thursday, indicating significant reliance on foreign technology as the country pushes for independence on chips.
Why it matters: China, the world’s largest semiconductor market, is determined to increase domestic production of chips, and plans to make 70% of chips it uses by 2025.
Details: China’s integrated circuit (IC) market increased 9% to $143.4 billion in 2020 compared with a year earlier, according to a Thursday report by market research firm IC Insights. China-headquartered firms, however, only made $8.3 billion worth of ICs sold in the country in the same year, the report said.
Context: In December, the US added China’s largest chipmaker, Shanghai-based Semiconductors Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), to an “Entity List” that effectively cut the company off from American technology.
China on Sunday put into effect new antitrust guidelines targeting internet platforms, subjecting the country’s tech industry to tougher rules on competition.
Why it matters: The guidelines formalize earlier draft rules announced by China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), the nation’s top trustbuster.
Details: The new rules forbid internet platforms from forcing merchants into exclusivity deals, offering different prices based on user data, and using algorithms to manipulate the market.
Context: In December, SAMR issued fines to Alibaba and affiliates of Tencent and logistics giant SF Express over three separate acquisition deals, a move that legal experts described as the country’s first batch of antitrust enforcements against tech firms.
]]>Douyin, ByteDance’s Chinese version of TikTok, said on Tuesday it had sued Chinese social media giant Tencent for monopolistic behavior including blocking Douyin’s content on its WeChat and QQ instant-messaging apps.
Why it matters: The legal move comes as China tightens antitrust regulations for tech companies and refines its laws to better rein in the internet sector. While similar lawsuits had often resulted in a stalemate, it is believed that officials and judges will now be less tolerant of internet companies and anti-competitive behavior.
READ MORE: China’s tech giants aren’t ‘immune’ to antitrust any more
Details: ByteDance has filed a lawsuit with the Beijing Intellectual Property Court, accusing Tencent of violating China’s Anti-Monopoly Law by restricting WeChat and QQ users from sharing Douyin’s short-video content, the company said on Tuesday.
Context: China has ramped up antitrust regulations in the tech industry in recent months. In December, the State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top antitrust regulator, issued fines to Alibaba and affiliates of Tencent and logistics giant SF Express over three separate acquisition deals, a move that legal experts described as the country’s first batch of antitrust enforcements against tech firms.
As the Biden administration takes office in the US, there’s a bipartisan, arguably multilateral, appetite to mess with China tech.
The new president has promised to make a U-turn on many of Trump’s policies, but China isn’t on this list. Cabinet picks have said that they support an aggressive stance on China and have made it clear that technology is a key aspect of their foreign policy, but haven’t revealed details as to how they will be tough on tech.
“The view that the two countries are competitors is now firmly held in both Beijing and Washington. In turn, there is little prospect for a meaningful improvement in US-China relations under the Biden administration,” Agathe Demarais, global forecasting director of The Economist Intelligence Unit, told TechNode.
“Biden will need to appease China hawks in both political parties in order to get support for his more ambitious domestic programs, such as building new infrastructure and healthcare,” Alex Capri, visiting senior fellow at the National University of Singapore, told TechNode.
Bottom line: China’s tech companies have seen big changes in their relationship with the US during the past four years, and a new US administration probably won’t undo many of those changes. The Biden administration is likely to put a pause on surprise moves like app bans, and be less unpredictable, but there’s almost certainly no going back to 2015.
‘Buy American’ initiative: Trump tried to encourage US federal agencies to buy homegrown products from the very beginning of his presidency. The American federal government is likely not a big client for Chinese companies, with some exceptions.
The Entity List: More serious threats to China tech began in 2016 with the short-lived addition of telecoms manufacturer ZTE to a list that limits exports of US technology, a move that temporarily cut it off from crucial supplies of semiconductors. In 2019, ZTE peer Huawei was added to this list in a move called a potential “death blow.”
Transaction bans: Perhaps Trump’s most confusing tech policy, if anyone is keeping score. On Aug. 6, 2020, Trump signed an executive order to bar US companies from making transactions with TikTok and WeChat over alleged privacy violations. Both bans were suspended by courts before coming into effect.
Investment bans: Trump banned investments in companies designated as affiliated with the Chinese military by the Department of Defense (DoD) including China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, starting Jan. 11, 2021. Shares of the three telcos in Hong Kong fell sharply on the announcement. The list also includes Huawei and Hikvision.
Delisting: Not a Trump policy per se, but a potentially major hassle for US-listed Chinese tech companies. US lawmakers voted unanimously to pass the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, which threatens to force Chinese companies off US stock markets within three years.
CFIUS: The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US blocked Chinese investments on several occasions, and expanded its jurisdiction in 2018.
Clean Network: First launched on April 29, 2020 as “Clean Path,” and later expanded in August 2020, the initiative seeks to rid US allies’ tech networks and infrastructure from Chinese technology.
Tariffs: Trump slapped tariffs on several Chinese tech products, starting with solar panels in January 2018, and later on electronics, including laptops and phones.
I could go on, but these are the most important.
Funding: Chinese VC activity in the US fell dramatically in 2019 and 2020, as Chris Udemans documented, when the techwar heated up.
By contrast, US funding is still flowing into China. Beijing-based VC Qiming Venture Partners closed a $1.2 billion round of financing in September, mainly led by US university endowments and pension funds.
Semiconductors: Export controls have also inspired big efforts in China to achieve semiconductor independence, or at least limit reliance on US chipmaking technology. This is a very long road and several US companies guard key chokepoints, but there is probably no going back.
The Trump administration aimed to decouple the US and China in the tech sphere, Scott Kennedy, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, told TechNode.
Biden will be using similar policy tools, but his goal will likely be risk mitigation rather than complete separation, Kennedy said.
Biden’s team has begun to describe an approach that could lower the temperature without changing the basic fact of rivalry.
Kurt Campbell, Biden’s Indo-Pacific Advisor, and Jake Sullivan, Biden’s National Security Advisor, summarized an alternative approach in a 2019 Foreign Affairs article:
Washington, for its part, will have to invest in the core sources of American economic strength, build a united front of like-minded partners to help establish reciprocity, and safeguard its technological leadership while avoiding self-inflicted wounds.
-Kurt Campbell and Jake Sullivan, “Competition Without Catastrophe,” Foreign Affairs
Competition: Biden’s early appointees have said that his administration will continue competing with China on technology issues. However, Biden-style competition could mean more efforts to boost US innovation and fewer surprise app bans.
Cooperation: The new administration doesn’t only want to ramp up competition with China. Cabinet picks including Antony Blinken have said they want to find ways to work with Beijing on global issues such as climate change. Biden’s Secretary of State said in September that a full decoupling is “unrealistic and ultimately counter-productive.”
Biden’s cabinet picks have almost unanimously expressed a desire to be tough on China on issues ranging from trade to human rights. They have also stressed the rising importance of technology on geopolitics.
President Biden and his incoming team have not detailed how they will deal with the US-China tech war. “I have not heard them whisper a word,” Kennedy said.
Biden’s top cabinet picks have often dodged making specific comments on technology issues. Here’s some exceptions on what they have said on China tech:
“Democracies must employ scalpels rather than sledgehammers,” Rosenberg said. CSIS analyst Kennedy said he expects the administration to “carry out a top-bottom review of China policy and the entire foreign policy of their tactics and strategy.”
There’s some policy areas where experts expect to see movement from the new administration, albeit further down the line.
Made in America: Biden signed an executive order on Jan. 25 that will narrow the definition of American-made products and make it harder for federal agencies to justify buying foreign-made goods.
Backseat for tariffs: Experts expect tariffs on imported goods to take a backseat in Biden’s administration, giving way to strategic tools that confront China’s tech companies in different ways, like sanctions. “Rather than tariffs, the Biden administration will increasingly shift to sanctions and export controls to confront China’s rise in the technological sector and to try to re-assert the US global dominance in this area,” Demarais told TechNode.
Export controls: Campbell expressed support for “enhanced restrictions on the flow of technology investment and trade in both directions,” but not in a wholesale manner to avoid the Balkanization of the internet.
Standards setting: Some Biden advisors have said that they want the US to play a stronger role in international standard settings institutions to curb China’s influence in global tech standards.
At this point, the broad strokes of the Biden team’s China approach are fairly clear. But tech companies and investors have a lot riding on the specifics. US policy won’t be going back to the rosier times of 2015, but China tech companies will have to wait to see how their access to US markets and stock exchanges will shape up in the next four years.
Kennedy said that US presidents usually don’t make decisions on foreign policy until the summer after they take office.
In the meantime, several of Trump’s policies will remain intact, chiefly entity lists. If you are Huawei or Hikvision, you will have to continue living with US export controls for the foreseeable future. If you are WeChat or Alipay, you can take a breather and expect to hear an update on whether you can operate in the US in a few months’ time.
Unfinished business: Analysts don’t expect any new moves any time soon, but the new administration has some homework due within the next two months.
Stalling: Kennedy says Biden might try to hit the pause button on these actions until he has finished his policy review.
“In terms of the larger arc in figuring out how to manage the relationship with China, I am fairly optimistic,” Kennedy said. “The Trump administration highlighted the concerns of a Xi Jinping-led China. I think Biden will show more care in the tools to get effective action,” he said.
Update: This article has been updated to include the full name and title of Abishur Prakash, futurist at the Center for Innovating the Future, Toronto.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi said on Sunday it had sued the US government over a move by the Trump administration which bars American investment in the company.
Why it matters: This is the first legal challenge launched by Chinese firms on the Trump administration’s investment blacklist. The US Department of Defense (DOD) alleges that the entities are “Communist Chinese military companies,” meaning they are owned or controlled by the People’s Liberation Army.
Details: Xiaomi said in a statement filed with the Hong Kong exchange on Sunday that it had filed proceedings in the US District Court for the District of Columbia against the DOD and the Department of the Treasury on Friday.
Context: An executive order signed by former US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in companies that are deemed to be linked with the Chinese military.
GGV Capital, an investor behind some of China’s most successful tech startups including ByteDance and Didi Chuxing, said Thursday it had closed a $2.5 billion funding round—the largest in its 20-year history.
The US- and China-based venture capital firm’s latest capital raise comes amid an uptick in inflows to VCs from domestic and international limited partners (LPs) looking to profit from China’s tech growth. On Tuesday, Qiming Venture Partners, a Beijing-based VC firm that has invested in food delivery app Meituan and smartphone maker Xiaomi, said it had closed a new RMB 2.9 billion (around $448 million) financing round, following a $1.2 billion capital raise in September.
The two deals are part of a trend: foreign investors are increasingly injecting funds into China’s growing tech sector, as the global economy slows. Investors and analysts have said that foreign LPs are optimistic about China’s tech startups following last year’s initial public offering (IPO) boom. China, meanwhile, is gradually opening its finance market, increasing its appeal to international investors, they said.
GGV said it had raised in this financing round $1.46 billion for its GGV Capital VIII fund, $366 million for the GGV Capital VIII Plus fund, $610 million for its Discovery III fund, and $80 million for its Entrepreneur VIII fund. The firm said it will focus on investment in sectors such as new retail, cloud-based enterprise services, and social media.
The firm said it also expects to soon close a separate financing round of RMB 3.4 billion, increasing its total assets under management to around $9.2 billion.
The company did not disclose the names of its backers in this round. It has previously raised US dollar funds from North America-based pension funds, family asset management firms, and universities. A GGV representative declined to comment.
Qiming’s latest financing round was backed by two government-led guidance funds in Shanghai and Beijing, as well as several domestic insurance companies, TechNode has learned. The firm’s $1.2 billion financing round closed in September was mainly backed by American university endowments and pension funds.
“Top domestic and international LPs are optimistic about our investment strategy to invest in China’s innovative and developing science and technology, even during the challenging global Covid-19 epidemic as well as changing global environments,” (our translation) Duane Kuang, Qiming’s founding managing partner, said in a company statement on Tuesday.
In 2020, Chinese US dollar funds raised 12% more money than the previous year, even though total capital flowing into the market dropped nearly 39%, according to data from PE Data, which tracks China’s VC activities.
“US dollar funds into Chinese VC firms increased in 2020 both because the Chinese government had loosened its regulations of foreign investment and because overseas LPs are a lot more confident about the Chinese market,” (our translation) Liu Xiaoqing, research director at Itjuzi, a Chinese VC activity database, told TechNode.
American LPs are finding Chinese tech firms increasingly attractive and the market is rapidly developing after some Chinese tech firms went public in 2020 and offered investors high returns, she added. Some of the largest Chinese tech IPOs last year included electric vehicle maker Xpeng and Li Auto, as well as gaming giant Netease’s dual listing in Hong Kong.
VC-backed Chinese video-sharing app Kuaishou is preparing for what is expected to be the world’s largest public listing since the pandemic. The company is seeking to raise around $5 billion on the Hong Kong stock exchange, implying a market capitalization of as much as $60.9 billion. The firm was valued at $18 billion in a funding round in January 2018, meaning early investors are expected to net returns of nearly 233%.
US investor interest in Chinese tech firms was hampered last year by two Trump-era policies, but signs from the Biden administration, which has thus far indicated an aversion to over-broad and arbitrary restrictions on Chinese tech firms, are stoking optimism.
In May, the US Labor Department advised US federal pension funds—important backers of Chinese USD VC firms—against investing in Chinese companies. In November, former US President Donald Trump signed an executive order which banned starting Jan. 28 American investment in companies that are deemed related to the Chinese military. Smartphone maker Xiaomi, China’s three biggest telecommunications operators, and Chinese chipmaker SMIC are on the blacklist.
However, in a sign that it is easing Trump’s “tough-on-China” tech policies, the newly inaugurated Biden government said on Wednesday it is delaying the investment ban on certain Chinese firms to May 27.
China’s economy expanded 2.3% in 2020 according to government data (in Chinese) released last week, as economies in the rest of the world grapple with the stranglehold on business brought by the coronavirus pandemic.
China brought in $163 billion in foreign investment in 2020, surpassing the US as the world’s hottest destination of foreign direct investment, according to a report by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development released on Sunday. In 2019, the US took $251 billion in foreign inflows and China got $140 billion.
“LPs are planning for the longer term,” said Liu of Itjuzi. “They are not only confident about China’s economy in 2021. They are at least confident about China in the next 10 years.”
]]>Chinese tech giants typically focus on the consumer market. But their appetite for semiconductors is growing.
In 2020, Xiaomi, the country’s second-largest smartphone maker, made 30 venture capital (VC) investments in semiconductor firms. In the same year, Chinese telecommunications equipment giant Huawei invested in some 20 semiconductor firms through its VC unit, Hubble Technology Investment.
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These deals highlight a trend: Chinese tech giants are trying to secure their future growth by making investments in the semiconductors industry.
Funding China’s semiconductor industry also underscores tech giants’ concerns about being cut off from the global semiconductor supply chain after the US effectively banned Huawei from sourcing American-made components.
Other active chip investors are Tencent and e-commerce behemoth Alibaba, which have focused on investing in the artificial intelligence chips and computer processors that power their cloud computing businesses. Earlier this month, Tencent participated in artificial intelligence chip maker Enflame Technology’s RMB 1.8 billion (around $278.3 million) Series C.
Tencent and Xiaomi have been targets of Trump’s actions against Chinese tech firms, but they have so far not had trouble getting chips.
Increasing investment in semiconductors is also in line with Beijing’s push for self-sufficiency in strategically important technologies. Unlike Huawei, which is locked in geopolitical disputes with the US and is barred from most high-end semiconductors that use American technology, the other companies making these investments are largely free from US sanctions.
China has vowed to produce 75% of all the chips it uses by 2025—and it is putting a lot of money behind this goal. Total VC investments into China’s semiconductor industry quadrupled (in Chinese) in 2020 to RMB 140 billion from the previous year. The country has also set up a series of government-backed funds to support semiconductors startups, including a $29 billion “Big Fund.”
In this issue of VC Roundup, we look into how Chinese tech giants are making investments in semiconductors.
Huawei: The Shenzhen-based telecoms company, which produces everything from smartphones to base stations for next-generation 5G networks, has felt the pain of a shortage of semiconductors. The company may have to stop manufacturing smartphones in the middle of this year if the US doesn’t lift sanctions.
But chip design won’t “help too much” if they don’t have access to chip contract manufacturers like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and South Korea’s Samsung, Randall added. TSMC and Samsung are also subject to US export restrictions on Huawei because their production lines contain American technology.
Xiaomi: Xiaomi made its first foray into chips in 2014 when it launched a semiconductor division that focuses on SoC design. In 2017, the unit, called Pinecone, launched its first and only mobile processor, the Surge S1, which was featured in Xiaomi’s Mi 5C smartphone.
Internet companies: E-commerce giant Alibaba is also China’s biggest cloud computing service provider. The company has been pouring money into making silicon for its cloud computing business to reduce reliance on foreign chipmakers such as Intel and Nvidia.
Alibaba’s semiconductor push began in 2017. The company invested in a series of artificial intelligence chip makers such as Cambricon (in Chinese) and DeePhi Technology (in Chinese).
Artificial intelligence chips have also caught Tencent’s eye. The company participated in three financing rounds for chipmaker Enflame between 2019 and 2021.
A mixed picture: While the US hasn’t targeted the majority of Chinese tech giants with technology export restrictions, some companies have already found themselves in the crosshairs of US-China geopolitical disputes. It’s unclear whether their investment strategies will mitigate this risk. Huawei has demonstrated that investing in chips can be more profitable than strategic.
Chinese smartphone brand Honor on Friday unveiled its first model since Huawei sold the unit in November, under pressure from US sanctions.
Why it matters: Huawei sold Honor to keep the brand free from US technology export restrictions. Friday’s launch shows that the strategy has achieved initial success, as Honor’s new phone contains technology that Huawei still finds difficult to acquire.
Details: The 6.7-inch V40 smartphone lineup starts at RMB 3,599 (around $556), featuring a 50 million-pixel camera.
Context: Huawei in November sold Honor to a government-backed consortium. Honor is a budget smartphone brand that Huawei established in 2013. It competes with other budget brands such as Xiaomi and Oppo while the Huawei brand sells to the high-end handset market.
TikTok’s Chinese owner has rolled out an e-wallet feature on its Douyin video-sharing app, a move that could pose a significant threat to the Alipay and WeChat duopoly in China’s mobile payment sector.
Why it matters: Douyin, the domestic version of TikTok, is one of China’s most used apps with 600 million monthly active users as of September.
Details: Douyin recently added Douyin Pay onto its checkout page, Chinese media reported Tuesday. The payment method allows users to buy virtual gifts for livestreamers and pay for goods on the app’s e-commerce platform.
Context: An in-house payment tool is essential to many of Bytedance’s offerings, including e-commerce and lending services.
The Trump administration is revoking certain licenses for some suppliers of Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei, Reuters reported Monday, and it warned it would deny more applications.
Details: The Semiconductor Industry Association, an American industry group, said on Friday that the US Department of Commerce had issued “intents to deny a significant number of license requests for exports to Huawei and a revocation of at least one previously issued license,” Reuters reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: According to two US government regulations issued in 2019 and 2020, companies around the world have to seek a special license from Washington if they want to sell products that contain US technology to Huawei.
]]>It has been nearly two years since Chinese tech workers took to Github, a coding collaboration platform, to protest Chinese tech firms’ overtime work culture known as “996,” a work schedule of 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. The virtual protest drew global press attention, but things have scarcely changed since then. Today, Chinese tech workers are still plagued by 996.
The problem came under public scrutiny again this month when it was reported that a 23-year-old employee of Chinese e-commerce firm Pinduoduo collapsed and died on her way home after finishing work at midnight on Dec. 29, 2020. The tragedy prompted Chinese authorities to start a probe into Pinduoduo’s working conditions, something the 2019 protest failed to achieve.
Meanwhile, poor working conditions for blue-collar workers for China’s tech companies continue to draw public ire, triggered by similar misfortunes, including the death of a courier at food delivery platform Ele.me at work earlier this month, and the self-immolation of another Ele.me deliveryman this week.
Bottom line: 996 is still a problem in China’s tech industry. It’s brutal to employees, but it is questionable whether overtime work pays off even for companies. Tech executives have implied that 996 is one of the key ingredients for China’s tech success, but economists argue that it is a symptom of low productivity.
Changing demography: Shao Yu, chief economist at brokerage Orient Securities, wrote in a 2019 essay (in Chinese) that anti-996 sentiment reflects China’s demographic shift from labor surplus to labor shortage in the past decades.
“Once the Lewis turning point is crossed, we enter the neoclassical development stage, in which labor supply shifts from surplus to shortage, and economic development no longer relies on the crude input of labor force, but on the improvement of production efficiency.”
“One result of the shift is that people start to pursue a quality life instead of basic needs.”
— Shao Yu, chief economist at Orient Securities
However, China still has surplus skilled labor, including tech workers, curbing skilled workers’ “bargaining power,” Eli Friedman, associate professor at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, told TechNode in an email.
“China’s higher education has expanded dramatically in recent years, creating a huge number of graduates competing for jobs, particularly in the prestigious big companies. In essence, the companies can get away with it because workers don’t have a lot of bargaining power in the marketplace. Companies of all kinds would like to extend their employees’ working hours, and the tech firms have been in a position to get away with it.”
— Eli Friedman, associate professor at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations
How do they get people into 996? It’s not as simple as telling people to stay late at work. Tech companies try to “create consent” when forcing employees into overtime work, He Xuesong, professor at East China University of Science and Technology, wrote in a 2020 paper (in Chinese).
“The overtime culture makes it impossible for employees to choose whether to work overtime or not according to their own will. They are forced to choose to work overtime together with their supervisors and colleagues in the atmosphere of overtime.”
— He Xuesong, professor at East China University of Science and Technology
Is it legal? On the front page of the 996.ICU project’s official website, organizers printed clauses found on China’s Labor Law that prohibit unpaid overtime work imposed on employees. In April 2019, online protestors called on people enraged by Jack Ma’s endorsement of 996 to send an official copy of China’s labor law to Alibaba’s headquarters.
However, China’s courts have held that forcing salaried employees to work overtime does not run afoul of China’s existing laws, according to a lecturer at Nanjing Audit University.
Wrong metrics: Tech firms had to adopt the 996 work schedule to make up for low productivity, but longer working hours doesn’t necessarily mean better outcomes, Zhang Yilai, an economic professor at the Business School of China University of Political Science and Law, wrote in a 2019 paper (in Chinese).
But it just doesn’t work: Increasing labor inputs, including increasing working hours, may lead to a rise in output, Zhang wrote, but it “follows the law of diminishing marginal returns,” a theory that predicts adding an additional factor of production will result in smaller increases in output.
“Chinese enterprises still tend to use ‘output per person’ as an indicator of management, which prompted the rampant 996 phenomena. We should switch to the management idea of how to improve ‘GDP per hour worked’ in order to maximize the innovation potential of enterprises and the society. ”
— Zhang Yilai, economics professor at the Business School of China University of Political Science and Law
Friedman of Cornell University said it’s unclear if 996 is good business, but he reckons that it’s an “ethical problem.”
]]>“Why should people be forced to devote the overwhelming majority of their waking hours to work, even as these companies amass billions of dollars of wealth? Companies like Alibaba and Tencent can absolutely afford to have employees work the legally-mandated number of hours and still turn a profit.”
— Eli Friedman
Shares of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi plunged 11% on Friday morning after the Trump administration added it to a blacklist, forcing Americans to divest holdings and barring share purchases.
Why it matters: Xiaomi is the second-largest smartphone maker in the Chinese market and ranks fourth globally. The company has been caught in US-China geopolitical tensions for the first time, its troubles bearing resemblance to its main rival Huawei.
Details: The US Department of Defense on Thursday added Xiaomi and eight other Chinese firms to a list of “Communist Chinese military companies,” according to a statement on its website. An executive order signed by US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in such companies.
Context: Xiaomi shares reached a historical high of HKD 35.3 (around $4.6) on Jan. 5, driven by strong sales and a weakened Huawei. Market research firm Trendforce expects Xiaomi will be ranked the world’s third-largest smartphone vendor in 2021 while Huawei, which ranked third in last year, will fall to seventh this year.
Update: This article has been updated to include a statement from Xiaomi and to correct a typographic error.
]]>The New York Stock Exchange said Wednesday it will stick to the original plan to delist three Chinese state-owned telecommunications companies after an earlier reversal of the decision that caused much confusion.
Details: Trading in the securities of China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom Hong Kong on the NYSE will be suspended at 4 p.m. on Jan. 11 local time, the bourse said in a statement Wednesday.
Context: The second twist of the plot came a day after the US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin reportedly disagreed with the NYSE’s earlier reversal.
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei, once the world’s largest handset vendor, will fall to seventh place in global smartphone shipment rankings in 2021 according to a report published Tuesday.
Why it matters: Huawei is losing its status as a smartphone powerhouse following US sanctions over the past two years. The company has been cut off from the global semiconductor supply chain and now relies on stockpiles to maintain production. To increase its chances of survival, it sold in November its budget handset brand Honor, which is now becoming a rival.
Details: Huawei is expected to ship 45 million smartphones in 2021, ranking seventh among global vendors, according to a Trendforce report published Tuesday. Huawei shipped 170 million units in 2020, ranking third globally, according to the report.
Context: Huawei was briefly ranked the world’s largest smartphone vendor in the second quarter of 2020, according to market research firm IDC. The company’s smartphone shipments then plunged 22% in the three months ended September to 51.9 million units, causing it to fall to second place on the top smartphone vendor list for the quarter.
The New York Stock Exchange said on Monday it will not delist China’s three major telecommunication companies, an abrupt reversal of a decision made last week which sank the firms’ share prices.
Details: The NYSE said in a statement on Monday that it “no longer intends to move forward with the delisting action” involving China Telecom, China Mobile, and China Unicom Hong Kong after “consultation with relevant regulatory authorities.”
READ MORE: China telecom shares drop in Hong Kong on US delisting
Share prices in Hong Kong for China’s three major telecommunication companies dropped as much as 5% Monday on news of a likely delisting from US stock markets. The telecom firms are among a batch of Chinese companies the US government has deemed to be affiliated with the Chinese military.
Why it matters: Shares of the three state-owned telcos dropped even as Chinese regulators tried to downplay the impact of the New York Stock Exchange’s (NYSE) decision to delist them. China’s top securities regulator has said the plan was “politically motivated” and that it will have a “limited impact” on the three companies.
Details: The NYSE said Thursday it would delist China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom Hong Kong on Jan. 7, citing an executive order signed by US President Donald Trump in November.
Context: China Mobile went public in 1997 and was one of the first Chinese state-owned companies to go public in the US, followed by China Unicom in 2000, and China Telecom in 2002. All three are also listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Zhang Qiyu, a Shenzhen-based founder, turned down a funding offer just hours before talking to TechNode on Dec 22. He said that it was not a good “match,” and that he was worried about being forced into rapid expansion by investors.
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Zhang is the founder and CEO of Balanx, a manufacturer of electrode workout suits that help burn calories, which ships to mainly Europe and North America.
“They want the company to reach revenue of RMB 100 million (around $15 million) and complete another financing round in the near future, which was not my plan,” he said. “Manufacturing is not like the internet industry, where you can create a giant by simply burning cash.”
Zhang’s idea of tech success isn’t Google or Alibaba. During the interview, he expressed his admiration for some of his fellow Shenzhen-based founders who have never raised VC money. He mentioned as an example a company owned by an acquaintance, a dashcam manufacturer with around 40 employees and around RMB 700 million in annual revenue.
“I think this is what a typical Shenzhen startup looks like,” he said.
Shenzhen is famous for entrepreneurship. The southern Chinese city is home to some of China’s most important tech companies like Huawei and Tencent, and is a global manufacturing hub. It is said to have the “highest density” of entrepreneurs in China with more than 10% of its population running their own businesses.
But Shenzhen’s venture capital (VC) scene doesn’t match its importance as a tech hub. Most of the country’s leading VC firms, as well as the Chinese branches of international private equity firms, are based in other metropolises like Beijing and Shanghai. In 2019, only around 9.4% of the country’s private-equity fundraisings went to Shenzhen-based companies, according to Chinese VC activities data provider Itjuzi. The city is home to some 32 unicorns, tech startups valued at more than $1 billion. By comparison, Beijing has 101 and Shanghai has 51.
Local sources told TechNode that Shenzhen has an active VC market, but fund managers in the city are low-profile and don’t tend to make investments that have high valuations. Meanwhile, local government wants to build the city into an “international hub” for VC investment and has injected real money into the market.
But many founders like Zhang still prefer to bootstrap their businesses rather than take money from VCs.
Shenzhen has an active, but cool-headed, VC market, said Jia Ke, founding partner at Shenzhen-based Creation Venture Partners. Most major players are low-profile and seldom catch press attention, he said.
One reason, he said, is because Shenzhen VC firms tend to put their money in startups that are likely to bring in moderate rates of return, unlike stereotypical internet investors who look for high-risk, high-reward bets, counting on a small proportion of their portfolio companies bringing high multiple returns.
“It is not easy for Shenzhen VCs to access US dollar funds, compared to Beijing or Shanghai VCs,” said Jia. The first Shenzhen VC funds were raised “in a market-driven way” from limited partners (LPs) mainly consisting of Chinese wealthy individuals and big corporates, he said. Fund managers used to go door to door asking potential funders for money, he added.
“The first question LPs ask is always: ‘Can I break even with this investment?’” he said. “While US dollar fund managers may have nine to 11 years to exit from their investment, Shenzhen VC firms are usually given five to seven years.”
As a result, said Jia, Shenzhen VC firms may “miss startups with high rates of return.”
But Jia cautioned against over-emphasizing the differences. While VC firms in Shenzhen may have some unique characteristics compared with their Beijing counterparts, at the end of the day they all try to do the same thing, he said.
Private investors are cautious. The 2015 Chinese stock market crash was a turning point in how Shenzhen VC firms raise money, Jia said. The stock market turbulence wiped out a third of the value of shares on the Shanghai Stock Exchange in less than a month.
“Following changes in the A-share market in 2015, high-net-worth individuals, who are mainly bosses of public firms, become cautious with their money,” said Jia.
But state-run funds will back ambitious plays. “Then the ‘national team’ entered the market,” Jia said, referring to state-backed policy and strategic funds that underwrite private-equity firms.
In 2018, the municipal government of Shenzhen set up a RMB 5 billion policy fund, dubbed the Shenzhen Angel Fund of Funds (SAFOF), to back local general partners. The fund doubled (in Chinese) its size to RMB 10 billion in August.
Shenzhen is determined to make itself an “international hub for venture capital and innovation investment,” according to a government initiative (in Chinese) announced in January 2019 that encourages fundraising. The municipal government has pledged to offer startups backed by local VCs RMB 500,000 to RMB 1 million in subsidies if they go public on domestic stock markets.
While state-backed funds in China are known for a top-down approach, the Shenzhen government fund is known for its “market-driven” approach, said Jia, whose firm is also backed by the SAFOF. “They are very efficient and make decisions very quickly.”
But it is not totally driven by the market. SAFOF said on its website that its aim is to guide “social capital,” or private money, into Shenzhen’s “strategic emerging industries” and promote “industrial transformation.” The company didn’t specify what are those “strategic emerging industries,” but the Shenzhen municipal government said in a 2018 filing that they include next-generation digital information technology, high-end equipment manufacturing, biotech, and new material. They are largely in line with the similar list made by China’s National Development and Reform Commission, which makes macroeconomic planning.
The fund has injected around a total of RMB 6.7 billion into 51 VC firms, which together raised RMB 16.7 billion, as of Dec. 11, according to TechNode’s calculations. The fund takes a 40% stake in every single deal. Shenzhen-based unicorns that have received funds from SAFOF-backed VC firms include chipmaker BYD Semiconductors, smartphone display manufacturer Royole, artificial intelligence firm 4Paradigm, and robot maker Ubtech.
Dec 22: Shenzhen-based Lalamove, a Uber-like platform that connects truck drivers with customers, announces a $515 million Series E led by Sequoia Capital China, valuing it at $8 billion.
Nov 31: Wangyun Wangdian, an e-commerce logistics firm, raises RMB 6 billion from investors led by Shenzhen Capital Group, a government-backed VC, valuing the company at RMB 25 billion.
Nov 14: Shenzhen-based Jmgo, a consumer projector maker, raises RMB 100 million from Yuanda Venture Capital.
Oct 28: SmartMore, a smart manufacturing firm, raises $100 million from investors led by Green Pine Capital, a SAFOF-backed VC firm.
Oct 21: Shenzhen-based Xiao’e Tech, a software-as-a-service company, raised a Series C funding round of an undisclosed amount from Tencent Investment, which valued the startup at RMB 1.5 billion.
]]>Chinese video-sharing app Kuaishou has asked all employees to work on every other Sunday starting Jan. 10, according to media reports.
Why it matters: The changes came as Beijing-based Kuaishou prepares for a Hong Kong listing as soon as January. The company is under tremendous pressure as it struggles to compete with rivals such as Douyin, the domestic version of TikTok, and Bilibili in the online entertainment sector.
Details: Kuaishou human resource head Liu Feng announced the new shift will be implemented beginning Jan. 10 during a staff meeting on Tuesday, Chinese tech news outlet Tech Planet reported Wednesday.
Context: In November, Kuaishou was caught in the crossfire of public criticism after Chinese media reported that it had installed timers on top of toilets in its headquarters.
The US is planning to add dozens of Chinese companies, including the country’s biggest chipmaker, SMIC, to the same trade blacklist that has cut off telecommunications equipment giant Huawei from American technology and components, Reuters reported Friday.
Details: The US is expected to add around 80 new companies to the so-called entity list, nearly all of them Chinese, according to Reuters, citing two people familiar with the matter. American firms are barred from exporting technology and key components to companies on the blacklist without government approval.
Go deeper: Exclusive-U.S. to blacklist dozens of Chinese firms including SMIC, sources say – Reuters
]]>When Zhang Zhengxin sued the internet giant Tencent for anti-competitive behavior in April 2019, it seemed like the action of a quixotic lawyer tilting at windmills.
Zhang had challenged the company’s practice of blocking links to Alibaba’s Taobao stores from its flagship WeChat messaging app. Tencent’s lawyers simply denied that there was an instant-messaging market to monopolize. The case resulted in a standoff on this basis—debating the existence of such a market and how to define Tencent’s share of it. In January, Zhang dropped the case for “lack of evidence.” He came away feeling that big tech was “immune” to antitrust law, he told TechNode at the time.
Barely a year later, powerful Chinese regulators are coming around to Zhang’s point of view. They’ve dusted off China’s 12-year-old Anti-Monopoly Law and are applying it to big tech companies for the first time. Meanwhile, revisions to the law are giving it more teeth to go after tech.
“If my case hit the courts again today, my odds to win could increase by a lot,” Zhang, a lawyer at Beijing-based Yingke Law Firm, told TechNode on Wednesday.
On Monday, the State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR), China’s top antitrust regulator, issued fines to Alibaba and affiliates of Tencent and logistics giant SF Express over three separate acquisition deals, a move that legal experts described as the country’s first batch of antitrust enforcements against tech firms. The regulator in January and November began laying the groundwork via multiple proposal laws and rules to tackle infractions by internet companies.
China is clearly looking to tighten its grip on some of its biggest tech companies. Its suspension of Alibaba subsidiary Ant Group’s mega public offering, expected to be the world’s largest public fundraise ever, was a clear shot across tech company bows. Regulators are also stepping up scrutiny of data security measures and online content moderation, signaling the end of the relatively lax regulatory environment tech firms once enjoyed.
The fines were issued for failing to flag merger and acquisition (M&A) deals as possible antitrust issues, a sign that regulators are gearing up to enforce the anti-monopoly law against big tech, experts said. The penalties cited the existing Anti-Monopoly Law framework, which stipulates that such behavior would be subject to a fine of up to RMB 500,000 (around $76,556) or a reversal of the deal.
Applying the law to punish internet companies is a distinct shift in attitude toward tech companies.
SAMR’s recent moves are a response to the state’s call for “strengthening scientific and effective regulations on internet platforms,” Deng Zhisong, an antitrust lawyer at Dentons law firm in Beijing, told TechNode. “[The state] has changed its previous ‘tolerant and cautious’ attitude towards internet companies,” he said.
In 2017, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang encouraged a “tolerant and cautious” approach to tech regulation in a speech (in Chinese).
The three deals in question are Alibaba’s 2017 acquisition of Intime, a retail firm; Tencent-backed China Literature’s acquisition of television series studio New Classics Media in 2018; and the acquisition of China Post Smart Logistics by SF Express-backed Hive Box in May. Each is being fined the maximum amount of RMB 500,000, though none of the deals are being reversed.
While investigations into tech company acquisition deals are not new, until now none have resulted in any punitive measures. When Chinese ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing merged with US rival Uber’s China unit in 2016, regulators opened an investigation into the deal. The case appeared to be unofficially suspended when Uber filed for an IPO in April 2019, according to Bloomberg. SAMR launched in January 2019 an antitrust probe into Tencent Music Entertainment’s dealings with the world’s three largest record labels after rivals complained that Tencent paid excessive fees for the initial rights and then passed those costs along to competitors. A year later, the regulator decided to suspend the investigation.
“With this latest development, regulators are signaling that they will no longer tolerate internet giants’ [monopolistic actions],” said Zhang, the lawyer who sued Tencent. He added, “They used to be more indulgent than tolerant.”
Beijing’s shift in attitude toward tech giants coincides with a global antitrust storm in which US and EU regulators are restarting efforts to check tech giants including Google and Facebook. In the US, several states filed Wednesday a lawsuit against Google over the search firm’s alleged antitrust violations in the online advertising market. In Europe, regulators proposed this week to designate companies with EU user bases exceeding 45 million as “gatekeepers,” making them subject to stricter antitrust regulations.
Prior to the fines issued Monday, SAMR had proposed an overhaul of the Anti-Monopoly Law in January and introduced a set of antitrust guidelines tailored for the internet industry in November.
While the fines are relatively trivial amounts for the three companies—the smallest of which generated RMB 1.6 billion in revenue in 2019—future offenders may pay a much higher price for similar violations, according to the draft revision of the Anti-Monopoly Law. Companies will be fined up to 10% of their annual revenue if they don’t report M&A deals that could create a monopoly, according to the draft revision.
The proposed amendment also asks authorities to consider factors such as network effects—services which rise in value as their user bases grow—as well as company size and data assets when determining whether a company is a dominant player.
The November guidelines further explain what is allowed and what is not. The draft, dubbed the Antitrust Guidelines for the Platform Economy, specifically targets tech firms that run online platforms connecting businesses and consumers such as Didi Chuxing and Taobao.
With the new rules in place, Tencent may no longer be able to argue that it doesn’t hold a dominant position in the instant-messaging market or that such a market does not exist. A dominant player in a market under the existing Anti-Monopoly Law is a company with more than 50% of market share. According to the newly proposed guidelines, a market could be determined by how hard it is for users to switch platforms. The proposed rules also expanded the parameters for determining market share to include factors such as transaction volume, user base, and page views.
The changes could pave the way for further probes into tech firms over possible violations such as abuse of dominance and reaching monopoly agreements.
In November, the draft antitrust regulations sent Chinese tech stocks crashing. Bloomberg estimated that the shares slump wiped out more than $200 billion of value from Chinese tech companies within two days.
Analysts, however, are optimistic about the prospects brought by tougher antitrust regulations. Liu Zejing, analyst at brokerage Huaxi Securities, wrote in an investment note (in Chinese) that the government is not aiming to clamp down on the internet industry, but rather is making the “inevitable move” to curb potential monopolistic behavior, contributing to the health of the sector.
Commenting on SAMR’s Monday fines on tech giants, Huachuang Securities analyst Jin Xiangyi wrote (in Chinese) that tech giants are bound to fall under the purview of China’s antitrust law and that it is beneficial for them to return to technological innovation, thus boosting the industry.
Nevertheless, the merger and acquisition tactic that formed incumbents such as Didi Chuxing, online classifieds marketplace 58.com, and Meituan will meet with greater regulatory resistance, said Zhang. Tech giants may have to reverse merger deals that run afoul of the antitrust law, he said.
Both Zhang and Deng of Dentons agree that Chinese tech giants don’t have to worry about being broken up as they grow bigger. “There are no such provisions for breaking up monopolies in China’s antitrust law,” Deng said.
Monopolists may be forced to open up their platforms or share their data with rivals as a consequence for abusing dominance, but also as a method of remedy, according to Deng.
Antitrust lawsuits against or between tech giants will likely to see the impact of recent changes. In the past, similar lawsuits were usually mired in stalemates on technicalities like Zhang’s suit against Tencent, and court rulings were usually in favor of defendants. A suit between Tencent-backed e-commerce platform JD.com and Alibaba will enter a court hearing stage in Beijing, Chinese media reported in November, without mentioning a specific date. The case, in which JD.com alleges Alibaba abused its market-dominant position in forcing platform exclusivity, will likely provide a clearer picture of how the new rules and antitrust law amendment will be used in legal practices.
]]>Chinese regulators imposed antitrust-related fines on three acquisition deals involving Alibaba, Tencent, and SF Express on Monday, in a sign of increasing concern about monopolistic behavior by internet giants.
Why it matters: The actions are fresh signs that Beijing is tightening its grip on internet firms, which once enjoyed a relatively lax regulatory environment. Officials have recently stepped up scrutiny on data security and content moderation. Regulators, meanwhile, have proposed stricter antitrust rules aimed at internet firms.
Details: The State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) said Monday it had decided to fine e-commerce giant Alibaba, Tencent-backed China Literature, and an SF Logistics-backed logistics firm for failing to report past acquisition deals properly to the regulator for antitrust reviews. Each is being fined about RMB 500,000 (around $76,410). It is not clear if regulators intend to pursue further action on these deals.
The next shoe to drop? SAMR said during the press conference that it is also looking into a merger agreement between gaming streaming platforms Huya and Douyu announced in October and planned to close in 2021. Both firms are backed by Tencent.
Context: China has this year tightened antitrust oversights on internet firms. In November, SAMR proposed new rules that could pave the way for antitrust authorities to launch more such probes into internet firms.
]]>Read more: China’s antitrust law doesn’t seem to apply to internet giants
Apple has told developers worldwide it would remove any remaining paid games that are not approved by Chinese authorities after Dec. 31, ending a six-month-long purge of unlicensed games.
Why it matters: The move means it will be almost impossible for international mobile games makers to access the Chinese market if they don’t comply with the country’s strict content rules. Chinese Android app stores have long required game makers to obtain such licenses if their apps contain paid features.
Details: In an email to developers on Dec. 2, Apple said that games without a valid game license number will be removed by Dec. 31, according to a report shared with TechNode Wednesday by AppInChina, a mobile services company that helps foreign apps enter the country.
READ MORE: Apple purges 3,300 games from China App Store in 2 days
Context: The purge of unlicensed games kicked off in July when Apple started to act on a February warning to developers to submit a valid license number or face removal. The company removed some 1,571 and 1,805 games from its App Store in China on July 1 and July 2, respectively, versus an average of around 200 titles removed in June.
The Trump administration faces further legal obstacles in its ongoing effort to ban Chinese video-sharing app Tiktok. In his final days in the White House, the US president is seeking a tough-on-China technology legacy, including blacklisting China’s largest chipmaker. Meanwhile, a bill passed by the US House of Representatives earlier this month could potentially accelerate the pace at which Chinese tech firms return home to list.
On Monday, US District Judge Carl Nichols in Washington fully blocked the Trump administration’s move to ban Tiktok in the US, NPR reported.
The Trump administration on Thursday added Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC), China’s largest chipmaker, to a blacklist that could cut it off from American investment, Reuters reported. Foreign policy and political analysts said that Trump wants to leave a “tough-on-China” legacy that cannot be reversed by his successor, Joe Biden.
A bill passed by the US House of Representatives last week is likely to accelerate US-listed Chinese tech firms’ pace going home. The bill will bar Chinese companies from US exchanges if they don’t fully comply with American auditing rules, Reuters reported.
Donald Trump’s administration on Thursday added China’s biggest chipmaker, SMIC, to a blacklist that could cut it off from American investment in the US president’s last days in the White House, Reuters reported.
Details: The Trump administration on Thursday added Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) and state-owned oil giant China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) to a list of entities designated as owned or controlled by the Chinese military, according to Reuters.
Food technology is gaining traction in China’s VC world. It’s a huge industry—from plant-based meat to agricultural drones, foodtech encompasses everything in the food supply chain that uses technology to improve efficiency and output.
So far, grocery delivery has garnered the most attention. The sector saw a boom thanks to pandemic-induced demand for everyday items on e-commerce platforms.
This year, tech giants like food delivery platform Meituan and e-commerce firm Pinduoduo have tapped into the market. Meanwhile, venture capitalists have injected billions of dollars into startups to compete with them.
Grocery delivery is just one part of the “downstream” link in the food technology value chain, said Matilda Ho, founder and managing director of Bits x Bites, a Shanghai-based foodtech venture capital firm. Companies in this category deal directly with customers.
China has built a vast digital economy with “impressive e-grocery and food delivery penetration,” which has been driving food and retail investment in the country, said Ho.
But when it comes to producing food to deliver, the country could still face challenges. “Without investment in upstream innovation, we won’t see meaningful improvement in farm production efficiency to sustain the rapidly growing food demand,” she said.
China was the world’s second-largest market for foodtech investments in the first half of this year, following the US, according to a report by foodtech venture capital firm Agfunder.
Some 24 startups raised a total of $1.2 billion from VCs during the period, according to the report. More than half of the total investment went to grocery delivery startups Missfresh and Tongcheng Life, which raised $500 million and $200 million in July and June, respectively.
“Since the start of the trade war and the African Swine Fever outbreak in China, self-sufficiency in food production has become a national priority. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the timetable for investment in supply chain efficiency.”
— Matilda Ho, founder and managing director of Bits x Bites.
In the “upstream” link of the foodtech value chain, which includes categories such as farm management technology and farm automation, one of the biggest deals went to Suzhou-based farm drone company Skysys, which raised RMB 10 million (around $1.5 million).
Nevertheless, investment into the upstream link is growing. Funding for companies focused on farm management technology, including internet of things (IoT) equipment and management software for farms, reached $490 million in 2019, up 363.4% from the previous year, according to another Agfunder report. The largest deal last year went to Beijing-based Mcfly, which provides remote sensing, big data, and AI technology to digitize farming in China. The company raised $14 million in March 2019.
READ MORE: How tech is changing agriculture in China
Matilda Ho, founder and managing director of Bits x Bites. (The interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.)
TechNode: How do you decide whether to invest in a foodtech startup?
Ho: We invest in companies that are advancing bioscience, data science, and processing technology to tackle challenges in China’s food supply chain, from precision agriculture to crop and animal health to protein alternatives and nutrition.
I should add that we’re a purpose + profit fund. That means we invest in companies that can demonstrate they have a sustainable business model to achieve meaningful growth and scalable impact. We carefully select founders with purpose in their core and empower them to build great enterprises of the future. With the $30 million first close of our new fund, we look forward to working with more pre-A to B stage companies that are bringing disruptive solutions to our food system.
TN: What are your projections for the foodtech market in China?
Ho: Since the start of the trade war and the African Swine Fever outbreak in China, self-sufficiency in food production has become a national priority. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the timetable for investment in supply chain efficiency. In the past two years, we have seen tremendous investment from state-owned enterprises and other corporates to consolidate agriculture.
Without industrial-scale operations, it is very challenging to apply technology and modernize production. So, in agriculture, we are looking at IoT and bioscience solutions that can help producers improve yields while reducing input, address soil degradation, and protect animals, crops, and farmers’ health.
Midstream, only 19% of the Chinese market has access to cold chain logistics, far below other developed countries, which exceed 95% [on average]. We are looking at how automation and data can improve food safety and cut down spoilage in storage, processing, and transportation.
TN: Why are investors interested in food tech?
In the past few years, there has been a surge in startups that are tackling the challenges in the food system. Many of them are applying proven technology from other industries.
For example, satellites from the aerospace field are now being applied to provide farmers with environmental analytics to make better decisions to improve crop yields. Gene engineering driven by human medicine is now used to improve breeding technology for more resilient and disease-resistant crops and livestock. Automation in industrial manufacturing is now being adopted to address the labor drain in agriculture.
The food industry is the largest sector of the global economy. The World Bank estimates food production to compose 10% of all economic output. This is an opportunity that investors cannot ignore.
TN: How do you categorize food tech startups? Which category do you think is the most promising?
Ho: One way to dissect food tech startups is by where a solution fits in the food supply chain. Downstream generally refers to innovations directed at the consumer, such as new packaged foods, personalized nutrition apps, and grocery or food delivery platforms that offer convenience.
Bits x Bites tends to focus more on upstream and midstream opportunities. Upstream examples are farm automation, breeding technology, and crop and animal health solutions that address food security and production efficiency. We also look at midstream applications such as ingredient technology [Editor: techniques that help make new food ingredients], food processing, packaging, and food preservation that can address nutrition and safety challenges.
TN: Will plant-based meat become the next big thing in the market? What is Bits x Bites’ projection of the market?
Ho: Chinese people consume more plant protein per capita than most countries in the world. Until two decades ago, meat was barely affordable for most consumers. In our view, China’s per capita demand for animal protein is unlikely to come down any time soon in the same way it has started happening in more meat-centric western diets. This leaves little room for plant protein consumption in China to see substantial growth.
TN: What are the exit options of food tech companies?
Ho: There are numerous initial public offering (IPO) and merger and acquisition (M&A) cases in agrifood. In China, recent acquisitions are primarily driven by the Chinese government’s push for self-sufficiency and food security. We’ll likely see more Chinese acquisitions of very few large, and likely international, targets. Globally, we see a number of multinationals highly active in M&As in the ingredient tech and agtech [agriculture technology] spaces. Most recently, Ingredion gained full ownership of legume protein company Verdient. However, I would still be more positive on IPOs when talking about exit [options] in China rather than M&A. Especially with the STAR market, biotech and data science companies in agrifood have an achievable pathway to raise public funding.
]]>China’s preference for its own 5G equipment vendors over European suppliers has created an unfair playing field in the country’s telecommunications market, according to the EU ambassador to China in a speech given during a major telecommunications event in Guangzhou on Thursday.
Nicolas Chapuis said Chinese telecommunication operators had “massively privileged their national suppliers” and complained about a market share “free fall” for European vendors in China’s telecom infrastructure sector during a pre-recorded speech at the opening ceremony of the World 5G Convention (W5GC) held in the capital city of southern Guangdong province.
Chapuis’s speech was not included in the detailed video recording of the opening ceremony published on the W5GC website. Instead, the 130-minute video recording of the opening ceremony includes around 40 minutes of a static image with music in the background. A representative of the Beijing-based nonprofit Future Mobile Communication Forum, which co-hosted the event along with provincial government bodies, said all speeches given by high-level politicians were not “live-streamed, published in video recording, nor included in the agenda of the event.”
“The bottom line is a free fall of European market share in the telecom infrastructure sector [of China], standing today at less than 11%, while their market share in other countries stands at more than 30%,” Chapuis said according to the text of the speech sent to TechNode. “This raises major questions on fair competition.”
The EU “is urging China to ensure openness, transparency, and equal opportunities for domestic and foreign suppliers,” he said, adding that the bloc will continue to press for “meaningful market access” for both 5G infrastructure and 5G-related services in China.
China has insisted that it is not biased in choosing 5G kit suppliers. “China always sticks to equal and fair principles when purchasing 5G telecom equipment. We never preset the market shares for domestic and foreign enterprises,” Miao Wei, minister of China’s top telecom regulator, said during a keynote speech at last year’s W5GC in Beijing.
China’s three state-owned carriers in April assigned more than 80% of their 5G base station buildout contracts this year to Chinese telecom equipment makers Huawei and ZTE. A small portion of their budget went to Swedish company Ericsson, while Finland-based Nokia was not awarded any contracts.
The Finnish firm, however, said in June that it had been selected by China Unicom, one of the state-owned carriers, to supply around 10% of its 5G core network.
Chapuis’s remarks are a rare direct complaint from the EU about its access to China’s telecommunications market, aligning with the bloc’s recent stance that calls for a Europe-China relationship based on “fairness.”
“We have a robust trading relationship with China… Trade can energize our economic recovery. But we want more fairness. We want a more balanced relationship. That also means reciprocity and a level playing field,” Charles Michel, president of the European Council, said in September.
China’s Huawei, the world’s largest supplier of telecom equipment, is facing a raft of challenges in Europe. Some member nations including the UK and Sweden have decided to exclude Huawei products from their 5G networks. Several other European countries, including France and Germany, have made moves to heavily restrict its participation in their 5G buildout. Experts have said the company could be completely excluded from the continent’s 5G core networks.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | More European countries are turning their backs on Huawei
For more than a year, the US government has continued to pressure its allies to exclude Huawei equipment. Not doing so, it said, poses the potential risk of Beijing using vulnerabilities in the company’s gear to spy on foreign 5G networks, an allegation Huawei has repeatedly denied.
Without mentioning Huawei, Chapuis said during the speech that 5G gear suppliers are subject to the same security scrutiny in Europe.
“Suppliers, be they European as well as non European, have been required to prove their compliance with a set of rules, known as the EU 5G tool box,” he said. “Chinese companies have welcomed this framework, which is based on a solid, thorough, transparent, and objective assessment of risks and applies to all players.”
]]>About a year after China launched its first public 5G networks, it held a major telecommunications event in the southern city of Guangzhou on Nov. 26-27. The second annual World 5G Convention (W5GC) attracted top executives from the country’s three state-owned carriers (China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom) and high-level officials from telecom regulators to the event.
Representatives of several overseas carriers including Spain’s Telefonica, Singapore’s Singtel, Deutsche Telekom, and America’s AT&T also attended by video link. But W5GC was more China than world: the agenda centered on China’s deployment and applications of next-generation 5G networks, while almost all foreign speakers were allocated to a “global forum.”
Not all information from the world-level conference was new, but the message delivered by officials is important: China is counting for future economic growth on a series of cutting-edge technologies enabled by ultra-fast 5G networks, which includes electric vehicles, artificial intelligence, and big data. In the short term, 5G is seen as a remedy for the country’s virus-hit economy.
Bottom line:
Widely available:
Growth forecast:
Message from Europe: After a year in which Huawei has lost ground in Europe, Nicolas Chapuis, European ambassador to China, argued that the bloc assesses vendors neutrally:
“In Europe, operators and suppliers are also ready to proceed, frequencies have been allocated, but governments and security agencies want to first make sure that the impact of this new technology on industry and services is well managed and regulated. Suppliers, be they European as well as non European, have been required to prove their compliance with a set of rules, known as the EU 5G tool box. Chinese companies have welcomed this framework, which is based on a solid, thorough, transparent and objective assessment of risks and applies to all players.”
Nicolas Chapuis, European ambassador to China
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | More European countries are turning their backs on Huawei
5G spending push to continue: In June 2019, China issued 5G licenses to its three major carriers and a broadcasting company, with commercial use of the service starting last November. Though China launched the service later than countries like the US and South Korea, the country is now—according to officials speaking at this week’s event—is “taking a lead” globally in the deployment of 5G networks.
5G as stimulus: Speakers tied the protocol to hopes for growth from the “digital economy.” China’s economy could have taken a much deeper hit this year without the “digital economy,” according to a former government official.
A subdued Huawei? You can’t talk about 5G in China without talking about Huawei. But Huawei was relatively inconspicuous at this year’s W5GC. Last year, one Huawei executive appealed (in Chinese) called for the digital “Berlin Wall” to come down, and the company’s then rotating chairman vowed to build “the world’s best 5G.” This year, attendees from the company focused on products and devices.
Internal circulation: Things have changed a lot between the two W5GCs. Last year’s conference featured a session (in Chinese) that aimed at promoting China’s participation in global 5G standards; this year’s “world” conference overwhelmingly focused on developments in China. Of course, closed borders and a pandemic make international events much harder, but the changes also reflect the change in economic strategy known as “dual circulation,” which calls for the country to rely less on international markets. If China was still hoping to shape the 5G conversation around the world when it launched the conference last year, this November’s event suggests a more modest focus on the home market.
UPDATE: The quote from EU Ambassador Nicolas Chapuis has been updated based on a text provided by the EU Delegation to China. An earlier version of this article relied on a translation printed in Chinese media reports.
]]>Xiaomi reported on Tuesday better-than-expected revenue of RMB 72.2 billion (around $11 billion) for the third quarter, the fastest growth the Chinese smartphone maker has seen since its 2018 listing.
Why it matters: The strong performance shows how the Beijing-based company has benefited following US sanctions imposed on its archrival Huawei. Xiaomi’s global smartphone shipments grew 45% year on year to 47.1 million units in the third quarter while Huawei’s fell 23% year on year to 51.7 million units, according to market research firm Canalys.
Details: Revenue for the world’s third-biggest smartphone vendor in the September quarter grew 34.5% year on year, said the company in a filing with the Hong Kong exchange Tuesday.
Context: Xiaomi beat Apple to rank the world’s third-largest smartphone vendor in the third quarter behind South Korea’s Samsung and Huawei, according to Canalys.
Huawei is selling its budget smartphone unit Honor, the company said Tuesday, to a consortium that is majority-owned by the local Shenzhen government in a deal to keep the brand alive.
Why it matters: The sale is a direct consequence of US technology export restrictions imposed on the Shenzhen-based company over the past year and a half. The world’s second-largest smartphone maker has lost access to most high-end semiconductors as well as Google apps and services on the Android operating system crucial to its handset offerings.
Details: Newly founded Shenzhen Zhixin New Information Technology will acquire all of the business assets of the Honor brand, according to a joint statement published in a local newspaper on Tuesday.
Context: Honor is a budget smartphone brand that Huawei established in 2013. It completes with other budget brands such as Xiaomi and Oppo while the Huawei brand sells to the high-end handset market.
China’s market regulator on Tuesday proposed new rules targeting anticompetitive behavior to include internet companies, which have largely fallen outside of the scope of existing antitrust laws.
What’s changed: The new rules widened the reach of certain antitrust terms that previously only applied to the physical economy. One example was the definition of “relative market,” in which players may pose a “dominant position” if they control more than 50% of the market and thus fell under the jurisdiction of China’s Anti-monopoly Law. The law came into effect in 2008.
READ MORE: China’s antitrust law doesn’t seem to apply to internet giants
Tech shares tumble: Share prices for Chinese tech companies tumbled Tuesday and Wednesday on news of the guidelines. Companies including Alibaba, Tencent, and Meituan saw their share prices dive at least 8% over the two days. The Hang Seng Tech Index in Hong Kong, where many Chinese tech stocks list, fell by more than 5% on Tuesday.
Context: Before China’s top antitrust regulator proposed revisions to the antitrust law in January and the draft rules on Tuesday, the SAMR was already working to curb potential antitrust violations from internet companies.
The telecommunications regulator in Sweden on Monday halted a spectrum auction after a court suspended “until further notice” parts of its decision that excluded Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei from the country’s 5G networks, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: The court ruling granted Huawei some relief from widespread backlash in Europe. However, the Swedish Post and Telecom Authority’s (PTS) move to suspend the auction may signal future tension between Huawei and regulators.
Details: PTS was set to hold spectrum auctions for the country’s 5G networks starting on Tuesday. The regulator halted the auctions on Monday after a court in Sweden ruled that carriers using Huawei equipment could participate, Reuters reported.
Chinese video-sharing app Kuaishou filed Thursday a prospectus to the Hong Kong stock exchange, paving the way for a listing in the city.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based platform, backed by Chinese internet giant Tencent, is the second most popular short-video app in the country, trailing Bytedance’s Douyin, the domestic version of global hit Tiktok.
The prospectus: The preliminary prospectus to the Hong Kong bourse did not specify a timetable or size for the offering. However, it was the first disclosure of Kuaishou’s key financial details.
Context: Reuters reported in September that Kuaishou aimed to raise up to $5 billion in the Hong Kong listing, citing people with direct knowledge of the matter. The company planned to list in January, according to the report.
From app bans in the US and India to the Chinese government’s increased push for self-reliance in cutting-edge technologies, 2020 has been a rollercoaster year for China tech. How has China’s VC industry been faring? Last week, TechNode held its Emerge 2020 conference in Shanghai. On the sidelines of the event, we chatted with William Bao Bean, an experienced venture capital investor who has been active in China since 2007.
Bean is a general partner at investment firm SOSV. SOSV runs Chinaccelerator, a startup accelerator based in Shanghai.
We covered some of the biggest questions facing Chinese technology companies in 2020: How much capital is enough to achieve tech independence? How will the country’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market affect funding? What does the slew of Chinese companies delisting from US exchanges mean for VC in China?
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Available to TechNode Squared members.
We took the opportunity for an interview. We’ve printed it in full below, edited for brevity and clarity.
TechNode: What are the new trends that you see in China’s VC market this year?
William Bao Bean: There are two major trends. First is enterprise B2B (business to business), where AI is becoming more important. Traditionally, large Chinese companies did not want to pay for their software, but now, one of the biggest applications of AI is personalization. For example, it can be used to tailor the messaging and advertising you see on an e-commerce site to each consumer’s preference. It’s very difficult for startups and other companies to build their own AI systems, because AI scientists are quite expensive to hire, and the big guys like Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu basically hired most of the experts. So there’s actual demand for AI services from companies who want to remain competitive. Since the only way to remain competitive is personalization, companies are willing to actually pay to bring in AI solutions.
Second, there’s a huge amount of investment happening around government policy. The Chinese government is really supporting investments in semiconductors, telecoms equipment, and a lot of hardcore traditional technology. Previously, you saw Chinese companies developing their own solutions. But because of the US-China tech decoupling and the difficulty in sourcing international semiconductors, telecoms equipment, and even manufacturing equipment, you’re seeing massive investment in these areas in China. It is a huge opportunity for local companies, and a very big opportunity for Chinese investors.
TN: Do you think putting in more money will help China catch up with the world’s leading players in semiconductors?
WBB: China’s semiconductor industry is behind. But when you dump money on a problem, generally, you get a solution faster. I still think China is still four to seven years behind, but a huge amount of capital is flowing into the industry, so I think you will see the technology innovation gap narrowing. Often in China, when you have big government backing, there’s a huge amount of opportunity in that space—we’re seeing a huge amount of activity there.
TN: What are the impacts of recent US-China tensions? Are China-based VC firms having a hard time raising money from the US?
WBB: Not so far. In China, VC firms have raised a lot of money from US investors. Now, we don’t know whether future funds will have difficulty raising money from those same limited partners (LPs). A friend of mine just closed a new $200 million fund from big traditional US LPs, and he is focused just on deep tech in China. He successfully closed last month in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic. So far, the early data that we see is that it’s not having an impact. Investors are after returns, they don’t care about politics.
TN: We have seen many Chinese tech companies delist from US stock exchanges and more companies choosing to dual-list their shares in Hong Kong this year. What do you think these trends mean to tech investment in China?
WBB: 2020 has been a record year for Chinese companies listing in the US. When startups are getting bigger, they go where the capital is. It’s still the case that the US is where the higher valuations and the big capital willing to invest in technology can be found.
In China, tech companies that list face a lot of restrictions. For example, they generally need to be profitable. Most technology companies are not profitable for three years —they grow fast and they’re investing money in the future. The restrictions on listing also make it very difficult for Chinese companies to tap global capital markets, so they choose to go abroad. The second thing is that the international appetite for technology investments is much higher than in China. In China, you have a huge interest in consumer-facing companies, but not so much interest in hardcore technology. And so those two issues combine to drive continued interest in an overseas listing.
TN: Shanghai’s STAR Market doesn’t require companies to be profitable to list. How do you think this change in listing rules has impacted investment in China? Do you see increasing competition from RMB funds against US funds?
WBB: Startups just go where the capital goes. Many US dollar funds also have RMB funds. If you’re doing something on the consumer side, RMB funds make sense. RMB investors like investing in Chinese consumer-facing players—products that they can see and feel. For some companies that are not profitable, or require huge amounts of money, and have historically raised US dollars, they have to go the international path. Sometimes you move the company from offshore to onshore, or from offshore to onshore based on where the money is. It’s just a pure market effect. One is not competing against the other. It’s just what makes sense for the company to get the best value to be able to raise the money and then to exit.
One of the biggest investments in China’s tech sector in the third quarter went to Yuanfudao, an online education firm. On Oct. 21, the company raised $1.2 billion from investors including DST Global, CITIC PE, and Temasek, valuing it at $15.5 billion.
Ted Mo Chen, a Beijing-based edtech entrepreneur, wrote in a column published on TechNode last month that the Covid-19 pandemic ignited a “unicorns take all” game in China’s online education market—and edtech startups have attracted big checks from investors.
Here are some of the biggest deals in China tech in the third quarter.
The Shanghai Stock Exchange has halted an initial public offering for fintech giant Ant Group, said a statement published on the bourse’s website Tuesday, just one day after Chinese regulators summoned company co-founder Jack Ma and other executives for a meeting. The firm’s concurrent Hong Kong listing appears to have been suspended as well. At $34.5 billion, the IPO was set to be the largest of all time.
Details: The Shanghai Stock Exchange made the decision because there were “significant changes” in the regulatory environment that Ant Group faces, according to the statement (in Chinese).
Context: On Monday, China’s central bank and three other top financial regulators summoned Ma, company Chairman Eric Jing, and Chief Executive Simon Hu to a meeting, but neither side has disclosed the reasons.
HEAR MORE: Ant Group is really big, and really confusing (podcast)
This piece has been updated to add additional context.
]]>2020 has been a tough year for China tech companies selling to overseas markets. In India, local authorities banned 177 Chinese apps in June and September following border clashes between the two countries. In the US, the Trump administration launched an effort to ban short video app Tiktok and instant-messaging app Wechat, which are among the most successful Chinese apps in international markets.
Even in Europe, Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei is facing increasing restrictions on supplying gear for next-generation 5G networks.
It forces us to wonder if the world is still open to China tech. It’s a question that’s fundamental to what we do here at TechNode—so we made it the headline question at our Emerge 2020 conference last Thursday.
Bottom line: Going overseas has always been tough, and in this political climate, it’s even tougher. But politics isn’t everything. Speakers said it’s still possible for some Chinese tech firms to succeed in the right overseas markets. Others face long-standing market barriers that predate current tensions.
Compliance and building trust: Many firms trying to enter developed markets have a more basic problem than bans, speakers said: consumers there just don’t trust them.
“The challenge for entrepreneurs going across the border is actually trying to understand what you can do and what you cannot do,” said William Bao Bean, general partner at investment firm SOSV.
Bean said a lack of regard for privacy has earned many Chinese tech companies a bad reputation in markets like Europe and the US. “You have to adapt to the local market. You have to follow the local law. And half the time, people don’t even know that they’re breaking the law when they go across the border.”
Chinese companies have been successful in exporting hardware to overseas markets, said Kiran Patel, senior director at China-Britain Business Council, during the discussion. Patel said he is “more positive” about the future of Chinese hardware than software in the British market because hardware companies usually don’t need to deal with a huge amount of personal data.
Trust is more important when exporting software that holds personal data, Patel said.
“That is the challenge that companies like Tiktok and Wechat have to meet when moving into a new market,” Patel said. “The first challenge that must be overcome is building trust.”
China, security champion? Privacy and security have always been weaknesses for China tech. But at a workshop at the conference, we heard that this truism could be changing as China moves to enforce new laws on privacy and cybersecurity. Carly Ramsey, director at risk consultancy Control Risks, told the audience that China has written one of the world’s most extensive set of requirements to protect data, and is now moving to enforce it. These don’t resolve international concerns about surveillance—but they could help clean up China’s “idiots with a database” problems.
Disrupting barriers: Embracing disruptive technology can be a path for getting around traditional tech barriers, speakers said. The most optimistic attendees about internationalism, by far, were the blockchain-watchers.
Asked about political barriers, Matthew Graham, founder of Sino Global Capital, a venture capital firm focusing on blockchain companies, said that the US cannot stop China in the world of blockchain the way it has hobbled Huawei on semiconductors.
“Most of blockchain is open source. It’s not really possible to throw a bottleneck in that way,” said Graham.
As the nascent technology matures, said Michael Sung, co-director of the Fanhai Fintech Research Center at Fudan University, China is emerging as a leader in standards-setting. State-affiliated projects like the Blockchain Services Network (BSN) are creating ecosystems that attract international players.
But Sung, and Harriet Cao of Bianjie, a blockchain startup, rejected a US vs. China framing for blockchain. Instead, they said, it’s a trans-boundary technology that can mitigate mistrust.
“Blockchain is a little bit of a different beast. It’s not about choosing to use Huawei equipment or not,” said Sung. “Blockchain is about multi-party coordination, having stakeholders being able to coordinate in a trusted and secure way, where trust doesn’t exist between the parties beforehand.”
They’re just not that into your EVs: China is home to some of the world’s most exciting electric vehicle (EV) makers, such as Nio, BYD, and Xpeng. But they’ve yet to get traction with Europe’s millions of prosperous, environmentally-conscious consumers. Marketing is a major reason, said Tu Le, founder and managing director of business intelligence firm Sino Auto Insights.
“Some Chinese companies have started to sell EVs into the EU. That could be a question because they haven’t really solidified positioning in their home market,” said Le. “Europe, like Southeast Asia, is very diverse, and therefore a marketing strategy in Germany might not work in France and Italy. That level of complexity for entering an international market is a lot to chew on for Chinese EV makers.”
“The complexity ramps up significantly for them. And that could be a drain on their capital,” he said, adding that Chinese EV makers should focus on individual markets as opposed to looking at Europe as one big market.
Go southeast: The right answer for many companies with global ambitions is to look for markets that are more like China than Germany or the US. We’ve long seen that most Chinese companies do best in markets that have more in common with China a few years ago—large rural populations, first-generation mobile users, or leapfrog growth.
Chinese tech companies should focus on Southeast Asia in expansion plans, said Bean of SOSV. In addition to friendlier regulations than Europe or India, he said, it’s a good market fit.
“Southeast Asia has a lot of the same challenges, problems, or opportunities that China had 10 years ago. It’s a mobile-first market. So people’s first or only experience with the internet is on a smartphone, which is very similar to China,” he said.
All we are saying is give tech a chance: Chinese companies have their share of problems. But at times they also make good-faith efforts to mitigate concerns. Huawei offered to sign “no-spy deals” with countries and set up a cybersecurity transparency center in Brussels and now is facing spreading bans from Western countries’ core 5G networks. Tiktok vowed to localize user data in the US and appointed a blue-ribbon panel of privacy experts—and was rewarded with an app ban.
Of course, the election in the United States is going to have a big impact on China tech. If US-China relations keep getting worse, tech will be affected. Maybe we’re biased, but at TechNode we don’t think this is a great thing for anyone.
With contributions from David Cohen.
]]>The world is still open to Chinese tech despite a global backlash in recent years, experts at the TechNode Emerge 2020 conference said Thursday, but firms must adapt to the changing geopolitical environment when expanding overseas.
2020 has been a tough year for Chinese tech companies selling to overseas markets. In India, local authorities banned a total of 177 Chinese apps in June and September following border clashes between the two countries. In the US, the Trump administration announced impending bans on short video app Tiktok and instant-messaging app Wechat, which are among the most successful Chinese apps in international markets. Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei is facing increasing restrictions on supplying gear for Western countries’ next-generation 5G networks.
Beyond geopolitical tensions, Chinese tech companies expanding overseas also face obstacles in the form of privacy regulations, marketing, and localization, William Bao Bean, general partner at investment firm SOSV, said during the opening panel at the Shanghai event.
“The challenge for entrepreneurs going across the border is actually trying to understand what you can do and what you cannot do,” Bean said.
The lack of regard for privacy has led to some of the problems Chinese tech companies face in markets like Europe and the US because of stricter local regulations on data security, Bean explained.
“You have to adapt to the local market. You have to follow the local law. And half the time, people [startups] don’t even know that they’re breaking the law when they go across the border,” he said.
Chinese companies have been successful in exporting hardware to overseas markets, but there are trust considerations when they are exporting software that holds personal data, Kiran Patel, senior director at China-Britain Business Council, said during the discussion.
“That is the challenge that companies like Tiktok and Wechat have to meet when moving into a new market,” Patel said. “The first challenge that must be overcome is building trust.”
Chinese venture capital (VC) funds may find it difficult to raise money from US pension funds, said Bean. But he believes that the hurdles faced by VCs are not affecting Chinese startups. “That’s a money problem, not a startup problem,” he said.
“China has got the number-two largest VC industry in the world in terms of the amount of funds put in startups and it’s actually easier for Chinese companies to raise money from China,” he said.
Bean said that Chinese tech companies should see Southeast Asia as their next destination in their global expansion plans to avoid regulatory uncertainties in Europe and India.
“Southeast Asia has a lot of the same challenges, problems, or opportunities that China had 10 years ago. It’s a mobile-first market. So people’s first or only experience with the internet is on a smartphone, which is very similar to China,” he said.
Bean said he couldn’t be sure whether or not there will be more Chinese tech companies facing global regulatory backlash like Huawei and Tiktok, but he is optimistic that this would not stop Chinese startups from going overseas.
“Innovation usually finds its away,” he said. “It’s like water. It’s always just going to find a crack.”
]]>Every one or two months, China’s Politburo, an elite group of China’s top 25 leaders, holds a “study session,” inviting external experts to lecture on topics ranging from archaeology to finance to legal systems. But on Oct. 16, they covered a somewhat novel topic: quantum technology.
The session followed a series of lectures on emerging technology over the past few years. In December 2019, the group studied blockchain technology. A year before that, artificial intelligence (AI).
The country’s most powerful leaders’ study of these technologies highlights their strategic importance on the national agenda. China has already ramped up efforts to support blockchain and AI development, and experts believe quantum technology will be next.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, who chaired the Oct. 16 session, said that “developing quantum science and technology is of great scientific and strategic significance,” state-run newspaper China Daily reported Monday.
Quantum technology is an emerging field of information technology that relies on the principles of quantum mechanics. Its fields of application range from computing to cryptography and sensors.
Xi’s remarks created an uproar on China’s stock markets. Several companies on Shenzhen’s startup board that investors believe are utilizing quantum technology on Monday saw their shares jump by 20%, the board’s daily limit.
The stocks include component maker Hongfeng Group, which said it is developing quantum-based cybersecurity software; cloud service provider Guochuang Software, which has invested (in Chinese) in a company specializing in quantum measurement instruments; and cybersecurity firm Blueton, which said it had been working on a “quantum communication terminal,” but Chinese media reports the company is mired in debt.
During his speech, Xi also said the central government should “speed up efforts to create a favorable policy environment for the development of quantum science and technology” and “ensure the investment in the field” to drive local governments and enterprises to “increase input,” according to state news agency Xinhua.
Quantum technology is a broad term for efforts to harness the principles of quantum mechanics, which describes minuscule objects that exist in a haze of possibility on a micro-scale instead of in a specific place at a specific time, to create more accurate navigation and timing systems, more secure communications, and more powerful computing.
One of the most promising applications of the technology is quantum computing, which experts say would provide an “explosive boost” to traditional computers. However, the quest for the commercial use of quantum computing is still at an early stage.
Quantum computers are made of quantum circuits that run quantum bits, or qubits, which are similar to the bits in traditional computers. Unlike bits, which represent a logical state with one of two possible values (often represented as either “1” or “0”), the qubits can be in a “1” or a “0,” or in what is known as a superposition of both “1” and “0,” potentially improve the computing power in a massive scale, according to a 2017 article by Mark Jackson, scientific lead of business development at Cambridge Quantum Computing.
However, qubits can only be made under extremely low temperatures and the circuits that house those qubits are hard to scale in a production environment.
Political endorsements for emerging technology are a powerful force in China’s capital markets. In October 2019, when members of the Politburo were given a lesson in blockchain, Xi made calls to promote the “deep integration” of blockchain with China’s economy and to “to increase China’s influence and rule-making power in the global arena.”
More than 85 blockchain-related stocks rose by 10% the Monday after Xi’s speech. Ten percent is the daily limit on the main boards of the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges.
Central and local governments in the country moved quickly to put money in blockchain. In December, the southern Chinese island province of Hainan announced plans to set up a so-called blockchain pilot zone and a government-backed fund of RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) to underwrite local blockchain companies.
In February, Chinese media reported that 22 of mainland China’s 31 provincial-level administrative divisions had mentioned blockchain in their 2020 government work reports—official documents that lay out governments’ work plans of the year—vowing to harness the technology to promote digital transformation and industrial upgrades.
Then, in July, Beijing’s government released a blueprint of its plan to implement a blockchain-based programmable government. The plan aims to build a unified blockchain-based framework for digital governance, facilitate data-sharing between agencies and businesses, and enable cross-departmental and cross-regional collaboration.
Xi’s blockchain speech and his quantum speech on Friday both called for comprehensive “policy support” for the two technologies, Qi Aimin, a law professor at Chongqing University, told TechNode.
Qi said that favorable policies towards quantum technology could be similar to those seen for blockchain, and could include setting up tailored industrial zones to incubate quantum companies, similar to Hainan’s approach to blockchain.
“China’s quantum science and technology development still has many weak links and faces multiple challenges,” said Xi during his speech. Nevertheless, China has hit several milestones in developing quantum technology ahead of the rest of the world.
In 2017, the country launched the world’s first quantum satellite and built a 2,000-kilometer quantum fiber link, which facilitates the transmission of information in the form of qubits, connecting Beijing and Shanghai. The country is also building (in Chinese) what officials claim will be the world’s largest quantum laboratory in Hefei, capital of China’s eastern Anhui province, which is set to complete by the end of 2020.
In September, a Chinese physicist claimed to have built a quantum computer that is one million times faster than Google’s Sycamore, a model which completed in around 200 seconds a calculation that would take the world’s fastest computer 10,000 years. His claims were widely reported by local official media but were later retracted by him and his team.
Unlike AI and blockchain, quantum technology is far from commercialization—analysts predict (in Chinese) it will take ten to 15 years. But what it has in common is the potential for leapfrog growth.
In industries where Chinese industries lag international rivals, disruptive breakthroughs create opportunities to start a new race from scratch. China’s policymakers have already taken the approach in the automobile sector. The country, not a traditionally important car manufacturing hub, pursued an aggressive strategy to support electric vehicles (EV) starting from 2009. Now, China is the world’s largest EV market and home to some of the world’s biggest EV makers.
Semiconductors have been a pain point for China for years, more so as the US has moved to cut off equipment maker Huawei from many vital components. The world’s largest market for semiconductors, it has pledged to produce 70% of chips it uses by 2025. But industry groups have said the goal is “unrealistic.” Semiconductor market research firm IC Insights said in a May report that China will produce only 20.7% of chips it uses in 2024, up only 5% from 2019.
But if qubits replace bits, all bets are off. China is not currently a global leader in quantum technology, as Xi acknowledged. But when the new races start, China may have a head start.
]]>Huawei said Friday its earnings for the first nine months of the year “met expectations,” though its revenue growth in the third quarter slowed sharply from the previous quarter.
Why it matters: The deceleration highlights how US restrictions on Huawei’s ability to source crucial high-end semiconductors have taken a toll on the Chinese telecommunication company’s business.
Details: Huawei said in a statement Friday that it booked income of RMB 671.1 billion (around $100.4 billion) in the first nine months of the year, growing 9.9% year on year.
Context: After three rounds of export restrictions, the Chinese telecommunications equipment and smartphone maker has lost nearly all access to semiconductors using US technology—specifically the high-end chips it needs for its carrier and handset businesses.
Sweden has banned Chinese telecommunications equipment makers Huawei and ZTE from participating in its 5G network rollout, the country’s top telecoms regulator said Tuesday.
Why it matters: The development shows European countries are tightening restrictions on Chinese suppliers for their 5G infrastructure, signaling the US government’s campaign to eliminate Huawei equipment from Western communications networks is gaining traction.
Details: Sweden’s top telecom regulator Post and Telecom Authority (PTS) is set to hold spectrum auctions on Nov. 10. The government body said in a statement Tuesday that potential license grantees must not use products from Huawei and ZTE in new central function installations.
Huawei’s future in EU: The US government has been campaigning its allies to avoid Huawei equipment from their networks since last year.
Chinese smartphone maker Huawei is in talks with several Chinese electronics companies to sell parts of its Honor smartphone unit, Reuters reported Wednesday.
Details: Digital China, a Shenzhen-based cloud service provider, has become the frontrunner in the contest to buy Huawei’s Honor business. Other suitors include Chinese electronics maker TCL and budget smartphone maker Xiaomi, according to Reuters, citing people familiar with the matter.
Go deeper: Exclusive: Huawei in talks to sell parts of its Honor smartphone business – sources – Reuters
]]>Software as a service (SaaS) has become a huge deal in China’s startup and venture capital world this year. Driven by demands of team collaboration amid the Covid-19 outbreak and increasing labor costs, venture capitalists and tech giants in the country are scrambling to put money behind SaaS startups.
A professional investor recently told me that the industry is so hot that VC firms are facing fierce competition to get their money into SaaS firms from tech giants like the “BATs”—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent.
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Available to TechNode Squared members.
In 2020, some 96 Chinese SaaS companies have received a total of RMB 12 billion (around $1.8 billion) from VC firms as of Sept. 30, according to VC market data provider Itjuzi. In 2019, VC firms injected a total of RMB 18.4 billion into 158 SaaS companies.
Looking at the US, it’s no surprise to see enthusiasm about the sector. Publicly listed companies like Slack, Zoom, and cloud data warehousing firm Snowflake have earned early investors substantial returns with subscription-based software targeting corporate users.
But for Chinese investors betting on SaaS, the local equivalents of these products may not be the right answer. The market is different from the rest of the world, investors said. The country’s economy is dominated by big, state-controlled corporations, which are not so tech-savvy and prefer customized services. Meanwhile, would-be SaaS entrepreneurs have to compete with big tech offerings such as Alibaba’s Dingtalk and Tencent’s Wechat Work, which are already popular and free to use.
Read more: Where are China’s SaaS giants?
The SaaS market in China is still small compared to other major markets. It was worth RMB 19.4 billion in 2019—just 0.26% of the $109.5 billion global SaaS market in the same year, according to a July report (in Chinese) by the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT). According to the report:
Since 2018, multiple central and local government policies have encouraged enterprises to adopt cloud-based services. SaaS startups have benefited from policies to promote cloud computing, the natural habitat of SaaS.
Read more: INSIGHTS | China’s new infrastructure projects, explained
To flesh out the picture, I chose a few more companies listed as SaaS by Itjuzi as examples:
A typical Chinese SaaS company doesn’t look much like something you’d find in Silicon Valley. American SaaS players often provide a fixed set of services—think of the regular fees you pay for access to Slack or Microsoft. Chinese companies provide more tailored solutions—so much so there isn’t a pricing page on their websites. Potential customers have to sign up via an online contact form to book a call or for a demonstration of their offerings.
Startups have had to rethink basic assumptions to succeed in the Chinese market—even the idea that SaaS has to run in the cloud. The investor who told me about BATs competition also told me about a startup which offers database-as-a-service, but found that major state-owned enterprises (SOEs) didn’t trust a public cloud to hold their data. So they installed servers in a client’s office buildings and charged them a subscription fee to use and maintain them on-site—essentially reinventing IBM’s original business model. The client loved it—and now the company has a thriving business with SOEs.
“The environment of the Chinese enterprise service market is extremely different from that of the rest of the world, so applying the business models of foreign publicly listed SaaS companies in China doesn’t work,” Jixun Foo, managing partner at GGV Capital, wrote in an article in June.
Foo said that large enterprises in China tend to adopt tailored services and medium-sized firms are more willing to pay for SaaS products because of their flexibility. He predicts that medium-sized enterprises will be the main consumer of China’s SaaS services.
However, Zhai Jia, managing director at Sequoia Capital, warns that China doesn’t have enough mature small and midsize businesses (SMB) to support SaaS. He told Chinese tech news site Huxiu in September that only China’s largest companies are able to spend on software—SMBs’ margins are mostly just too tight.
“As a result, SaaS companies are not able to offer standardized and fast-growing products… companies have to give up the SMB customers and serve only large clients,” he said.
For Chinese companies, the US approach to SaaS—retaining customers with standardized cloud-based service using recurring payments—“only looks good,” he said.
]]>Shanghai-based Hurun publishing group estimated that Huawei, which it calls the most valuable consumer electronics company in China, is worth $160 billion in its first-ever report ranking the country’s consumer electronics companies published on Monday.
Why it matters: Assessing Huawei’s value is difficult because the company is not publicly traded. The report offers a glimpse of the mysterious company’s overall size and how its value has been impacted by US sanctions aiming to cut it off from the global semiconductor supply chain.
Details: Hurun said in a report (in Chinese) Monday that Huawei was valued at RMB 1.1 trillion (around $160 billion), ranking it as the most valuable consumer electronics company in mainland China.
Context: Though not listed, Huawei releases reports about its quarterly and annual earnings. In July, the company said its revenue for the first six months of the year grew 13.1% year on year to RMB 454 billion.
A federal judge on Sunday temporarily blocked US President Donald Trump’s ban that would have removed Tiktok from American app stores starting from midnight Sunday, court files showed.
Why it matters: The court order grants the popular video-sharing app a reprieve amid ongoing deal negotiations to settle a US regulatory dispute. However, it doesn’t cover a broader ban to spin off Tiktok’s business in the US which will take effect in November, meaning the Chinese-owned company’s struggle in the US has not yet concluded.
Details: US District Judge Carl Nichols granted in part Tiktok and its Chinese parent Bytedance’s motion for an injunction of the Sunday ban, but he denied Tiktok’s appeal to block an executive order from Trump demanding the company to divest from its American assets, according to court documents. The order will go effect on Nov. 12.
Context: Tiktok and Bytedance on Wednesday afternoon filed for a preliminary injunction to halt the Sunday ban. On Thursday, Judge Nichols ordered the Trump administration to postpone the ban or file court papers to defend the move by Friday afternoon.
]]>READ MORE: Bytedance to obey China tech export rule as Tiktok sale nears
A US federal judge ordered the Trump administration to postpone a ban on US downloads of Tiktok set for Sunday or file court papers to defend the move by Friday afternoon, according to court files released Thursday.
Tiktok’s Chinese parent Bytedance filed for a preliminary injunction to prevent the ban on Wednesday afternoon. The ban is set to take effect at midnight Sunday and will remove the popular video-sharing app from US app stores.
US District Judge Carl Nichols said in an order Thursday that the defendants, including US President Donald Trump, US Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, and the US Department of Commerce, must respond to Tiktok’s motion for a preliminary injunction or file a notice describing the delay of the effective date of the ban.
A similar move: The Trump administration said last Friday that it would ban from US app stores Tiktok and Wechat, a Chinese instant messaging app, starting the evening of Sept. 20. The Commerce Department delayed the ban against Tiktok for one week because Bytedance is close to a deal with Oracle and Walmart to set up a new US company.
The mysterious deal: Oracle and Walmart said Saturday that they will set up a new company called Tiktok Global with Bytedance as part of the deal that will meet the Trump administration’s demands to divest Tiktok from its Chinese owner.
Analysis: At the moment, all signs are showing that Beijing will block the deal. Even though there is no direct objection from Chinese officials, state media has started delivering the message that the deal harms China’s interests and dignity.
China’s Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gao Feng said that the Beijing Municipal Commerce Bureau has received an application from Tiktok parent company Bytedance to export certain technology, local newspaper National Business Daily reported (in Chinese).
The company is close to a deal with Oracle and Walmart to set up a new company to operate Tiktok in the US after US President Donald Trump ordered Bytedance divest the video-sharing app. It needs Beijing’s permission to confirm the deal.
In August, China’s Ministry of Commerce and Ministry of Technology added 23 items to a list of “prohibited or restricted export technologies.” They include two types of technology that are used in Tiktok.
Bytedance said Monday that neither the algorithm nor the company’s technology will be transferred in the deal but Oracle would have the permission to review its code.
]]>The US Commerce Department license granted to Intel allowing it to continue supplying Huawei shows that Washington wants the Chinese telecommunications company to rely on US products rather than make its own chips, according to an industry expert.
The US government has imposed license requirements on chipmakers around the world which want to sell products that contain US technology to Huawei. The new restrictions came into effect on Sept. 15.
Silicon Valley-based Intel supplies integrated circuits such as systems-on-chip (SoCs), central processing units (CPUs), and graphics processing units (GPUs), used in computers. However, the company doesn’t contract out its manufacturing capabilities to make customized chips for clients, nor does it sell chip-making tools or machinery.
The move shows the US “may be willing to grant licenses as long as it doesn’t help Huawei create its own chips,” Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software at Shanghai-based consultancy Intralink, told TechNode on Thursday.
Intel’s license to continue shipping to Huawei doesn’t help Huawei make its own chips but it does help the Chinese company’s server, personal computer, and laptop product lines, Randall said, adding that this shows Washington wants Huawei to “rely on US chips.”
Intel is the first company known to have received US permission to sell chips to Huawei. Huawei suppliers around the world, including Chinese contract chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix, and Taiwanese chip designer Mediatek, have applied to the US government for similar licenses. None of the applications have yet been approved.
On Wednesday, Huawei rotating chairman Guo Ping told reporters that US chipmaker Qualcomm is applying for a license to sell its chips. “If Qualcomm were granted the license, we will be willing to use their chips to make phones,” said Guo.
Huawei now relies on its stockpile of semiconductors to continue making products ranging from 5G base stations to smartphones and laptops. Guo said Wednesday that the company is still verifying how many wafers they have in stock.
“We have sufficient chip stock for base stations… But as to smartphone chips, we are still looking for solutions because Huawei uses hundreds of millions of smartphone wafers every year,” Guo said.
Analysts said Huawei’s stockpile of chips may last four to 10 months. “We are confident that Huawei’s chip stock can last until the end of this year… It is possible that Huawei will still have chips to use in the first half of 2021, but, in this period the uncertainty is huge,” IDC analyst Will Wong told TechNode in an interview last week.
]]>Huawei’s long-awaited Android replacement is here. On Sept. 10, the company announced that its in-house mobile operating system, the Harmony OS, will be available on handsets starting next year.
The announcement came just days ahead of a US Commerce Department deadline which cut the company off from all possible sources of high-end chips, critical for its smartphone and carrier businesses. Analysts said the company may have to halt hardware production starting in the middle of next year.
The company first debuted Harmony OS in August 2019, shortly after new Huawei devices lost access to Google services on the official version of Android as a result of a May 2019 US ban. Harmony was widely seen as an alternative to Google’s Android mobile operating system, but at first Huawei only deployed it on devices like smart television sets and smart watches.
A third operating system outside of Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android could be an important source of revenue for Huawei’s consumer business to offset losses in hardware sales. In 2019, income from mobile services accounted for 10.5% of Google parent company Alphabet’s revenues and 17.8% of Apple’s, according to TechNode’s calculations.
Experts say that it will be difficult for Huawei to generate material revenue from the new operating system. The company faces challenges ranging from establishing a profitable business model to attracting app developers. If Huawei can no longer make smartphones, persuading other phone makers to adopt the system will prove challenging, they said.
Both Google and Apple take a 30% cut from transactions made on their platforms, which include sales of apps and digital content, as well as in-app purchases.
But there is a difference in China which makes earning revenue more difficult, according to Rich Bishop, chief executive officer of Appinchina, a company that helps overseas developers distribute their apps in China.
“All of the [third-party Android] app stores in China only make money from games. For any non-gaming apps, they don’t charge any fee.”
“But if they are able to make Harmony OS successful, for example, they have 500 million people around the world using Harmony OS to download apps and games from the Huawei store, then potentially they could make a lot of money,” Bishop explained.
“But that really depends on whether they can persuade everybody to sign up to Harmony OS.”
It is relatively easy for a developer to convert an Android app to a Harmony OS app, Bishop said. “Huawei obviously is a massive company with a lot of resources, and they are working very hard to try to persuade as many developers as possible to set up a Harmony version of their apps,” he said.
But according to Richard Yu, president of Huawei’s consumer business, the company’s mobile service ecosystem now has around 1.8 million developers, but only 96,000 apps. Most of these developers have yet to make an app for Harmony OS.
“Most developers are basically going to wait and see because they don’t particularly want to start assigning resources to develop for a third mobile OS,” Bishop said.
“I think they are just gonna see how successful the ecosystem is and whether other companies are making good money from Harmony OS, and then they may decide to develop Harmony OS apps too.”
The other challenge Huawei faces in promoting the Harmony OS is attracting new users. It is now the world’s largest smartphone vendor, but its handset capacity is under huge pressure because of the semiconductor restrictions.
Rumors spread that Huawei smartphone peers Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo could adopt Harmony OS, with a number of articles in Chinese either predicting that they would or calling upon them to do so in support of the company. Huawei denied that it had reached a deal to put Harmony on competitors’ phones, but none of the other companies have commented.
But they would have to be very patriotic to support a competitor.
“Smartphone makers like Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo have been facing great pressure from Huawei in the past year after it shifted its focus on the domestic market,” Will Wong, analyst at market research firm IDC, told TechNode.
“If they adopt Harmony OS, they are essentially helping Huawei. So I think the possibility is low.”
Bishop of Appinchina agrees. “I don’t think that other domestic manufacturers like Xiaomi and Oppo would want to use Harmony OS, because obviously, it is a much weaker ecosystem than Android. And it’s run by a competitor, Huawei,” he said.
Both Wong and Bishop reckon that the only reasons that other Chinese phone makers would use Harmony OS would be “political.”
“I don’t think Huawei’s competitors will say ‘absolutely no,’ to Harmony OS because the political risk is a very important factor in today’s market,” said Wong.
“The only way I can really see it working is if the Chinese government, because of the US-China decoupling, says: ‘all right, China needs its own mobile OS.’ And therefore, they kind of require every Chinese manufacturer to offer Harmony OS or to have it as an option,” said Bishop.
On Wednesday, Zhang Pingan, president of Huawei’s consumer cloud business unit, told reporters that the ecosystem of Harmony OS is always “open” to other smartphone makers.
“I think we will work together with all hardware makers to build a better ecosystem and help developers avoid switching back and forth between different platforms,” he said.
]]>There was twist after twist in the Tiktok drama over the weekend. US President Donald Trump said Saturday he had approved a deal that involves software maker Oracle and retail giant Walmart, but it falls short of an outright Tiktok divestment. Chinese parent company Bytedance denied some of Trump’s claims that the new Tiktok company would have nothing to do with China. Meanwhile, Chinese officials criticized the US for lacking “internet freedom.”
The deal: Bytedance, Oracle, and Walmart will form a new company called Tiktok Global as part of the deal, CNBC reported Saturday.
Trump’s blessing: Trump said Saturday that he had approved the deal “in concept.” But the deal still needs formal approval from his administration. “I give the deal my blessing,” Trump told reporters.
What Bytedance says: In a slightly different narrative, Bytedance said in a statement (in Chinese) Monday on its Jinri Toutiao news aggregator that it currently owns 100% of Tiktok Global, and that the company plans to launch pre-IPO fundraising which will give investors—Oracle and Walmart—a combined 20% stake.
Are apps still getting banned? On Friday, Reuters first reported that the Trump administration would ban Tiktok and Wechat from US app stores starting Sunday night. However, with Trump saying he approved the Tiktok deal, the Commerce Department said it would delay the plan of barring the video-sharing app from US app stores for one week.
Chinese media takes: On Monday, most major Chinese media outlets reprinted an article titled “Does Tiktok really harm US national security? Why did Oracle fail in the Chinese market? Chinese enterprises storms overseas” (our translation), authored by the National Supervisory Commission of China and Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the ruling Communist Party. It was first published on a website that the two government agencies share.
I love lurking on Linkedin. A couple of weeks ago, something struck me. While Tiktok was facing the prospect of a US ban under an Aug. 7 executive order, many people in my European networks were delighted to announce that they were joining the short video company. Countless emojis were harmed in the making of these Linkedin posts.
As its future in the US is under threat, Tiktok appears to be trying to fortify its operations in Europe. On Tiktok’s careers site, 272 jobs are posted in Europe (excluding Russia) at the time of writing. Dublin takes the lead with 117 jobs, London comes second with 78, and Germany third with a total of 34. Germany is hiring for offices in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg. Positions in Madrid, Paris, Stockholm, Warsaw, and Milan are also seeking candidates.
In Europe, Tiktok’s hiring patterns reflect its growing ambitions on the continent and a push to localize and clear the bloc’s data security hurdles.
A data sweep on Twitter conducted by TechNode indicates that Tiktok has ramped up its hiring in Europe. Bytedance employees and job advertising services including the UK’s Job Centre Plus, a state-run employment platform, have mentioned jobs at Tiktok more frequently in recent months.
In August, 42 links to the Tiktok global careers website were posted on Twitter, compared to 12 in February.
“It’s quite incredible how many people they’re bringing on board. Every week there’s new people,” a new hire who joined Tiktok’s European operations in August told TechNode.
Open positions on the company’s website include a wide variety of roles, from advertising and brand strategists to privacy specialists. Tiktok appears intent on localization, seeking fluent speakers in most European languages, such as Swedish, Hungarian, and Greek.
“Of course everybody is looking at what’s happening in the US,” the recent hire said, “but there’s no anxiety. On the contrary, everyone is very optimistic.”
Despite the ongoing row with Washington, Tiktok hasn’t taken down its job listings in the US. Currently, 465 positions are listed as available in the US on the app’s website.
READ MORE: China tech faces double compliance challenge in Europe
Bytedance’s continued hiring for the popular video app shows it is optimistic about the European market, despite criticism over its privacy policy. Regulators have expressed concern over personal data flowing from the EU to China, the app’s handling of minors’ data and consent. But as long as Tiktok complies with local data regulations, the company should be safe in Europe, experts told TechNode.
Tiktok currently has over 1,600 employees based in Europe, roughly 1,300 of whom are based in the UK and Ireland, the company said in a statement Monday.
A Europe-wide ban is “unlikely,” said Jan Stryjak, Associate Research Director at Counterpoint Research. “Tiktok has not faced the same levels of scrutiny and political grandstanding in Europe as in the US,” he said, so it makes sense that it “looks to establish itself to build on its rapid growth in the region.”
In Europe, regulators have tried to appear neutral. “I am not in the business of banning any company, I am in the business of explaining very clearly what are our rules,” EU Commission Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Bretton told Politico earlier this month.
“In the short-term, I wouldn’t expect any comparable moves on Tiktok in Europe to match US actions,” Andrew Small, associate senior policy fellow at think tank European Council on Foreign Relations, told TechNode.
By contrast, the situation around Huawei includes “fundamental questions” about the company’s role in Europe’s digital infrastructure and “longstanding issues about Chinese subsidies undermining European telecoms firms,” he said.
Tiktok does not provoke the same sensitivities. “The issues at stake with Tiktok relate to censorship and data use, neither of which is likely to lead to an outright ban, and there will be no inherent objection to Tiktok hiring and investing in Europe either,” said Small.
New data privacy and security rules in the European bloc are compelling Tiktok to reconfigure its global operations.
Bretton stressed that the “key subject” when it comes to Tiktok operating within the bloc is data, highlighting the rigor of Europe’s data security and privacy rules in comparison to China.
“The EU has not had to deal with this issue on a really major scale given that Chinese apps have not made many inroads with European consumers,” Small said.
In August, the European Court of Justice ruled that personal data collected on EU citizens can only be transferred to third countries that have similar privacy regimes. The decision, known as Schrems II, could mean that personal data collected by Tiktok on European citizens can never be legally transferred to China.
A few weeks after the ruling, Tiktok said its Irish and UK entities will be taking over data management for European users from its US operations. Shortly after, the company announced plans for a new data center in Dublin. According to company statements, the data center will form part of a “Privacy and Safety Hub” for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
Bytedance said it plans to spend €420 million ($500 million) on the Dublin data center. The investment will “create hundreds of jobs” in the city, said Roland Cloutier, Tiktok’s Global Chief Information Security Officer in a blog post.
Cloutier previously worked at Automatic Data Processing, a Nasdaq-listed HR systems provider, as well as US computer manufacturer Dell.
The job listings on Tiktok’s website appear to line up with this announcement. Dublin is the city with the most job openings.
But the Dublin data center doesn’t mean that Tiktok can put the data security issue to bed.
The EU is known for having some of the world’s most stringent personal data protection rules, known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
In June, the European Data Protection Board, an EU body in charge of the application of the GDPR, set up a task force to probe Tiktok’s data processing activities and privacy practices across the EU, China’s Caixin reported.
Privacy watchdogs in France and the Netherlands have also launched inquiries into Tiktok’s privacy policies, especially as they pertain to Tiktok’s underage users.
Tiktok has not replied to a Sept. 15 email seeking comment.
Tiktok’s job listings show that politics have not dented its ambitions to be a true multinational. The company is charging ahead with establishing regional hubs and localization teams in key European cities, all answering to a CEO currently based in California.
London ranks second among European cities in active jobs listings on Tiktok’s careers website. The short video app operator is reportedly considering moving its headquarters from Beijing to London, British media reported in August.
“A new global headquarters in London could be a huge boon for the UK’s job market, which has suffered in recent months due to the Covid-19 pandemic,” Stryjak said.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will welcome the Tiktok headquarters with open arms, risking the wrath of US President Donald Trump, UK media has reported.
The British government is reportedly split over the potential Tiktok move. Trade and tech officials and ministers are at odds over how to handle the Chinese tech company, the Telegraph reported citing UK government sources familiar with the matter.
Germany, which ranks third in the number of listed job openings, represents a big market with a big pool of tech talent, experts told TechNode.
It’s also a strategic location that Tiktok can use to “buy some goodwill, given its outsized influence over the European debate,” Small said.
Yet those who decide to join the company in these times are taking on a lot of uncertainty. The app’s US and EU operations were nearly sold to Microsoft after pressure from the US government. After weeks of speculation about a deal with Microsoft, the company has reportedly settled on a partnership with Oracle instead.
TechNode found two people who have been approached by recruiters. Both said they ignored the recruiters’ messages as they were not interested in working for the short video app. “Tiktok is stupid,” one of them said.
But Linkedin job updates indicate that Tiktok’s attempts to poach top tech talent have been successful at times.
Many of the new hires came from some of the West’s biggest companies, including big tech. The person who onboarded recently said the salary offer was “very competitive” but didn’t give any further details. But “it wasn’t like I couldn’t trust my eyes,” they said.
Another new hire said that they were under a non-disclosure agreement that is valid for 100 days after onboarding.
In a Linkedin search, TechNode identified one person who worked at Amazon for seven years in Germany and recently said they joined the Bytedance app in September. A UK-based professional with four years of experience at Google and three years of experience at Netflix said they took a position at Tiktok in July. Another person who was at Google for two years also said they joined the app in September.
The European who is considering a position said that working for the Chinese company in the midst of an international storm seemed “insane” at first, but that they have come to appreciate the challenge.
The recent hire said that Tiktok is “an exciting place to work in at the moment, regardless of how safe this job is in the long term.
“We all know that this industry is moving very fast. But it’s really interesting to be part of this and get this experience at this time,” they said.
]]>US officials have complained many times about “loopholes” that allow Huawei to keep its chip supply chain running in the face of export controls. Now it seems that the “loopholes” are closed, and tight.
After being subjected to three rounds of export restrictions, the telecommunications equipment and smartphone maker has lost nearly all access to semiconductors using US technology—meaning the high-end chips it needs for its carrier and handset businesses.
Richard Yu, president of Huawei’s consumer business, said Aug. 7 that the company had to stop making its in-house Kirin chips, which are widely used on the company’s mobile devices, because they are made using US technology.
Despite the looming bans, Huawei has been on a roll lately. The company was ranked the world’s largest smartphone vendor for the first time in the second quarter. However, in an event last week, Yu said the growth of Huawei’s smartphone sales during this period had been “affected” by “a shortage of components.”
In other people’s eyes, however, the situation could be much worse. Analysts told Reuters that US export restrictions would threaten Huawei’s status as the world’s largest handset maker, and warned its smartphone business would “disappear entirely” if it could not source the chips it needs.
The uncertainty in Huawei’s supply chain has also taken a toll on its carrier business. The British and French governments have told domestic telecom operators to phase out Huawei equipment, citing the risks of the company’s supply chain continuity.
It looks like the end of the world for the company. But what options does Huawei still have? We asked experts, and it doesn’t look good.
Huawei has faced escalating US restrictions for over a year.
May 16, 2019: The US government bans American companies from shipping components and technology to Huawei, but granted the company a series of reprieves, the last of which expired in August.
May 15, 2020: The White House announces plans to tighten its stranglehold, cutting Huawei off from global semiconductor foundries that use American software and technology to Huawei. These news rules officially took effect on Tuesday.
Aug. 17: US government expands licensing requirements, seeking to prevent Huawei buying US-linked chips through subsidiaries or third-party vendors
After Tuesday’s deadline, Huawei will lose access to most of the semiconductor fabrication plants in the world that can make high-end chips because they use US technologies. Huawei cannot buy ready-made chips that contain US technology from any third parties because of the August ban.
Experts said that the US will move swiftly to block any further “loopholes.” The company has stockpiles of chips, but only enough to last a few months. It has to plan out how to use these stockpiles in order for its production to continue.
Huawei has an in-house chip designer known as Hisilicon. This subsidiary designs a variety of chips used in Huawei’s products. They include the Kirin series for mobile devices and the Balong series for telecommunications gear.
Hisilicon could struggle to continue designing Kirin or Balong chipsets because it lost access to US-origin electronic design automation (EDA) tools, Jan-Peter Kleinhans, project director at Germany tech-policy think tank Stiftung Neue Verantwortung, told TechNode in an email.
EDA is a category of software tools for designing electronic systems such as integrated circuits and printed circuit boards. The EDA industry is dominated by three US, or US-linked, firms—Synopsys, Cadence, and Mentor Graphics. Together they account for 60% to 70% of the global EDA market and around 95% of sales in China.
But even if Huawei managed to design chips, it would still need an outsourced fabrication plants to manufacture them, like nearly all semiconductor companies. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), South Korea’s Samsung, and Chinese company Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) are Huawei’s existing suppliers. All three are forbidden to use US-origin manufacturing equipment to fabricate chips for Huawei, Kleinhans said.
They can apply for licenses to continue supplying Huawei—but it’s up to Washington whether to grant them. SMIC, China’s biggest chipmaker, said Tuesday it had applied to the US government for a license to continue supplying to Huawei. TSMC reportedly planned to apply for a license to continue shipping to the company. A unit of Samsung is also seeking approval from the US government to continue supplying Huawei.
“The outlook is rather grim,” Kleinhans said. “Also, even if Huawei finds ways around the current restrictions, the US government’s trajectory is pretty clear: this is now the third export ban against Huawei. There can easily be a fourth or a fifth, if they deem it necessary.”
So far, none of the applications have been approved.
With Huawei’s chip stockpile, smartphone production may not need to halt immediately. But the question is: How long will Huawei’s stockpile last?
Four to 10 months, according to analyst Will Wong at market research firm IDC.
Wong told TechNode that Huawei currently has a stock of high-end chips from TSMC and medium- to low-end chips from Mediatek, a Taiwanese chip designer.
“We are confident that Huawei’s chip stock can last until the end of this year,” Wong said. “It is possible that Huawei will still have chips to use in the first half of 2021, but, in this period the uncertainty is huge.”
The company might use Mediatek chips to produce more medium- to low-end phones during the rest of the year to make up its losses in the high-end handset market, said Wong, adding that Huawei might have to save some chips for production next year.
“All Huawei has to do is to bide its time, because there might be a turnaround after the November US presidential election,” he said.
“No matter how much chip stock does Huawei have, it has to race against time,” he said. “There may be a better situation after the election, or perhaps Huawei can manage to produce chips in China, but the key is time.”
A Huawei spokesman declined to comment on questions about the company’s plans for chip sourcing. He said in a statement to TechNode that the company is “still evaluating the long term impact of the matter at hand and are actively seeking solutions to minimize the impact for everyone.”
The US government has been pushing Western countries to avoid Huawei equipment in their next-generation 5G networks, saying that the Chinese government could use its gear for spying purposes. Huawei, the world’s largest supplier of telecom equipment, has repeatedly denied the allegations.
Eventually, some US allies announced they would begin excluding Huawei. But what made some European countries dodge Huawei products were not Washington’s security warnings, but the possibility that the company would not be able to supply them due to semiconductor export bans.
In July, the United Kingdom and France instructed telecom operators to phase out Huawei equipment from their current networks over the next few years. Both countries cited the uncertainty around the company supply chain as a reason for doing so.
“The UK government revised its 5G strategy and excluded Huawei from further 4G/5G deployments exactly because they are not confident that Huawei will be able to serve British operators in the future because of the US export control,” said Kleinhans.
“Following the UK’s analysis, I think it’s fair to say that Huawei will struggle to maintain or even upgrade customer networks in the near future,” he said.
]]>Bytedance is planning to list Tiktok Global, a joint venture set up to operate the short-video app in the US, pending approval of the proposed deal by the US government, Reuters reported.
Details: The joint venture, dubbed Tiktok Global, will have a majority of American directors, a US chief executive, and a security expert on the board, according to Reuters, citing people familiar with the matter.
READ MORE: 8 things to know about the Chinese tech giant behind Tiktok
Go deeper: ByteDance plans TikTok IPO to win U.S. deal as deadline looms: sources – Reuters
]]>Chinese broker Huajing Securities downgraded its rating of Shanghai-based chipmaker SMIC to “sell,” citing US-China tensions and its inability to continue supplying Huawei.
Details: Huajing Securities analyst Zhao Bing lowered his rating for Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) shares trading on Shanghai’s STAR Market to “sell” from “buy.” He also lowered its target price to RMB 47.5 (around $7) from RMB 55.23 in a research report (in Chinese) published Tuesday.
Context: The chipmaker said Tuesday that it had applied to the US government to continue supplying to Huawei. On the same day, a grace period for a US semiconductor ban against Huawei expired, meaning SMIC, which uses US technology and machinery to make chips, can no longer ship to Huawei.
]]>China’s biggest contract chipmaker SMIC has applied to the US government to continue supplying to telecommunications equipment maker Huawei, local media reported, after the grace period for a semiconductor ban expired on Tuesday.
Details: Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) told Chinese newspaper Securities Times that the company had applied to the US government to continue shipping to Huawei and vowed that it would “strictly comply with laws and regulations.”
Context: SMIC itself, however, is under threat of being added to a US technology export blacklist. The US Defense Department said earlier this month that the Trump administration is considering imposing export restrictions on the company.
Chinese company Bytedance has chosen Oracle over Microsoft for a deal involving Tiktok, Bloomberg reported Monday, which will resemble a partnership involving Oracle purchasing a stake in the company rather than an outright sale of the app’s US operations.
Why it matters: Bytedance had no intension of selling Tiktok’s key asset—the algorithm behind the popular video-sharing app. A deal with Oracle, whose executives have a close relationship with the US President Donald Trump, was viewed as a way to increase the company’s odds of winning approval from the White House.
Details: While the talks are ongoing, a deal with Oracle could, for example, take the form of a corporate restructuring rather than an outright sale. In this case, the American software company would take a stake of a newly formed US business while housing Tiktok’s data on its cloud servers, according to Bloomberg.
Context: In late August, officials in Beijing updated a Chinese technology export regulation to ban the export of limited technologies, potentially including those used by Tiktok. Bytedance soon pledged to comply.
Tiktok parent Bytedance is planning to invest several billion dollars in Singapore over the next three years and make the city-state its beachhead for the rest of Asia, Bloomberg reported Friday.
Details: The investment plans are part of Bytedance’s global expansion. They include the establishment of a data center and are expected to add hundreds of jobs in the country, according to the report.
]]>Go deeper: TikTok Owner to Spend Billions in Singapore After US Ban – Bloomberg
Chinese smartphone maker Huawei announced Thursday that Harmony OS, its in-house replacement for Android, is coming to smartphones. The mobile operating system will be available to developers in December, company officials said, with consumers to see it next year.
Why it matters: This is the first time the embattled Chinese company confirmed that its HarmonyOS, known in Chinese as HongmengOS, will run on mobile devices. The new OS is a sign that Huawei is inching towards independence from American technology for its smartphone ecosystem.
Details: Richard Yu, head of Huawei’s consumer business group, said in an event Thursday afternoon that HarmonyOS will come to smartphones early next year, as he announced the 2.0 version of the operating system. Developers will get early access in December.
Context: Huawei sold 55.8 million smartphones in the second quarter and, for the first time, reached the top spot in global smartphone vendor ranking, according to market data provider IDC. But the US-China trade war has threatened the company’s access to critical inputs for its smartphones.
Correction: An earlier version of this story wrote that HarmonyOS will be “deployed” to smartphones in December. In fact, it will be made available to developers in December, according to the company’s announcement, and consumers will get phones with the new operating system next year.
]]>A government-backed semiconductor manufacturing project based in the central Chinese city of Wuhan has gone belly-up, with key operator HSMC mired in debt. The local government said the project amounts to nearly RMB 128 billion (around $18.7 billion) in investment.
Chinese media recently reported that the construction of the Wuhan Hongxin Semiconductor Project, which was planned to house China’s first 7-nanometer (nm) chip fabrication plant in a 650,000 square meter (around 160 acre) structure, had been at a standstill since December.
Local newspaper National Business Daily said in a report (in Chinese) on Monday that work had stopped on the project’s headquarters in Wuhan as of Thursday, with no buildings completed. The newspaper cited a contractor of the project as saying that construction had been halted because workers had not been paid.
On Aug. 28, the Commerce Bureau of Wuhan’s Dongxihu District, where the project is located, said in response (in Chinese) to a local resident’s inquiry that the project had been suspended because of “financial difficulties.”
On July 30, the Dongxihu District government said in a semi-annual report about the local economy that “there is a huge funding gap in the Hongxin Semiconductor Project” and that it faces “risks of stagnation at any time.” The report cited the “challenge in the capital market” because of the “global outbreak of Covid-19.”
The district government deleted the report (in Chinese) from its website after wide coverage from local media.
The project’s operator is a company founded in 2017 called Wuhan Hongxin Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (HSMC). The company said on its website (in Chinese) that it expects to be able to build a 14-nm chip production line that can produce 30,000 wafers per month and a 7-nm chip production line with the same capacity. It did not give a timetable for those goals.
The decline of the ambitious chip manufacturing project highlights risks as local governments in China rush to achieve dreams of semiconductor self-reliance. According to Made in China 2025, a government initiative announced in 2015 aimed at boosting the high-tech sector, China wants to produce 70% of chips it uses by 2025. But making cutting-edge chips is hard, and attempts to charge into the industry haven’t gone well.
The Hongxin Semiconductor Project had received RMB 15.3 billion in funding as of the end of 2019, according to the Wuhan Municipal Development and Reform Commission, a government body that oversees local macroeconomic planning. The project is expected to receive an additional cash infusion of around RMB 8.7 billion in 2020, it said.
It is a truth universally acknowledged—as Jane Austen would have put it, during a second career as a semiconductor market analyst—that a new chipmaker in possession of a good fortune must be in want of talent. HSMC has been courting engineers at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the largest contract chipmaker in the world. The company, together with another local government-backed chipmaker, had hired more than 100 engineers and managers from TSMC since last year, according to a Nikkei Asian Review report in August.
In Taiwan, HSMC is known as a generous suitor. One anonymous source told Nikkei that the HSMC offers packages “as high as 2 to 2.5 times TSMC’s total annual salary and bonuses” for engineers and managers from the Taiwanese company, which supplies high-end chips to big tech firms such as Apple, Google, and Huawei.
In July 2019, HSMC hired as its chief executive Jiang Shangyi, formerly a research and development vice president at TSMC. The 75-year-old chip veteran also served as an independent director at Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), a Shanghai-based state-backed chipmaker, from 2016 to 2019.
While the Wuhan municipal government said the project had received billions of RMB in funding, HSMC’s shareholding structure doesn’t reflect that. The company is 10% owned by a government-owned firm and 90% by a Beijing-based private firm, according to Chinese corporate information platform Tianyancha. The Beijing-based firm is majority-owned by company Chairwoman Li Xueyan, who holds a 54% stake. Mo Sen, one of the company directors, holds the balance.
On Monday, Chinese media The Cover reported that the Beijing-based company never put real money in the project.
Public information shows Li has no experience in semiconductors and data from Tianyancha shows she also has stakes in a baijiu retailer, a few catering companies, and several medical firms.
Li cannot be reached for comment. HSMC didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment.
“The strange thing about HSMC is that it’s unclear where its money is from… It seems that the company didn’t actually receive as much money as it claimed to have,” Gu Wenjun, chief analyst at Shanghai-based semiconductor research company ICwise, told TechNode (our translation).
Chen Rang, a semiconductor investor cited by the National Business Daily, hinted that the Wuhan municipal government may have leveraged land resources to attract private capital to back the project. “But the semiconductor industry has a high standard on investment and it is far from enough to just utilize land resources [to raise money],” Chen said.
HSMC’s goal was to make China’s first 7-nanometer chips. All it has to show for it is a few uncompleted buildings. It did buy a high-end machine needed for bleeding-edge semiconductor production, but it was put up as collateral for a loan.
The semi-annual report by the Dongxihu District government also said that HSMC had bought “China’s only mask aligner that can produce 7-nm chips” from Dutch company ASML, referring to an instrument that enables photolithography in the fabrication process.
If true, it would be quite a coup—the US government has been campaigning since 2018 to prevent ASML from selling the most advanced machine required to make high-end chips to Chinese companies, according to Reuters.
Chinese media Caixin tried to find the unique 7-nm machine, and it does seem to exist. But they found that it was under mortgage; is good only for 14-nm chips, not 7-nm; and, citing an anonymous semiconductor industry insider, that SMIC has around 10 units of the same model.
Court files show that the machine had never been used when it was held as security for the RMB 582 million loan in January.
“You will need at least two mask aligners and nearly 100 pieces of other machinery to make chips,” said Gu of ICwise. He added that no Chinese chipmaker has realized the mass production of 7 nm chips.
READ MORE: SILICON | Can China make chips?
The Hongxin project was widely questioned in the semiconductor industry, said Gu. “No one believed that it would be a success,” he said.
There are similar stories from other parts of China. In July, Dekema, a Nanjing-based chipmaker backed by the local government, announced it was bankrupt because of “financial difficulties” in raising additional funds from investors.
The Nanjing company previously received $3 billion from investors including the Nanjing municipal government. Founded in 2016, the company said it would “fill the blank in China’s contact image sensor (CIS) chip production.” CIS chips are a key component widely used in portable scanners and bar code readers. After the bankruptcy announcement, local media found that the company’s headquarters consisted of two unfinished buildings and that it had not produced a single wafer.
“Building [semiconductor] production lines needs long-term and consistent investment and it usually takes three to five years to see the initial results,” Gu said. “Production lines backed by local governments face the risk that the support is not consistent because of rotations in officials.”
“We appeal to local governments to make decisions on semiconductors after necessary analyses,” he said. “Whether a semiconductor industry can be built doesn’t depend on how much subsidy the government gives, but on how capable the participants are.”
]]>The owner of PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) has cut ties with Chinese tech giant Tencent in India after the country banned 118 Chinese apps, including international hit PUBG Mobile.
Why it matters: While most of the apps banned last week don’t have a huge user base in India, PUBG Mobile had more than 50 million players in India as of April 2019. PUBG Corporation, which develops and publishes the original PC/console game, is a South Korean company, but it partnered with Tencent to bring the game to mobile. The move to cut ties with Tencent is an attempt to lift the ban on the game.
Details: PUBG Corporation said in a statement Tuesday that it would no longer license the PUBG Mobile franchise to Tencent Games in India, CNBC reported.
Context: Last week’s ban followed a standoff between Indian and Chinese troops in the same week. In June, India banned 59 Chinese apps, including Bytedance’s Tiktok and Tencent’s Wechat, on national security concerns following a deadly border clash with China.
India on Wednesday banned another 118 Chinese-made apps, including Tencent’s popular video game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, as border tensions between the two nations continue to escalate.
Details: The Indian Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology announced it had decided to block 118 apps that it said were prejudicial to India’s sovereignty, integrity, and national security, the ministry said Wednesday in a statement.
Context: The ban follows a standoff between Indian and Chinese troops earlier this week and media reports that a Chinese land mine killed an Indian soldier during the confrontation.
Tiktok owner Bytedance said Sunday it will “strictly comply with” a Chinese technology export regulation, which was updated last week to ban the export of limited technologies, potentially including those used by the popular video-sharing app.
Why it matters: The development adds a new twist to Bytedance’s negotiations with the American companies that want to buy Tiktok’s US operations, including Microsoft, Oracle, and Walmart.
Details: Bytedance said Sunday on its social media account that it will strictly adhere to (in Chinese) the revised Catalog of Prohibited or Restricted Export Technologies when handling technology export-related businesses.
Between the lines: At present, it is unclear if the Tiktok sale in the US is subject to review by the two ministries. However, the catalog has not been revised for 12 years, signaling that the Chinese government could be looking to interfere with Tiktok’s forced sale.
READ MORE: 8 things to know about the Chinese tech giant behind Tiktok
Context: Trump signed an executive order on Aug. 6 banning “any transaction” between any person or company under US jurisdiction and Bytedance starting Sept. 15. On Aug. 14, he updated the order to require Bytedance to either sell or spin off Tiktok’s US operations within 90 days.
Chief executive officer of Bytedance’s video-sharing app Tiktok, Kevin Mayer, said Wednesday that he was resigning, following an executive order from US President Donald Trump requiring the company to sell its US operations.
Details: Mayer said in a note to employees that he had decided to leave the company and that Vanessa Pappas, the general manager of Tikok US, will take over as interim global head of the company, The New York Times reported Thursday.
READ MORE: Kevin Mayer might be exactly what Bytedance needs right now
Context: In May, Bytedance appointed Mayer, formerly the top executive for The Walt Disney Company’s streaming business, as its chief operating officer and Tiktok’s chief executive officer.
Lawmakers in Shenzhen, a high-tech manufacturing hub in southeast China, passed a rule Wednesday allowing companies to incorporate with a dual-class share structure as the city seeks to attract more tech companies to its economy and stock exchange.
Why it matters: The move followed just days after the Chinext startup board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange welcomed its first batch of companies subject to a new, Nasdaq-style initial public offering process—part of China’s efforts to lure tech companies to list at home.
Details: The Shenzhen Municipal People’s Congress passed Wednesday a rule aimed at promoting technology innovation, according to its website (in Chinese). The new rule allows companies to set up weighted voting rights (WVR) share structures when registering a new company in the city. It also allows companies with WVR to go public on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
Context: Technology companies tend to list with a two-pronged share structure, with founders and management granted WVR in order to maintain control over the company after it goes public. Tech companies including Facebook, Google parent Alphabet, and China’s JD.com, and Xiaomi have all adopted dual-class share structures for their listings in the US and Hong Kong.
Recent developments in the escalating US-China tech war signal that a full technology “decoupling” between the world’s two largest economies might be inevitable. So far, new measures have stifled sectors ranging from telecommunications equipment to social media. But is it chilling US VC activity in China?
Two weeks ago, TechNode reporter Chris Udemans wrote that Chinese investments in US startups have fallen dramatically since 2018, the same year the US began to scruitizine Huawei and ZTE, two of China’s largest telecom manufacturers.
But when TechNode looked at US-to-China data, we got a surprise: things look normal. Investor and analyst data show that American capital flowing into Chinese startups has not yet taken a hit from geopolitical tensions between the two nations.
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Overall US investment in Chinese startups—including deals made directly by US institutions or China-based venture capital (VC) firms investing in US dollars—has fallen since 2018, but this is in line with a broader cooldown in Chinese tech investment due to a slowing economy and growing financial headwinds.
But it could be that the slow-moving field is still processing the changed environment. Some investors and analysts told TechNode that politics is going to catch up with investments. Chinese VC firms that raise funds in US dollars, which have played a big role in China’s decade-long technology boom, are having a hard time raising money from their limited partners in America. Growing hostility from regulators and lawmakers toward US-listed Chinese companies may make it more challenging for Chinese firms to float shares in American financial markets, which is where most US dollar-based venture investors seek to exit.
American VC firms first entered the Chinese market in the early 2000s. Many credit these early American investors with helping establish modern VC investing in China. Among them were firms like Sequoia Capital, IDG Capital, and Matrix Partners.
US-China Investment Project, a research initiative led by Rhodium Group and the National Committee on US-China Relations, estimates that US VC firms invested in nearly one-third of all venture capital-backed Chinese companies from 2000 to the first half of 2019. It also estimates that US investors channeled around $47 billion into Chinese startups over the period, accounting for 16% of the roughly $300 billion in total investments.
Investment into Chinese startups by US venture firms took off after 2014, peaking at $19.6 billion in 2018, according to a US-China Investment Project report. The findings attributed this spike to a few massive late-stage fundraising rounds for prominent Chinese technology companies like Ant Financial, Pinduoduo, and Bytedance.
Venture funding, however, fell dramatically to $5 billion in 2019, the lowest level since 2015, according to the report. The drop was in line with a broader slowdown in Chinese tech and venture capital markets. Investors were becoming “more selective in the face of increasing economic uncertainty and a growing perception that parts of China’s tech ecosystem had become overheated after years of rapid growth,” the report said.
Total VC investment into Chinese startups fell by almost half from $204 billion in 2018 to $119.7 billion in 2019, according to Itjuzi, a Chinese venture capital data provider.
US-owned VC firms only represent a small portion of the American capital that flows into Chinese startups. The majority of US dollar investments are made through Chinese VC firms that raise funds from American limited partners. These US dollar funds often include high-profile Chinese general partners such as Source Code Capital, which backed Chinese super-app Meituan Dianping; Lightspeed China Partners, which invested in social e-commerce upstart Pinduoduo; and Zhenfund, whose portfolio firms include social media app Xiaohongshu and the artificial intelligence unicorn Yitu.
Foreign backers in these Chinese US dollar funds include sovereign wealth funds, retirement funds, and big corporates, according to Liu Xiaoqing, analyst at Itjuzi. Liu told TechNode that while such funds raise money in countries like Japan and Singapore, the majority of their funding comes from the US.
Compared to RMB funds, US dollar funds participate in far fewer deals but tend to make substantially greater investments in each. The average investment made by RMB funds was $28.1 million in the first quarter, compared to an average of $103 million per deal by US dollar funds, according to a report (in Chinese) by financial advisory firm China Renaissance.
Investments by US dollar funds into Chinese startups peaked in the second quarter of 2018, with $42.8 billion invested into 217 venture funding rounds. In 2019, Chinese venture capital dropped by more than half, though this is still in line with the overall performance of the Chinese tech VC market. The transaction volume of financing rounds made by US dollar funds in 2019 also halved compared to the year before, according to China Renaissance.
In the second quarter, even as the US government tightened restrictions on Chinese tech companies, US dollar funds were still playing an important role in startups’ fundraising. US dollar funds accounted for 54% of VC transaction volume with Chinese tech startups in the quarter, according to Itjuzi (in Chinese).
Adam Lysenko, associate director at Rhodium Group, said there have also been tailwinds for increased investment over the last couple of years, such as Beijing’s embrace of foreign investment in the automobile and financial sectors, despite escalating US-China tensions. “Due to these factors, we haven’t seen a massive drop-off in US investment in China yet,” said Lysenko, who co-authored the US-China investment report.
But experts warn that investment data moves slowly. If investors are getting cold feet now, the effects may not appear in the data for years. In the VC market, the time horizon may stretch longer. “There is a delay in market data considering that the lifecycle of VC funds could be three to eight years,” Liu told TechNode.
Xu Miaocheng of Unity Ventures, a Beijing-based early-stage VC firm, told TechNode that some Chinese US dollar fund managers are already having a hard time raising money from their American limited partners. Reasons include the Covid-19 crisis which has hampered business trips, as well as escalating conflicts between the Trump administration and Chinese tech companies.
Liu, however, insists the impact will be minimal because money is “not political.”
“The US government will not regulate US investment in China in the same way it scrutinizes Chinese investment in the US technology sector,” she said. Beyond a number of select Chinese firms currently sanctioned by US regulators, “they [the US government] don’t care which countries American limited partners invest in, as long as they are making money.”
Not everyone believes the calculus is so clear-cut. “The future trajectory of US investment in China will depend on whether political concerns outweigh the powerful commercial motives that still exist to deploy capital there[China],” said Lysenko. He added that US venture capitalists continue to see China as a crucial market for growth in a world with slower economic growth.
Given the interdependence between the two countries’ corporate sectors, he continued, “I expect that only a dramatic decoupling path—with sustained US government pressure on US firms—will result in a meaningful reduction in US investment in China.”
Additional contributions by Chris Udemans.
]]>Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Group filed draft IPO prospectuses for a dual listing on the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges on Tuesday, the first simultaneous listing for a Chinese tech company.
Ant Group is reportedly eyeing a $200 billion valuation, which would make it the world’s most valuable fintech company. Such a valuation would top those of some of the world’s biggest banks, including China’s big four. It could be one of the biggest IPOs in recent years, potentially topping Saudi Arabian state-owned oil producer Aramco’s $29 billion listing.
READ MORE: Ant Group’s dual listing will be one of the biggest IPOs of 2020
Ant Group’s 674-page Hong Kong prospectus reveals the extent of its empire, risk factors related to geopolitical tensions, and financial regulations. Here are five key takeaways.
In the first half of 2020, the company earned RMB 72.5 billion in revenue, a year-on-year increase of 38%. Digital finance services drove growth, growing 56% year on year to RMB 46 billion in the period.
The company booked a net profit of RMB 21.9 billion in the first half, outstripping its RMB 18.1 net profit for all of 2019, according to the prospectus.
Monthly active users of mobile payment app Alipay, Ant Group’s key asset, reached 711 million as of end-June, while transaction volume for the app reached RMB 118 trillion during the 12 months ended June 30.
The bulk of Ant Group’s revenue comes from its “Credittech” business, which operates a range of loan services targeting individuals and merchants. Credittech revenue grew 59.5% year on year in the first six months of the year to RMB 28.6 billion, accounting for 39.4% of its total revenue in the period.
Credittech’s key products include Huabei, a virtual credit card service; Jiebei, a micro-lending service targeting individuals; and Mybank Loan, which lends money to small and medium-sized businesses (SMB). The company said in the prospectus that the consumer credit balance of its loan businesses was RMB 1.7 trillion and the SMB credit balance was RMB 400 billion as of the end of June.
Ant Group warned investors that rising geopolitical tensions could seriously impede its business. It emphasized rising risks of sanctions and trade restrictions on Chinese tech firms from the US government.
READ MORE: Techwar: Trump to end transactions with Tencent and Bytedance in 45 days
Such restrictions have the potential not only to banish Ant Group from US markets, but also disrupt its ability to participate in the US dollar-led global financial system, the company said.
The company singled out its cross-border payments business as exposed to such actions, adding that cross-border payments will be a key area of investment for Ant Group in the future.
Some analysts have said that new listing restrictions in the US are the very reason that Ant Group didn’t list in the US, as Alibaba did with massive success in 2014.
In June and July, four Chinese companies, including China’s US IPO pioneer Sina and online travel agency Ctrip, announced plans to delist from the US stock market. Big Chinese tech companies listed in the US have also started dual listing their shares in Hong Kong, signaling a retreat from US financial markets.
The fintech company has tried to distance itself from Alibaba founder Jack Ma and Alibaba in the past, insisting that it is an independent company. Yet Alibaba shares in New York jumped 3.6% Tuesday on the back of Ant Group’s IPO news.
The prospectus said the billionaire entrepreneur is Ant Group’s “ultimate controller,” holding a 50.52% stake in the company. Information about Ma’s stake after the IPO is redacted in the draft prospectus.
The Alibaba and Ant Group founder helms a limited liability partnership, which controls two other partnerships that are Ant Group’s biggest shareholders.
According to the prospectus, Ma transferred 66% of the controlling entity’s equity shares to Ant Group’s leadership on Aug. 18. He divided it equally between Eric Jing, the company’s executive chairman, Simon Hu, the CEO, and Fang Jiang, a non-executive director.
Ant Group also recognized that its success is closely linked to Alibaba. The prospectus says Alibaba, mentioned 650 times in the document, is a “major shareholder,” and the prospectus reports that the two have a data sharing agreement. It lists conflicts of interest between the two giant companies as a risk factor, highlighting the fact they have “overlapping” user bases.
There are “no assurances,” the prospectus says, that Alibaba won’t try to compete with its fintech twin.
The prospectus warns of tightening regulations in key business segments for Ant Group, both globally and in China: payments, investment, insurance, and credit, among others.
It makes special reference to China’s tightening anti-monopoly laws: Authorities have in recent years “strengthened enforcement,” it said.
China’s central bank is reportedly not happy about Ant Group and Tencent’s hold over the domestic digital payments market through Alipay and Wechat. In late July, Reuters reported that Chinese regulators are preparing for an antitrust investigation in the two apps.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | China’s digital currency has a long way to go
The digital yuan’s e-wallet is expected to compete with the effective duopoly, possibly breaking Ant Group and Tencent’s chokehold on the market.
“If we fail to adapt to these new initiatives in a timely manner, our business, financial condition, and results of operations may be materially and adversely affected,” the company said in reference to the digital yuan.
Ant Group’s IPO filings are not final, and many pieces of crucial information were redacted, including the number and price of shares, and the company’s total valuation.
]]>“The A Share [REDACTED] comprises an [REDACTED] of initially [REDACTED] A Shares for subscription, representing approximately [REDACTED]% of our total outstanding Shares following the completion of the H Share [REDACTED] and the A Share [REDACTED], assuming that the [REDACTED] are not exercised.”
Ant Group in its draft IPO prospectus filed at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange
UPDATE (Aug. 25): Bytedance filed a lawsuit early Monday challenging an Aug. 6 executive order forbidden transactions with popular social media app Tiktok. We’re updating the story with new details of the legal argument from the complaint. Bytedance argues that the executive order was issued without evidence or due process, and that the company’s previously provided documentation was “sufficient to address any conceivable US government privacy or national security concerns.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian criticized the Wechat and Tiktok restrictions at a Monday press conference (Chinese), saying China supports companies “taking up legal weapons to safeguard their legitimate rights and interests” and that the American politicians pursuing the bans were “full of lies and slander.”
Tiktok parent Bytedance said Sunday said it would file a lawsuit as early as Monday against the US government over an executive order banning transactions with the popular Chinese-owned video-sharing app.
Why it matters: The lawsuit does not address forcing the sale of Tiktok to an American buyer because it doesn’t target the executive order signed by the US President Donald Trump on Aug. 14 ordering the divestiture. However, it may become a bargaining chip for the company in talks with potential buyers such as Microsoft and Oracle.
Details: Bytedance said in a statement (in Chinese) issued on Sunday that it would sue the US government on Monday to “make sure the company and its users are fairly treated.”
Context: Trump signed two executive orders on Aug. 6 banning “any transaction” between any person or company under US jurisdiction and Bytedance as well as Chinese instant messaging app Wechat starting Sept. 15.
This piece was updated Aug. 25 with details of Bytedance’s complaint.
]]>Chinese telecommunications equipment makers Huawei and ZTE have slowed their 5G base station installation in the country amid increasing uncertainty in its key component supply chain, Nikkei Asian Review reported Wednesday.
Why it matters: The two companies grabbed more than 80% of 5G base station contracts from China’s three main telecom carriers. The throttling of their 5G base station construction signals that US export controls are taking hold, curbing their ability to source key components.
Details: Huawei and ZTE are working on re-designing some of their 5G products to remove as many US parts as possible, Nikkei reported. They told some suppliers to slow down shipments of certain 5G base station-related products in June.
Cautious stance: China’s three state-owned carriers—China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom—have maintained prudent 5G budgets despite Beijing’s push to build more 5G cell towers, part of the so-called “new infrastructure” initiative in the post-virus stimulus measures.
Context: On Monday, the US Commerce Department expanded restrictions on Huawei, forcing non-US companies to apply for a license to sell chips made using American technology to Huawei.
The US Commerce Department issued Monday new rules expanding restrictions on Huawei, in a move that will further narrow the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker’s access to crucial chips.
Why it matters: The move could further close what some US officials call “loopholes” in Huawei’s chip supply chain, forcing non-US companies to apply for a license to sell chips made using American technology to Huawei.
Details: The US Commerce Department added another 38 Huawei subsidiaries into the so-called “Entity List” and imposed license requirements on any transactions involving items subject to US export controls, it said in a statement on Monday.
Context: A series of US restrictions on critical chips has taken a toll on Huawei’s business, especially in the smartphone segment.
Last week, US President Donald Trump took aim at two of the most internationally successful apps ever made by Chinese companies. After preaching about the national security risks posed by Chinese-made apps for months, he signed two executive orders on Aug. 7 that ban transactions with the owner of Tiktok and Wechat starting from Sept. 20. It looks like the US is now in the app bans game.
We’ve spent a lot of the last week trying to figure out what it all means. Here’s what we’ve learned.
Bottom line: The two apps will be banned in the US unless there is a change in their ownership, meaning at least that they will be dropped from app stores. While Bytedance is reportedly in talks with potential buyers like Microsoft and Twitter, it is virtually inconceivable for Tencent to sell Wechat, one of the Chinese internet titan’s most valuable products.
Every week, TechNode picks a story in the news and boils it down to what you need to know in the exclusive Insights column.
It’s normally paywalled, but we’re making this issue free as a sample of our work. Sign up here to get access to every issue.
No one knows how the ban will be interpreted. It’s not clear if users who have already downloaded the apps would be prevented from using them, or if the bans will have effects beyond the borders of the US. But as the US continues to pursue its “clean network” policy, more bans may be coming soon.
The executive orders: The orders ban “any transaction”with Bytedance by a person or company under US jurisdiction, and any transactions with Tencent that relate to Wechat. The Secretary of Commerce will be tasked with identifying these transactions when the bans come into effect on Sept. 20.
What’s banned? Critics say the orders are “incredibly broad and vague” with little clarity on the “transactions” that are banned until Sept. 20. But lawyers told TechNode that it’s possible to guess based on the law behind the order.
Best case: Greg Pilarowski, founder of tech-focused boutique law firm Pillar Legal, told TechNode that IEEPA may limit the president to blocking financial transactions—so it could be that Wechat Pay and perhaps Tiktok ads are blocked, while the apps survive.
More likely: The White House is aiming for a total ban on the apps in the US, Pilarowski said. Even if the law is disputable, the Commerce Department will likely order the apps removed from app stores, which would put pressure on Apple and Google to comply.
Jump the wall? In the event that apps stores are forced to de-list the apps, would users be blocked from using them? The US probably can’t block the apps the way China blocks many foreign apps—but the apps could block themselves.
Worst case: The US tries to enforce these app bans beyond its borders, as it is doing with the ban on exports to Huawei. In such a scenario, the ban could prevent Starbucks from accepting Wechat Pay in China—or force the Apple App Store and Google Play to de-list globally.
What options do Tiktok and Tencent have?
But the courts move slowly, and the chance of rulings before the Nov. 3 election are close to nil. Even if the companies eventually win, Pilarowski said, the bans will accomplish their political goals for the president. “It doesn’t matter if he has the authority to do this, or he doesn’t have the authority to do it, he’s got what he wanted. It’s one more data point in this administration being tougher on China than any previous administration in the United States.”
For Bytedance, the executive order means more than just losing Tiktok.
Tencent, however, seems sanguine. The company publicly downplayed the importance of the US market to its global businesses in an earnings call Wednesday, as it reported robust second-quarter results.
A silicon curtain? The executive orders came a day after the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo escalated the tech war with a new initiative. He promised to purge US networks from Chinese technology under the “Clean Network” program.
The setbacks faced by Bytedance and Tencent also came as Chinese President Xi Jinping is promoting a new strategy to speed up China’s shift toward more reliance on its domestic economy. The initiative, translated as “domestic circulation,” encourages companies to prioritize domestic consumption and markets. Chinese officials said the strategy is gaining urgency as Chinese companies such as Huawei and Bytedance face increasing resistance in overseas markets, according to the Wall Street Journal.
But experts say this will not be the end of Chinese tech companies’ global expansion, nor does it mean Chinese companies will have to focus only on the domestic market.
The hostility Chinese tech companies are facing in the US may also have an immediate impact on how startups and venture capital firms raise money, said some VC investors.
A future of ‘splinternets’? The executive orders against Tiktok and Wechat don’t mean the end of Chinese tech companies’ global expansion, but further restrictions are expected to come. With China’s long-standing Great Firewall, and the addition of the US’ new “Clean Network” program, we are now closer than ever to a world with two different internets.
Additional contributions by David Cohen
]]>Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi said Thursday that it is under investigation by US authorities over a short report released in April which accused the company of inflating 2019 revenue by up to 40%.
Why it matters: US regulators are more actively investigating allegations against Chinese companies for financial fraud after beverage chain Luckin Coffee admitted in April it had fabricated transactions in 2019 totaling around RMB 2.2 billion (around $317 million).
Details: Baidu-backed Iqiyi said in a statement announcing its second-quarter earnings on Thursday that it is cooperating with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) probe, which is seeking financial and operating records dating from January 2018.
READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Short seller huffs and puffs, but it doesn’t blow Iqiyi down
Context: In April, Muddy Waters Research tweeted a link to a Wolfpack Research report, alleging that Iqiyi had inflated its 2019 revenue by 27% to 44% and overstated user numbers by 42% to 60%.
Everyone’s talking about Tiktok, the hot short video app that has been thrust into the global spotlight on the back of an emerging US-China cold war. But outside China, few people know about Bytedance, the elusive tech unicorn behind one of the world’s biggest social media smash hits.
The company has always been reclusive. When employees run into journalists, they joke about being seen with dangerous contacts. Zhang Yiming, the company founder and CEO, rarely speaks to media directly. The mystery surrounding the world’s most valuable tech startup spurred TechNode to take a deep dive into the company last year, the results of which we published monthly in the form of our first In Focus newsletter series. Many of these articles were written by Bailey Hu, who left TechNode in May 2019. We are offering up our research in this story, with some updates.
While most international users know Bytedance as the company behind Tiktok, it isn’t just the maker of a single successful platform. In fact, the company has a lineup of virally popular apps in China, its home market. These include news aggregator Jinri Toutiao; Douyin, the domestic version of Tiktok; and Xigua Video, another video-sharing platform. In overseas markets, it operated Vigo and Topbuzz, the international versions of Xigua Video and Jinri Toutiao, respectively, both of which Bytedance shut down because of poor performance.
These stumbles have done little to slow the Beijing-based company. It is considered the world’s most valuable tech startup, according to CB Insights. The company was valued at as much as $140 billion earlier this year when state-owned carrier China Mobile, one of its shareholders, sold a small stake in a private deal, according to Reuters.
Here are eight things to know about Bytedance:
In March, Bytedance founder Zhang Yiming revealed in an internal letter to employees that the company’s global headcount had exceeded 60,000, and the number is expected to reach 100,000 this year.
Ad sales and content monitoring staff each make up a quarter of Bytedance’s workforce, according to a report by The Information in April 2019.
Bytedance now employs more people than Facebook, analyst Liu Jiehao of research group Iimedia pointed out, but average productivity still lags well behind the US titan. Facebook booked $71 billion in earnings in 2019, while Bytedance reportedly made $17 billion in revenue in the same period.
Tencent, which employed 54,000 people as of December 2018, fell between the two in terms of 2019 revenue. The company reported a total annual revenue of RMB 377 billion (around $48.5 billion) in 2019.
Providing online news and content for millions of users in China, Bytedance’s flagship app Jinri Toutiao (which translates into “Today’s Headlines”) doesn’t require an editor-in-chief to lead its content strategy like other news platforms do, according to company founder and CEO Zhang Yiming.
The app’s editorial staff is a set of artificial intelligence and deep-learning algorithms that deliver personalized content to its users.
Like other flagship Bytedance apps, Jinri Toutiao shows users an endless feed of posts and videos recommended by its algorithms, all based on the user’s age, sex, location, and personal preferences.
As you read posts recommended by the platform, it learns what you like and don’t like by tracking your behavior: what you click to read, what you choose to dismiss, how long you spend on an article, which stories you comment on, and which stories you choose to share. The behavior recorded by the system then spits out recommendations to populate your feed. The more time you spend in the app, the more it learns about you—and the more it learns about you, the more time it can get you to spend in the app.
The company has replicated the recommendation system with other products such as Douyin and Tiktok. Its success speaks for itself.
According to a person who is familiar with Bytedance’s recommendation system, it was initially based on Google’s Wide & Deep Learning, open-source models that combine the strengths of the wide linear model and the deep neural network, two types of artificial neural networks that can perform tasks usually carried out by a human brain.
The Wide & Deep Learning system is used for recommendations on Google Play, the search engine’s popular Android mobile app store with more than 1 billion active users, and has led to “significant improvement” in app downloads, according to a paper by a group of Google researchers.
“The recommendation system is now Bytedance’s core technology that underpins everything from its news app to its short-video apps,” said the source.
In January 2018, Bytedance held a meeting to disclose how the algorithms work. The move was in response to pressure from internet watchdogs and state media, which had criticized the Jinri Toutiao app for spreading pornography and allowing machines to make content decisions (in Chinese).
At the meeting, Bytedance’s algorithm architect Cao Huanhuan explained the principles of the recommendation system used by Jinri Toutiao and many of the company’s other apps. The full text of his speech can be found here (in Chinese).
The company has moved to open up access to its recommendation algorithm to external companies in recent years after the success of Douyin and Jinri Toutiao. In September, Bytedance started to package its recommendation algorithm as a solution, known as Byteair, to its different lines of products and external partners.
On its English-language website, Bytedance lists a modest ecosystem seven apps worldwide. The reality is more like a jungle, populated with hybrids, close cousins, and the occasional evolutionary dead end.
Tiktok and Douyin are the international and Chinese versions, respectively, of Bytedance’s hottest app. They don’t share any content, their features vary, and each app has different privacy policies in accordance with local regulations. Huoshan and the now-shuttered Vigo, similarly, had been the global and domestic versions of another short-video offering.
Many of Bytedance’s apps are free, and most have options for in-app purchases on Apple’s China App Store. In addition to those listed, relatively new launches like Tomato Novel are not only entirely free to use, but also offer cash incentives in return for user activity, as TechNode previously reported.
Douyin and Tiktok are unquestionably Bytedance’s biggest successes. The two apps are often referred to as versions of one another—Douyin is the domestic Chinese version; Tiktok is the global version.
Bytedance once presented Tiktok and Douyin as two versions of the same product, at least until Tiktok began attracting scrutiny overseas because of its Chinese ties. The two apps share the same logo, layout, and even some stickers and filters, but they are strictly segregated in accounts and content. This means it’s impossible for a Tiktok user to log in to the Douyin app using their Tiktok credentials, and vice versa.
Now, Bytedance is trying hard to shake off Tiktok’s ties to China. It named an American CEO in May and reportedly cut off Chinese employee access to Tiktok in June. But the efforts didn’t pay off. India banned the app in June after a border clash with China in the same month and Japan is seeking to restrict Chinese-made apps including Tiktok. This month, the Trump administration signed an executive order that would effectively ban the app in the US on Sept. 15.
Content recommendations are not always entirely dependent on algorithms, at least in regards to the Douyin app. Douyin has promoted a fair amount of content produced by state-run media and government agencies for propaganda purposes. This content features recent news or stories with “positive energy,” a phrase that describes topics that align with government policies.
Conversely, on the Tiktok platform, recommended content featuring news or politics is minimal. Everything in the app is designed to be fun. A commentary published in The New York Times said that Tiktok might be “the only truly pleasant social network in existence.”
Bytedance’s account segregation of Tiktok and Douyin differs from the way that tech titan Tencent has constructed the domestic and international versions of its mega messaging app Weixin (known as Wechat abroad).
By comparison, Tiktok and Douyin users exist in different worlds, meaning that content cannot be accessed across platforms. For example, one of Tiktok’s most popular accounts is Jacob Sartorius, an American singer who has 20.9 million followers on the platform. However, the “Jacob Sartorius” found on Douyin is an “unofficial” account with 36 followers.
Under pressure from authorities, Bytedance has completely segregated the Tiktok and Douyin platforms, freeing the company from any potential breach of China’s internet controls while providing its international users with a relatively censorship-free platform.
Bytedance was founded in 2013, but it started to make investments as early as 2014. It kicked off its VC activity by investing in a series of blogs and media companies such as artificial intelligence-focused blog Xinzhiyuan, and Caixin Globus, an international news site founded by Chinese finance news outlet Caixin.
Bytedance started to expand its investment portfolio outside of China in 2017 as overseas markets became more and more important to the company, but it tended to make acquisitions rather than simply investing.
By far the most successful example of Bytedance’s global expansion was its acquisition of lip-syncing app Musical.ly in 2017, which was later rebranded to Tiktok and became a global hit.
In recent years, Bytedance pivoted to invest in enterprise services and online education companies such as edtech company Fclassroom in 2019 and online word processor Shimo in 2018. In April, Bytedance co-led a Series B of nearly $14 million into Chinese cleaning robot maker Narwal Robotics.
Based on disclosed figures, Bytedance tends to favor certain tech sectors over others.
Here are some of Bytedance’s biggest investment deals from 2015 to 2019.
In June 2018, we reported that longstanding Bytedance app Jinri Toutiao had launched “Jinri Games,” its own version of Wechat mini games, or lightweight apps which run on a large platform without requiring users to leave the app.
Within Toutiao’s selection of in-app mini programs—another adaptation of a Wechat innovation—Android users could for the first time choose from a variety of casual games.
Since then, mini games have become available in Bytedance’s humor app Pipixia and most recently, Douyin. The additions allow independent gamemakers to adapt or develop 10-megabyte programs for each platform.
In March, the Bytedance obtained its first mobile games license from Chinese regulators, allowing it to publish a game legally to China’s multi-billion-dollar gaming market. Bloomberg reported in January that the company is also building a gaming division that will hire more than 1,000 employees, and there were already two games in the pipeline. The company’s casual mobile game “Combat of Hero” became the most-downloaded free iOS title in Japan for four consecutive days beginning March 7, the South China Morning Post reported.
Bytedance may have made its name with short-video and news aggregator apps, but it seems unusually determined to break into the online education sector.
Over the past two years, the company has made several attempts to gain a foothold in online education through the launch of new apps, acquisitions, and investments. Underperforming apps are abandoned as new ones keep appearing, fresh off the production line.
Bytedance’s education apps:
In a lot of ways, Bytedance is something totally new. It’s the first Chinese tech company that’s really based on a new algorithm, and the first Chinese company ever to get a big hit in the global app space. It often terrifies its Chinese competitors as much as it seems to terrify American policy-makers.
If it’s forced to sell Tiktok, it could lose one of those strengths: the global hit. But it’ll remain a huge, disruptive force in Chinese tech.
]]>Analysts are optimistic about Chinese tech and gaming giant Tencent despite a Huawei-like sanction from the US government imposed last week, with one saying that it may instead end up hurting Apple’s Iphone sales in China.
Why it matters: The lack of detail in the Trump administration’s sudden ban on Thursday of transactions involving Tencent’s mega messaging app Wechat has sowed widespread confusion. But analysts are optimistic about the company’s future performance even considering a worst-case scenario.
Details: Shenzhen-based broker Guosen Securities on Monday maintained a buy rating on the Tencent stock because it said that the Trump administration’s ban on Wechat will have little impact on revenues from Tencent’s social media business.
Context: The Trump administration said Thursday it would bar individuals and companies within US jurisdictions from making transactions with Tencent and Bytedance, the owner of Tiktok, in 45 days.
This week, we’re taking a look at some of the biggest players in China’s tech venture capital (VC) world: tech companies. Corporate VCs are known to invest lavishly in chosen startups, but these deals come at a cost to entrepreneurs: taking a giant’s money means being locked up in their “ecosystem” and losing access to funding from their rivals.
The winners of Chinese big tech’s investments include Nasdaq-listed social e-commerce company Pinduoduo, ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing, and e-commerce giant JD.com. But there are also losers who failed because they chose the wrong side.
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Normally available to TechNode Squared members, we’re making this free as a sample of our work. Sign up here to get every issue of this, and three other regular In Focus newsletters.
On July 21, scooter maker Ninebot, a company backed by Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, won final approval from the Shanghai Stock Exchange to register on its Nasdaq-style STAR Market tech board. If the registration is approved by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the country’s top securities watchdog, Ninebot will become the fourth company within the so-called “Xiaomi ecosystem” to go public.
The Xiaomi ecosystem is a group of startups the smartphone maker has invested in, who are allowed to leverage its sales channels to distribute their products. Joining the group also means startups, which are often makers of smartphone accessories such as headphones, power banks, and cameras, can utilize Xiaomi resources like brands, supply chain management, and design.
The clique has incubated three publicly traded companies, including smart home appliance maker Yunmi, cleaning robot maker Roborock, and smart wearable devices maker Huami. Meanwhile, three more companies are in the pipeline to go public on the high-tech STAR board.
The Xiaomi ecosystem is one example of how big Chinese tech companies expand their empires through investments. During the past decade, corporate venture capital has thrived under the wings of big tech firms like Xiaomi, Tencent, Alibaba, as well as rising stars like Bytedance and Didi Chuxing.
While, like all VCs, corporate VCs hope to invest in promising startups that generate returns for their parent companies, they’re also pursuing strategic objectives for their companies that shape their priorities.
In the first six months of this year, corporate VCs participated in 15% of venture capital investments in China, according to Chinese venture market research firm Jingdata.
Like Xiaomi, all Chinese tech giants use their investments as a way to build their ecosystems, and they are usually incompatible with those of their rivals’. For example, users of Tencent-backed JD.com cannot pay with Alibaba’s Alipay on the e-commerce platform.
Social media and online gaming giant Tencent is one of the most active corporate VCs in China. The company has invested in 741 companies around the world as of July 24, according to venture capital data provider Itjuzi (in Chinese).
Apart from online market place Taobao and Tmall, the e-commerce titan also operates cloud computing platform Aliyun Cloud and Cainiao, a logistics platform. Alibaba’s investments also focus on these areas: e-commerce, enterprise services, and logistics.
Bytedance was founded in 2013, but it started to make investments in 2014. The owner of short video app Tiktok and news aggregator Jinri Toutiao started its VC activity by investing in a series of blogs and media companies such as AI-focused blog Xinzhiyuan, and Caixin Globus, an international news site founded by Chinese finance news outlet Caixin.
Bytedance started to expand its investment portfolio outside of China in 2017 as overseas markets became more and more important to the company, but it tended to make acquisitions rather than simply investing.
One of the most successful examples of Bytedance’s global expansion was the acquisition of lip-syncing app Musical.ly in 2017, which was later rebranded to Tiktok and became a global hit.
In recent years, Bytedance pivoted to invest in enterprise services and online education companies such as edtech company Fclassroom in 2019 and online word processor Shimo in 2018.
Chinese tech giants’ investment strategies show a strong tendency toward exclusiveness, as they deploy capital to build out ecosystems. This means that when a startup gets money from Tencent, Alibaba’s door slams shut.
Even though Chinese unicorns only accounted for 15% of deals in the first half of the year, nearly all startups have to align with a tech giant as they scale.
There are a few unicorns, such as drone maker DJI and Tiktok owner Bytedance, that have managed to succeed without joining any of the BAT camps. But 80% of Chinese tech startups have taken a form of investment from BAT by the time they reach $5 billion in valuation, according to a report by The Economist.
And sometimes, trying to please more than one giant can be dangerous. One example is failed bike-sharing platform Ofo, another intersection of Tencent and Alibaba’s investments.
The company received money both from Tencent, via Didi Chuxing, and Alibaba. A 2019 article by Chinese magazine GQ Report argued that the resulting clashes between the two giants in the startup’s boardroom ultimately led to Ofo’s failure.
“Experienced entrepreneurs know: Under normal circumstances, do not accept investments from two (or more) of Tencent, Alibaba, or Baidu at the same time,” GQ Reports wrote. “It is dangerous to violate common sense.”
]]>Chinese online travel company Ctrip is considering delisting from Nasdaq and is in talks with potential investors to fund the plan, Reuters reported on Tuesday citing unnamed sources.
Why it matters: China’s largest online travel firm is the fourth Chinese tech company in the past month to consider delisting from the US financial markets. Intensifying tensions between the world’s two largest economies are scaring Chinese tech companies from New York exchanges, once a sought-after market to raise funds.
Details: The management of Baidu-backed Ctrip has asked several financial and strategic investors including venture capital firms and tech companies to fund its privatization plans, according to the Reuters report, citing four people familiar with the matter.
Context: Ctrip, founded in 1999, went public on Nasdaq in 2003. The company acquired British flight search engine Skyscanner in 2016 and US online travel agency Trip.com in 2017.
Chinese tech giant Tencent proposed buying out Chinese search engine Sogou, said its parent company Sohu on Monday, a move that would mean the subsidiary would delist in New York.
Why it matters: In considering the proposal, Sogou joins Chinese media firm Sina in mulling over delisting from US stock exchanges amid new investor-protection legislation and US-China trade uncertainties.
Details: Long-time investor Tencent proposed acquiring all of the outstanding ordinary shares of Sogou at $9 a share, according to the Sohu statement. Tencent’s initial proposal is not binding and has not yet been reviewed by the Sohu board.
Context: Growing distrust between US and Chinese lawmakers is spreading throughout financial markets. On May 20, CNBC reported that the US Senate unanimously passed legislation prohibiting foreign companies from listing on US exchanges or raising money from American investors unless they can prove “they are not owned or controlled by a foreign government.”
The French government has told telecoms operators to avoid equipment made by Huawei, warning that licenses granted for the Chinese company’s gear will not be renewed once they expire, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing three sources.
Why it matters: France will effectively phase out the Shenzhen-based company’s equipment out from its next-generation 5G networks by 2028, following a similar decision by the United Kingdom this month.
Details: The French National Cybersecurity Authority (ANSSI) told a French newspaper this month it was urging telecoms operators not currently using Huawei equipment to avoid switching to it, though it would give licenses that could be valid for three to eight years.
Context: Following years of pressure from the United States, more European governments are moving to exclude Huawei from 5G networks.
]]>READ MORE: “Five eyes” look in different directions on Huawei
Chinese scooter maker Ninebot on Tuesday gained final approval from the Shanghai Stock Exchange to register on the bourse’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market, according to a notice on the board’s website.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company, incorporated in the Cayman Islands, is expected to become the first foreign-registered company with a variable-interest entity (VIE) structure to list on a stock exchange in Mainland China.
Details: Ninebot has been allowed to submit registration filings to the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the country’s top securities watchdog, for a final review, the STAR Market’s website shows (in Chinese).
Context: Founded in 2014, Ninebot is now the world’s largest vendor of electric scooters. The company snapped up failing American personal-transport manufacturer Segway in 2015.
Shares of Chinese heavyweight chipmaker SMIC jumped more than 200% during its Thursday debut on the Shanghai tech bourse while those listed on the Hong Kong exchange fell 17%, signaling skepticism from global investors.
Why it matters: The contrast shows that international investors are cool on the prospects of China’s biggest contract semiconductor manufacturer despite strong support from the state.
Details: Shares of SMIC surged 245% to RMB 95 at the open on its first day of trading on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market. The shares were priced at RMB 87.1 (around $12.5) by the end of the morning trading session.
Context: SMIC’s secondary listing on the Shanghai bourse is the biggest stock sale in mainland stock markets in a decade since Agricultural Bank of China’s RMB 68.5 billion initial public offering in 2010.
Huawei said Tuesday the UK’s decision to ban the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker from its 5G networks was “disappointing” and urged the country to “reconsider.”
Why it matters: The British government said that banning Huawei gear was due to “uncertainty” around the company supply chain. The company argued that it was a “politicized” decision.
Details: Huawei urged the British government to reconsider the ban announced Monday on the company’s equipment from the country’s 5G network rollout, said Huawei in a statement to TechNode on Tuesday.
Context: A new US regulation announced by the Department of Commerce in May requires companies around the world to obtain licenses for sales to Huawei of semiconductors made with US technology, potentially cutting the company off from global chip manufacturing.
Huawei said Monday its revenue during the first half of the year grew 13.1%, a significant slowdown from the same period last year as the company faces stricter sanctions from the United States.
Why it matters: The Shenzhen-based telecommunications gear maker’s business in the first six months of the year was hit by a double whammy—a new round of US sanctions imposed in May and the Covid-19 pandemic that has disrupted the global economy.
Details: Huawei booked RMB 454 billion (around $64.9 billion) in revenue in the first six months of the year with a net profit margin of 9.2%, the company said in the statement.
Context: The same period a year earlier, the company reported 23.2% year-on-year revenue growth, before the impact of a May 2019 US blacklisting that sought to cut the company off from American technology. Huawei touted the growth as proof that US sanctions had a limited impact on its business.
China is set for its biggest stock sale in a decade when homegrown chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC) debuts on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market at the end of this month.
Backed by heavy subscriptions by mainland investors, the Hong Kong-listed company could raise as much as RMB 53.2 billion (around $7.6 billion) in a secondary listing on the Shanghai bourse, potentially the biggest in mainland stock markets since Agricultural Bank of China’s RMB 68.5 billion initial public offering in 2010.
SMIC is just the latest example of China’s chip funding fever. A report by Nikkei Asian Review says Chinese chipmakers have raised around RMB 144 billion this year from equity markets, already twice the amount of money they raised in the whole of 2019.
Shanghai-based SMIC is China’s largest contract chipmaker. It’s a solid division II team, manufacturing reliable midrange chips mostly for domestic customers. It lags a few years behind the cutting edge: SMIC is still inching towards 7-nanometer chip production while Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) has been producing them since 2018. But the company’s 14-nanometer chips are not good enough to supply many domestic needs, such as Huawei’s most advanced Kirin chips.
The on-going race between China and the United States for technology supremacy has given SMIC its chance at the major league: US sanctions on Huawei could force the world’s largest telecommunications gear maker and second-largest smartphone maker to move all its chip production from TSMC to SMIC. The state is ready to pour billions into the company’s effort to master cutting-edge production. Shares in SMIC have gone up 215% from the beginning of this year, driven by increasing domestic demand, favorable policies, and the dual listing plan itself. It’s a huge opportunity—but a daunting challenge.
The company said it plans to spend 40% of the proceeds of the Shanghai stock offering to help produce 14-nanometer or higher-end chips, and 20% will be put into research and development.
But to become a global leader, experts suggest, SMIC will need more than money.
Since it was founded in 2010, SMIC has enjoyed generous support from the state. In the same month it announced the secondary listing plan on the Shanghai bourse, a state-backed industry fund injected more than $2 billion into a SMIC chip fabrication plant.
Years of state support have put China in the fourth spot on global wafer capacity ranking in 2019, according to semiconductor market research firm IC Insights.
China is known for its lavish investments to boost industries deemed strategically important. In the semiconductor sector, the well-known National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, or the “Big Fund,” underwrites chipmakers. The fund has gathered a total of RMB 342.7 billion from the finance ministry, state-owned enterprises, and local governments.
Read more: VC roundup: State-backed ‘big funds’ manage 60% of China’s VC/PE money
In addition to its official goal (in Chinese) of “investing in chip manufacturing, designing, and promoting mergers and acquisitions,” the fund is also expected to provide “guidance” to get private capital into key sectors.
To raise really big money, SMIC and the Big Fund count on the markets. In 2019, investable assets held by Chinese residents that can be put into the equity market were RMB 29 trillion, according to the China Chief Economist Forum (in Chinese), a Shanghai-based think tank, while the entire national budget (in Chinese) for guidance funds was RMB 2 trillion in 2019.
The STAR Market on the Shanghai Stock Exchange also shows a strong preference for semiconductor firms. Of the 122 stocks listed on the board, around 20 are from the semiconductor sector. The board, known for a meticulous pre-listing review process that can take up to six months, took only 29 days to go through SMIC’s application.
“The Big Fund has definitely achieved its goal to guide private capital into the semiconductor sector, and I think the effect is significant,” Fang Jing, chief analyst at Cinda Securities, told TechNode.
“Thanks to the push of the Big Fund, the proportion of total capitalization of semiconductor firms in the A-share market’s electronics sector grew to approximately 30% from just more than 10% a few years ago,” he added. “It is no exaggeration to say that the past two years have been a feast for semiconductor investments.”
Beijing’s expectations are very high for SMIC. According to the Made in China 2025 plan, a government initiative announced in 2015 aiming to boost the high-tech sector, China wants to produce 70% of chips it uses by 2025. With 18% of the domestic market (in Chinese), SMIC is the only company that’s even on the road to this target.
The target seems more urgent now in the context of escalating US-China economic conflicts. The Trump administration has already blocked Huawei’s access to its technology and machinery and would potentially cut the company off from the global semiconductor supply chain.
But despite heavy investments from the government and private investors, experts predict China will fall far short of the goal of semiconductor self-sufficiency by 2025.
A May report by IC Insights predicts that China will produce only 20.7% of chips it uses in 2024, growing only 5% from 2019.
China not only needs more chips—it needs better ones. SMIC is “generations behind” TSMC, Alex Capri, visiting senior fellow at the National University of Singapore Business School, told TechNode in an interview in May. SMIC, one of the country’s most sophisticated chipmakers, mainly produces 14-nanometer wafers, while the most edge-cutting chip fabrication technology is now 5-nanometer. For Huawei, this means there is nowhere to buy cutting-edge chips in the domestic market.
In addition to closing a capital gap, China also needs to narrow the talent gap in the semiconductor industry to catch up with the bleeding edge of chip designs, said Fang of Cinda Securities.
China faces a talent shortfall of around 300,000 people in the semiconductor industry, Yu Xiekang, vice president of the China Semiconductor Industry Association, told local media in 2019.
“It should start with education because you can’t always poach talents from overseas. We need not only technology self-sufficiency, but also education self-sufficiency,” Fang said.
Clarification: This post has been updated to clarify the attribution of a quote in the last paragraph.
]]>Two US federal government agencies are investigating whether Tiktok, a Chinese short video app popular with American teens, breached a 2019 deal designed to protect children’s privacy.
Why it matters: The probe is Tiktok’s latest setback in overseas markets following a ban on the app in India last month and its retreat from Hong Kong this week.
Details: The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Justice are investigating whether Tiktok complied with an agreement it reached with the FTC in January 2019, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing David Monahan, a campaign manager with the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood.
Context: Pressure on Tiktok is mounting in the US after it was shut out of India, which used to be its biggest overseas market.
Chinese online news and social media company Sina said Monday it had received an acquisition proposal which would take the company private after 20 years of trading on the Nasdaq.
Why it matters: Sina is the second Chinese tech company in a month to mull a delisting from US stock exchanges. Chinese online classifieds marketplace 58.com entered a deal to delist from the New York Stock Exchange in June.
Details: New Wave, a British Virgin Islands-based company owned by Sina chairman and CEO Charles Chao, has proposed to acquire all of Sina’s outstanding shares at a price of $41 per share, the company said in a statement on Monday.
Context: Founded in 1998, Sina started as a news portal that aggregated articles from print-based media. It went public on Nasdaq in 2000, becoming one of the first Chinese tech companies to list in the US.
More than 3,000 games have been removed from Apple’s China App Store in the first two days of July, a move the company has warned developers about as it closes a loophole which allowed unlicensed paid games to list on the platform.
Why it matters: This is one of the biggest game purges on Apple’s App Store. It comes after the American technology giant moved to comply with China’s strict gaming regulations, requiring game developers worldwide to gain approval from Chinese regulators before being published in the Chinese store.
“We are seeing unprecedented numbers of games dropping off the Apple App Store China daily since Apple implemented this new policy on July 1. Sadly, because China only approves about 1,500 game licenses a year, and the process itself takes six to 12 months, most of these apps will be waiting a long time before they are allowed back on the store.”
— Todd Kuhns, marketing manager at AppInChina, to TechNode
Details: Some 1,571 and 1,805 games were removed from Apple’s App Store in China on July 1 and July 2, respectively, in a sharp surge compared with the end of June, when an average of around 200 titles were removed daily, according to figures from Appinchina.
Context: Since 2016, Chinese regulations have required all paid games or games that offer in-app purchases to obtain a publication license before they can be uploaded to app stores.
China’s biggest server maker, Inspur, said Friday that Intel has resumed shipments to it. The American chipmaker briefly suspended shipment after Inspur was added to a US list of Chinese companies it deems military-controlled.
Why it matters: The list, announced by the US Department of Defense, paves the way for US President Donald Trump to impose sanctions on 20 Chinese companies, including Inspur and Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei. However, Intel’s twist indicates the list has not been turned into an export control list.
Details: Inspur has received notice from Intel that the US company has resumed shipment to the Chinese server maker, Chinese media Caixin reported Friday. Intel also confirmed the information to Caixin.
Context: Chinese manufacturing companies are increasingly subject to supply chain disruption when sanctioned by the US as a result of intensifying geopolitical conflicts between the world’s two largest economies.
Apple has frozen updates of mobile games that didn’t provide gaming licenses from Chinese regulators. The move came after a “loophole” used by foreign game makers to bypass China’s strict gaming regulations was closed by Apple at the end of June.
Details: The American tech giant said developers would not be able to update their games without a valid license issued by the Chinese government, Financial Times reported Thursday.
Context: The Chinese National Radio and Television Administration, China’s top content regulator, issued a notice in 2016 requiring mobile games to obtain approval before publishing.
JD Digits, the fintech subsidiary of Chinese online marketplace JD.com, is preparing for an initial public offering at China’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market in Shanghai, according to a filing by several securities firms.
Why it matters: The move is part of JD.com’s broader plan to take its affiliates public over the next two years. TechNode reported in May that the e-commerce giant will focus on floating shares of JD Digits and JD Logistics, the company’s courier business, after JD.com’s own secondary listing in Hong Kong in June.
Details: Four Chinese securities firms have signed “pre-listing tutoring agreements” with JD Digits on June 28 to help the company file an IPO on the STAR Market, according to a filing to the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s top securities watchdog.
Context: Spun off from JD.com in August 2017, JD Digits is currently valued at RMB 133 billion (around $18.8 billion) after raising RMB 13 billion in 2018.
Understanding China’s tech sector means knowing the biggest players in the venture capital space. They are not the big tech companies like Tencent or Alibaba, nor international consortiums backed by Softbank. They are onshore funds that raise money from the Chinese state.
For years, China has adopted the so-called “Temasek model” of managing state wealth—setting up state-backed investment firms to manage hundreds of billions of dollars like the Singaporean sovereign wealth fund.
But unlike Temasek, China uses these so-called “guidance funds” as an upgraded tool for economic planning. Acting as state-led VCs, they’re an alternative to providing large subsidies to state-owned enterprises, and an incentive luring private capital to flow into certain sectors that carry China’s push for technological self-sufficiency.
VC Roundup is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on trends in fundraising. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Those funds, accounting for only 26.6% of total Chinese VC firms, managed more than 60% of the money in China’s private equity market in 2019, according to a June report (in Chinese) by the Chinese investment research firm Zero2ipo.
They raise money from China’s finance ministry, state-owned enterprises, and local governments’ fiscal reserves, but some local funds also raise private money as well.
Unlike Temasek, which issues detailed reports to the public about its portfolio value and returns to shareholders every quarter, Chinese state funds often operate mysteriously and are sometimes criticized (in Chinese) by local media for a “lack of transparency.”
The outside world has very limited access to state-backed funds’ investment activities. Local media and research institutes often find out what these funds have invested in only after their portfolio companies have gone public and disclosed their shareholding structures. Other information, such as their backers and management, can be gleaned from corporate registration databases maintained by market regulators.
We don’t know about the returns they yield and how they make investment decisions. Critics say state-backed funds usually make decisions following economic plans rather than market incentives.
Back in the Stone Age (aka the 1980s), state funds were the only players in China’s private equity market. The country’s first PE firm was set up in 1985 by the State Science and Technology Commission (succeeded in 1998 by the Ministry of Science and Technology) to “provide funds for the industrialization of technology achievements.”
According to the Zero2ipo report, by the end of 2019 China had around 14,000 private equity and venture capital firms, 26.6% of them state-backed. Together, those funds managed 60.5% of all the money raised in the market.
Many more private firms have entered the market recently, but in dollar terms it has hardly changed. In 2014, around 70% of newly founded Chinese VC firms were state-backed, altogether managing around 59% of new funds raised in the market.
The report attributed the increasing share of state-backed funds to the foundation of a series of “guidance funds” founded between 2015 and 2018. “Their size usually ranges from several billion RMB to several tens of billions RMB, sharply increasing the scale of capital managed by state-backed funds,” said the report.
China’s so-called guidance funds use state money to invest in companies in industries that the government considers strategically important. There is no official list of those strategically important industries, but “Made in China 2025,” a government-led industrial subsidies scheme (as well as a focus of the US-China trade war), has outlined some “prioritized sectors” that include semiconductors, new materials, and next-generation information technology.
Not all guidance funds are relevant to tech. Other major funds have missions such as supporting the country’s small- and medium-sized enterprises.
The chip fund: The China National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, dedicated to investing in semiconductor firms, is dubbed the “big fund.” It was set up in 2014 and raised RMB 138.7 billion from the Ministry of Finance and China Development Bank Capital, as well as several other state-backed enterprises.
The chip fund was set up to invest in semiconductor manufacturing and designing, and to promote mergers and acquisitions, according to China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), which supervises the fund. In October 2019, the fund closed another financing round, raising RMB 204 billion.
The internet fund: In 2015, the Cyberspace Administration of China, together with the Ministry of Finance and some state-owned enterprises, formed the China Internet Investment Fund. The fund focuses on investing in Internet-based services and promoting the development of “Internet innovation,” according to Xinhua. It raised RMB 30 billion in its first financing round and will have a total scale of RMB 100 billion. Portfolio companies of the fund include cloud computing company Kingsoft Cloud and voice recognition technology firm Unisound.
The manufacturing fund: In 2019, China’s finance ministry and several state-owned enterprises set up a RMB 147.2 billion National Manufacturing Transformation and Upgrading Fund. The fund will invest in companies working on areas including new materials, next-generation information technology, and electrical equipment, according to a filing by one of its investors.
State-backed funds are seen by experts as a tool to execute economic plans while making a profit. But the idea is that they will “guide” private capital to strategic sectors rather than replace it.
Another report from Zero2ipo in January said the total scale of China guidance funds reached RMB 10 trillion and a total of 1,686 guidance funds have raised a combined RMB 4.7 trillion as of the end of 2019.
On top of making money for the state, these funds also aim to leverage China’s massive private capital to invest in sectors considered strategically important by the government.
State-backed funds targeting specific sectors are important because they are seen by the market as a vote of confidence, and thus help lure private capital to invest in those sectors, as Dong Dengxin, director of the Financial Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told TechNode in an interview last year.
While the state-backed funds are born with political tasks, their decision-making processes are not market-oriented, according to a 2015 paper by Chen Zhihai, the general manager of Chengding Fund, a Shanghai-based venture capital firm backed by a state-owned enterprise.
State funds, especially those backed by local governments, are very cautious about their investments, said Guo Libo, research head of investment research and consulting firm Chinaventure, when he spoke to Chinese media outlet Caixin last year.
From 2015 to 2018, many state-backed funds preferred investing in pre-IPO companies because they wanted to avoid risks and pursue a quick return, said Guo.
In the paper, Chen wrote, the management of state-backed funds, especially investment decision-makers, was composed mostly of cadres allocated from central or local governments rather than professional investors selected from the market.
“[The cadres] may have done some research on the country’s macroeconomics or some specific industries, but in the long term, they won’t be able to put enough effort into the research of investments, sometimes resulting in inaction because they would rather avoid mistakes than make decisions,” wrote Chen.
State-backed funds have incubated some successful companies in key areas such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence. SMIC, a Shanghai-based contract chip maker backed by state money, has started to take over some chip production of Huawei’s chip designs from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) amid US sanctions. The Hong Kong-listed firm is expected to dual-list its share on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR board in July.
Despite the massive amount of cash injections, state investors, especially those backed by local governments, have sometimes failed to mobilize private capital into targeted sectors.
In October 2019, auditors of three provinces reported that their guidance funds yielded low returns and had not “sufficiently” mustered private capital, according to Chinese business newspaper 21 Caijing (in Chinese).
In central China’s Henan province, some 43 guidance funds were set up as of the end of 2018, with a planned target of raising RMB 38 billion from fiscal money and private investors. However, they only raised RMB 19 billion and fiscal money accounted for 92%, according to the report. In north China’s Hebei province, auditors said only 14.7% of RMB 6.3 billion raised by 13 guidance funds were used for investments by the end of 2018.
These setbacks are signs that while these state-backed funds have a huge share of the market, they hold big disadvantages in terms of inefficiency. Encumbered by their politicized nature and bureaucratic decision-making processes, their efficacy and results are still far from certain.
]]>The top telecommunications regulator in India has asked telecom operators and internet service providers to block local user access to the 59 Chinese apps banned on Monday, local newspaper Telangana Today reported Wednesday.
Why it matters: The move means users who have downloaded the banned apps before may be barred from using them. Affected apps include Bytedance’s popular short video app Tiktok and Tencent’s instant messaging app Wechat, as well as mobile games Mobile Legends Bang Bang and Clash of Kings.
Details: India’s Department of Telecommunications has asked all internet service providers (ISPs) and telecommunication companies to comply with the order immediately and submit compliance reports, according to Telangana Today, citing anonymous sources.
Data security probe: Representatives from the 59 banned Chinese apps can appear before a government panel within 48 hours of the announcement to prove that they do not transfer Indian user data to servers in China, according to the Indian newspaper Economic Times, citing government officials.
Read more: Tiktok pulled from India stores in ban on 59 Chinese apps
Context: The Monday ban on 59 Chinese apps came two weeks after a border clash with China left 20 Indian soldiers dead.
Bytedance’s mega app Tiktok has been removed from Android and Apple app stores in India, its second-largest market, following a Monday ban on 59 Chinese apps on national security concerns. The ban comes two weeks after a border clash with China left 20 Indian soldiers dead.
Among those blacklisted are popular Chinese apps like Tiktok, Wechat, Baidu Maps, Baidu Translate, Sina Corp’s microblogging platform Weibo, as well as mobile games Mobile Legends Bang Bang and Clash of Kings. Other banned apps popular in India include Chinese-owned e-commerce platforms Shein and Club Factory, Bytedance’s social media app Helo, and Alibaba’s UC Browser.
A door slammed shut: Losing access to India’s market is a blow for Chinese companies like Bytedance, which aim to ride India’s rapid growth in mobile internet penetration.
The companies react: Bytedance told TechNode that its team of 2,000 employees in India “is committed to working with the government to demonstrate our dedication to user security and our commitment to the country overall.”
Collateral damage: Many analysts see this decision as a direct reaction to the border clash, bolstered by other factors like protectionism.
Protecting our own: However, Datta-Ray added that “these actions are in keeping with a generally isolationist and nativist approach” on India’s part, as seen in moves such as its withdrawal from the mega free trade agreement known as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership in late 2019.
Nationalist tide: The app ban follows a China-India border clash in the Himalayas that left 20 Indian soldiers dead, the first time in nearly 50 years that Indian soldiers had been killed on the border.
Swing state, swung: In the context of US-China tech tensions, some analysts have interpreted this ban as a loss for China.
Firewall goes up: It isn’t entirely clear how the ban will be implemented. Some apps have already been taken down from app stores, but actively restricting their use would require additional steps.
The board of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi passed Tuesday a resolution on share buybacks, paving the way for the company to repurchase up to $4.3 billion in shares.
Why it matters: Tuesday’s announcement is part of the company’s broader efforts to boost investor confidence.
Details: Xiaomi’s board of directors has approved a resolution allowing the company to repurchase up to 10% of its issued shares, according to a statement filed with the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday.
Context: The Beijing-based company is looking to roll out a more aggressive share buyback initiative following an earlier plan announced in September to repurchase up to HK$12 billion (around $1.6 billion) worth of stock in an effort to halt its decline in value.
Apple will start removing unlicensed games from its China app store as a deadline given by the American technology giant passes on June 30. The company’s move to enforce Chinese game licensing regulations is expect to affect thousands of mobile games that have relied on a loophole to list on the Chinese app store.
Why it matters: Apple’s move will make it much harder for international mobile games developers to access the Chinese market, requiring them to find a Chinese partner to apply for a license from regulators.
Details: TechNode reported in February that Apple sent a notice to developers requiring them to submit valid license numbers for paid games or games offering in-app purchases before June 30 if they want to distribute in mainland China.
Context: The Chinese National Radio and Television Administration, China’s top content regulator, issued a notice in 2016 requiring mobile games to obtain approval from the administration before publishing.
In the past few months, a series of power struggles have rocked Chinese tech companies, including e-commerce company Dangdang, bitcoin mining rig maker Bitmain, and UK chip designer Arm’s Chinese branch.
The disputes at the three companies were over different versions of the same issue: removed company executives trying to regain power. But their approaches varied, as well as the results. Some tried to grab company seals, some tried to restore a key position at a company with the support of the authorities, and some just ignored decisions made by the board.
Bottom line: The power struggles in the three companies are, at their core, battles between management and shareholders. But some peculiarities of Chinese corporate governance makes it easier for executives to seize control and harder to resolve such standoffs.
Grabbing seals: A former executive tried to take control of e-commerce marketplace Dangdang by forcibly seizing the company’s official seals from its office in a daylight raid.
Defying the board: On June 10, Arm China, a subsidiary of British chipmaker Arm, rejected a decision by its own parent company to fire China chief Allan Wu.
Whatever this is? Bitmain’s co-founder Zhan Ketuan’s coup attempt started with reappointing himself as the legal representative of the company with the help of Beijing’s market regulator.
The power of legal representatives: Chinese corporate law requires every company to have one legal representative, an executive position on par with the CEO in importance. Leadership turnovers in a Chinese firm almost always involve the company’s legal representative in some capacity.
The representative is practically the company incarnate: they have the power to act on behalf of the company and are answerable for the company’s mistakes—they can even go to jail on the company’s behalf. It’s a high-risk, high-reward position.
The Chinese-style insider-ownership problem: Experts have attributed the frequent power struggles that happen within Chinese companies partially to a so-called “insider ownership” problem.
When American CEOs get away with ignoring their shareholders, it’s usually because they own company stocks or that the company’s equity ownerships are highly dispersed, Zheng Zhigang, professor at Renmin University’s School of Finance, wrote in an article in 2017.
In China, executives rely more on informal personal relationships to control their companies—so much so they can sideline the board, according to Zheng.
Chinese company founders usually own their companies and hold executive positions, forming “strong social connections” with employees in the process. When leadership challenges arise, this “de-facto control” is often unassailable, even overriding the board of directors, said the article.
A lawyer’s view: Cheng Jun, a lawyer at Beijing Yanshang Law firm, argues that the power struggles happening in Chinese tech companies may be a result of poorly conceived corporate structures.
China’s current company law doesn’t provide comprehensive provisions on how to balance power inside an enterprise, he said, but company founders can formulate clauses in the company constitution to prevent ambiguous power structures.
“I estimate 99% of Chinese companies simply adopted templates of company constitution provided by market regulators instead of drafting their own,” he said.
Trust the court: In the long run, Cheng said, China’s courts can be trusted to resolve the problems at three companies. “Eventually, the decision-makers are company owners, or the shareholders, who exercise their power through the board of directors,” he said.
But “eventually” is a long time. According to Bloomberg’s reporting on Saturday, Wu will remain the legal representative of Arm China until he hands over the company seals he holds. The problem is he refuses to do so.
Shareholders could go through the courts, the article said, “but the process could take years.”
]]>Chinese short video app Zynn on Monday halted its practice of paying users to watch videos and invite friends to use the app, just days after it was removed from both Google’s Play store and the Apple App Store.
Why it matters: Zynn, developed by Chinese tech company Kuaishou, is part of the company’s efforts to challenge Bytedance’s Tiktok in overseas markets. However, Zynn has experienced a series of setbacks after launching in May.
Details: Zynn has replaced the payment feature with a new rewards system called Zynncheers, which gives users points, instead of cash, for signing up and watching videos, according to The Verge.
Context: Launched in May, Zynn became the most downloaded app on the US App Store in the first week of June, according to app data provider Sensor Tower. The app notched more than 2 million installs worldwide in May.
New Zealand and Canada face a dilemma as the US pushes them to ban Huawei from telecoms networks, national security experts from Five Eyes countries said in an online discussion held by Canadian research organization Conference of Defence Associations Institute on June 9.
Smaller countries in the US-led intelligence alliance are trying to avoid being entrapped in the conflicts between the two superpowers while keeping their relations with the US, said Joe Burton, senior lecturer at the University of Waikato’s Institute of Security and Crime Science, during the online panel. Representatives of four out of the five countries participated in the panel, with a UK expert canceling.
The Trump administration has waged a years-long campaign against the Chinese hardware giant, asking allies to ban its telecoms equipment and attempting to cut off its access to key technology. Most recently, the White House moved to cut the Chinese telecommunications equipment and handset maker off from global chip manufacturing.
The United States has long warned of national security risks associated with Huawei’s equipment. The Shenzhen-based telecoms giant could spy on other countries’ telecommunications at Beijing’s behest, Washington has argued.
Around the world, some US allies, like Japan, have responded with restrictions of varying degrees on Huawei equipment.
The UK has sided with the US and plans to phase out Huawei products in the next three years. Australia excluded Huawei equipment from its 5G networks in 2018.
But Five Eyes members New Zealand and Canada have yet to come up with comprehensive policies on Huawei.
New Zealand placed restrictions on Huawei equipment in its 5G rollout, but “the door has been left ajar for [the company’s] involvement in the future,” said Burton.
The Pacific country doesn’t have an official ban targeting Huawei equipment in its 5G network. However, in 2018, the country’s intelligence agency rejected telecoms company Spark New Zealand’s request to use 5G gear provided by Huawei, citing concerns about national security.
In November, Spark named again Huawei as one of its preferred 5G vendors and Wellington has yet to decide whether to approve the new plans.
As a small state with considerable dependence on Chinese goods and markets, New Zealand doesn’t have “the capacity necessary to absorb economic shocks like other countries do,” said Burton.
Burton said that New Zealand’s current policy on Huawei shows they don’t want to get involved, and even entrapped, in US-China conflicts. Burton used entrapment, a term describing countries dragged into wars they don’t want to fight, to refer to the scenario that New Zealand is avoiding.
“We are afraid of entrapment…I think there is a new form of technological entrapment which we should be aware of, and the tensions in the China-US relationship over technology and industrial policy have adverse effects on us which we are keen to avoid,” said Burton.
Canada hasn’t made a decision on whether Huawei’s involvement should be allowed in its 5G networks, despite warnings from its own military against Huawei equipment, said Richard Fadden, a former director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, during the online discussion.
The US-China ongoing diplomatic dispute over the arrest and possible extradition of Huawei executive Meng Wangzhou makes things even more complicated for Canada. Wanzhou was arrested by Canadian authorities in Vancouver in 2018 over alleged sanction violations, at Washington’s request. British Columbia courts have yet to decide whether she will be extradited to the US.
Meng’s arrest plunged Canada’s relations with China into their darkest period in decades. Within a month of Meng’s arrest, China detained, and then formally arrested, two Canadians and halted key agricultural imports from the country. Beijing has threatened further retaliation if Canada bans Huawei from its 5G networks.
But this tit-for-tat diplomacy might not do much to sway Canada. The amount of harm that China can do to Canada is “limited,” said Fadden.
“Our country would not be materially hurt in the medium to long term if we said no to Huawei,” said Fadden, who is also a former Canadian national security advisor.
But Canada could also see reprisals coming from its neighbor and largest trading partner. The US is prepared to reassess its intelligence-sharing arrangement with Canada if Huawei is allowed to participate in Canada’s 5G rollout, the Canadian State Department said earlier this month.
However, the country has long insisted on an independent approach towards Huawei. The country’s industry minister Navdeep Bains told local media in March that Canada would not be “strong-armed into a decision” on the Chinese company’s access to its 5G networks.
“We will make sure that we proceed in a manner that’s in our national interest. We won’t get bullied by any other jurisdictions,” said Bains.
The Huawei dilemma is not going away in the near future. Whatever the result of the US presidential election, the country’s policy towards Huawei will not change, according to Timothy Heath, senior international defense researcher at American policy think tank Rand Corporation.
During the online discussion, Heath said the US approach towards China and Huawei is “bipartisan.”
Even within the Five Eyes, security concerns seem to be universal. Patrick Walsh, associate professor of intelligence & security studies at Australia’s Charles Sturt University said the country has been lobbying Washington to ban Huawei equipment even before Trump placed a series of restrictions on the company.
“We’ve seen things like the intelligence law that have come up, which essentially states that even if you’re a private sector company, if the state calls you to help with an intelligence operation, you’re compelled to participate in that,” said Walsh, referring to China’s 2017 National Intelligence Law which requires organizations and citizens to “support, assist and cooperate with the state intelligence work.”
“Huawei is operating in a sector considered strategic by the state and it is clearly subject to direction by the Chinese state,” said Fadden.
A Huawei spokesperson refused to comment on the discussion but cited company founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei as saying the company is willing to sign non-backdoor agreements with carriers around the world to address concerns over its equipment’s potential security risks.
The company has set up a series of cybersecurity centers around the world, including in the UK, Germany, and Belgium, the spokesperson said.
]]>Bytedance is taking down its video-sharing app Vigo in India, the Tiktok owner said Monday, the second overseas app the company has closed in a month.
Why it matters: With Vigo’s closure just a few days after the company announced that it is phasing out news aggregator Topbuzz, Bytedance is actively narrowing its product line overseas to focus on hugely successful short video app Tiktok.
Details: Vigo has already ceased operations in Brazil and the Middle East and will shut down in India by October 31, according to a company statement on Monday.
Context: Vigo was rebranded from Flipagram, a US video-sharing app Bytedance acquired in early 2017.
]]>READ MORE: INSIGHTS | Bytedance gaming play doesn’t threaten Tencent—yet
Shares of Chinese internet and gaming company Netease jumped 8.1% as they began trading in Hong Kong on Thursday. The company is one of a number of US-listed Chinese tech firms to pursue a second listing in Hong Kong.
Why it matters: The strong debut for Netease, China’s second-largest online gaming company after Tencent, is a good sign for companies that are looking at a dual listing.
Details: Shares of Netease traded at HK$133 (around $17.2) shortly after the Hong Kong market opened at 9:30 am.
Context: The Hong Kong dual-listing trend came as the Trump administration threatened to order US markets to delist Chinese firms. Nasdaq-listed JD.com, a Chinese e-commerce firm, is also seeking to trade its shares in Hong Kong starting on June 18.
Arm’s China subsidiary appears in be in open conflict with headquarters, as it rejected a decision by the British chipmaker to fire China chief Allan Wu.
Details: Arm China, a joint venture set up by Arm Ltd and a Chinese investment consortium in 2018, said in a company statement (in Chinese) Wednesday that Wu remains the chairman and CEO of the company.
Context: UK-based Arm, which is owned by Japanese telecom giant Softbank, licenses semiconductor technologies such as the Arm architecture to chip makers. Arm is a key player for Huawei and other Chinese IC companies, as its architecture are standard for mobile phone CPUs, among other applications.
Read more: Chip designer Arm says Huawei ties unaffected by US trade restrictions
]]>Chinese state-owned telecommunications companies China Telecom and China Unicom urged the US telecommunications regulator not to revoke their authorization to operate international phone services in the country as relations between the two countries deteriorate.
Why it matters: Efforts to restrict Chinese state-owned telecom companies from operating in the US are intensifying as concerns about national security and Chinese espionage gather momentum.
Details: The US arm of China Telecom urged the FCC on Monday not to revoke its right to operate in the US “based solely on foreign policy concerns in the absence of any evidence whatsoever of specific misconduct,” according to Reuters, citing a filing by the Chinese company.
Context: China Telecom and Unicom hold licenses granted by the FCC in the early 2000s allowing them to operate in the country, but US lawmakers have long advocated re-examining their operations.
One night, it was an ordinary walkway in a residential compound in an eastern suburb of Beijing. The next night, it was a night market. Days later, it was gone again.
For a short while, dozens of stalls were set up along a walkway inside the community of around 40,000 residents, selling clothes, packed food, flowers, and accessories.
Wang Meng, 28, was one of those vendors, selling earrings and hairpins.
“In the past, security guards would chase us away immediately,” she told TechNode on Wednesday. “A few days ago people rushed to the street and set up their stalls following Premier Li Keqiang’s remarks on street vendors. The guards tried to cast us out, but in the end they failed.”
The night bazaar popped up during a brief regulatory vacuum in Beijing after Premier Li said street markets were to be legalized on June 1, declaring the so-called “street-stall economy” an “important source of jobs.” This particular market vanished as quickly as it appeared, as Beijing authorities clamped down on spontaneous markets after a five day window.
But elsewhere in China, cities have lifted bans on hawking on public streets in an effort to reboot the economy after the coronavirus outbreak. Chengdu in the southwest province of Sichuan and Nanjing in Jiangsu province have set up thousands of designated areas for street vendors to operate in, state media China News Service reported Thursday.
Li’s public support has made “street vendor” one of China’s hottest buzz phrases—the “internet Plus” or “AI” of summer 2020. Unsurprisingly, tech companies are also jumping on the bandwagon, offering a series of services and incentives tailored for street vendors, including interest-free loans, mobile payment tools, and even food vans for stallholders.
However, vendors interviewed by TechNode were not very interested in tech companies’ much-hyped offerings.
Wang resigned her position as a middle manager at a wealth management firm in May. She now makes an average of around RMB 400 ($56.3) per day from her stall, which is equipped with just a table and a lamp.
She sources stock from e-commerce giant Alibaba’s business-to-business (B2B) marketplace 1688.com. The site announced last week it would offer RMB 70 billion in interest-free loans for street vendors for an undefined period of time, allowing them to stock up goods from the platform without paying before they’ve sold them.
Wang says she is aware of the service, but she is not using it. “I prefer to grow my business within the realm of my financial ability,” she said.
Following on the heels of the Alibaba announcement, e-commerce firm JD.com launched the “Spark” plan on Tuesday, pledging approximately RMB 50 billion worth of goods to supply stall owners and shopkeepers and providing up to RMB 100,000 of interest-free credit per merchant.
On the same day, retailer Suning.com said it would offer stall owners free space to store wares in 10,000 freezers in Suning convenience stores and Carrefour supermarkets across the country, according to local media reports.
Other tech companies responding to Beijing’s call to support street vendors include Tencent’s instant-messaging app Wechat, which said it would offer plans (in Chinese) to help with the “digital transformation of small businesses.” Alibaba’s payment tool Alipay said in a blog post (in Chinese) on Tuesday it would also provide small businesses with interest-free loans.
Wang also runs an accessory shop on Alibaba’s online marketplace Taobao which she opened last month. When asked about the incentives offered by tech companies, she said she is more worried about making sales face to face than digital transformation.
Policy and regulation can have a significant impact on the tech world, especially in China. From mass entrepreneurship to the artificial intelligence boom, government-backed initiatives have created lots of opportunities for Chinese entrepreneurs.
Tech majors often react swiftly to government initiatives. In a Wechat post, Alipay responded to Premier Li’s call in the tone of a young pioneer reporting for duty: “Premier Li, we are already making plans!” The payments platform promised to help to raise income for small businesses from digital operations by 20% and the availability of online loans by 20%.
Chinese tech firms looking for new sources of growth likely also see the “street stall economy” as a new opportunity. Chinese tech companies have long trumpeted so-called “internet thinking”—a business philosophy used by low-margin internet-based services that attract new users by offering them free services or goods. After amassing a sizable user base, they monetize by leveraging online advertising and paid services.
With the potential for street markets to grow into bigger businesses, tech companies are offering them interest-free loans in order to capture their business now in hopes to later sell them lucrative services such as high-rate lending, payment systems, to raw material supply.
Most of the tech companies that are offering interest-free loans to street vendors already offered loans to small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at sky-high rates.
JD.com offers an online lending service for small businesses with an annual interest rate of 11%, according to its website (in Chinese). Alipay parent company Ant Financial offers a loan service targeting SMEs with an annual rate of up to 17.2% through its online Mybank (in Chinese). By comparison, China’s targeted medium-term lending facility, the Chinese central bank’s policy lending tool for small and private firms, has an annual rate of 2.95% as of April, according to Reuters.
Part-time vendor Li Nan told TechNode she’s looking at loans, but worries they won’t be free forever.
Li, a 22-year-old sales assistant at an internet company based in Beijing, sells prepared seafood she makes at home in the evenings at the same marketplace where Wang’s stall is located. She resigned from her previous company early in the year with the hope of finding a new job after the Spring Festival holiday in late January. However, it took her three months to restart her career because of the Covid-19 outbreak which brought the economy to a standstill. Her new company pays her around RMB 2,000 less than her previous job, she told TechNode.
Li says street selling is just an initial step and she wants to open her own—indoor—seafood restaurant in the future.
“Of course interest-free loans provided by tech companies may help me expand my business considering my financial situation,” she said.
However, Li believes that those loans won’t always be free. “By the time I open my restaurant, I will choose services that suit me the best,” she said.
However, Li’s restaurant plans may have to wait for Beijing’s strict city management policies. On Saturday, the City Urban Administrative and Law Enforcement Bureau of Beijing pledged to purge “illegal behavior including street vending,” according to official newspaper the Beijing Daily (in Chinese).
The authorities took action ahead of the announcement. On Friday night, after the city management authorities and security guards took over the night market, street vendors vanished from the street as quickly as they appeared a few days before.
The tech giants are still powering ahead with plans for the street stall economy—but you may have to get outside the fifth ring road to see the results.
]]>Tiktok owner Bytedance has halted updates for Topbuzz, its news aggregator app for overseas markets, the company confirmed on Friday.
Why it matters: Topbuzz is part of Bytedance’s attempt to replicate the success of Jinri Toutiao, the company’s popular news aggregator for Chinese users. However, the app, which amasses news stories from publications such as British newspaper the Daily Mail and American news website The Daily Beast, has seen a lukewarm reception from overseas users.
Details: Topbuzz has been taken down from Apple’s App Store and Google’s Play store as of Thursday afternoon. A company spokesperson said the company is no longer providing new versions of the app and will gradually reduce article updates to existing users.
Context: In September, The Information reported that Bytedance was in talks with potential buyers for the news aggregator including US-based media companies.
We are delivering one exclusive thematic newsletter a week to TechNode Squared members. Our new in-focus series features in-depth reporting on the latest developments in key areas:
This week, we launch China VC Roundup, a look at investments as a leading indicator of tech trends. Each issue will round up monthly tech investment activities in China and feature an interview with a tech VC.
As the slowing global economy turns China’s capital winter into a little ice age, it looks like all but a few tech sectors might have to bundle up heavily for the cold.
Normally one of the world’s most active venture capital markets, China’s technology VC investment boom from 2014 to 2015 brought up a new generation of unicorns such as Bytedance, TikTok’s owner, and ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing.
But last year, that VC boom turned into a bust as investors struggled to deal with a slowing economy and growing financial headwinds, leaving the country’s cash-ravenous startups in a “capital winter.”
At the time, some investors were glad to see a correction to the overheated market. But now some are getting nervous. If capital winter in 2019 was “hard mode,” 2020 has become “hell mode,” said an article in the Chinese venture capital news outlet PE Daily. Between Covid-19 and the escalating US-China feud, VC activities in China’s tech sector nosedived in the first four months of 2020, and private-equity firms raised less money as the exit uncertainties scared investors away.
Investment in China’s tech startups totaled RMB 119.1 billion (around $16.7 billion) in the first quarter of this year, down 31.3% year-on-year, according to business information provider Itjuzi.com. Meanwhile, the number of VC funding deals to tech companies fell to 634 in the quarter from 1,143 a year earlier.
In April, Chinese businesses got back on track as the virus came under control. But VC activities didn’t climb out of the hole. Around 223 VC deals happened in China’s tech-related industries in April, with the disclosed sum of money raised totaling RMB 22.5 billion, according to Chinese venture market research institute Zero2ipo Research.
The dramatic fall in fundings to tech startups is due to a “more cautious approach“ taken by VC firms amid the coronavirus outbreak, according to Xu Miaocheng, investment vice president at Beijing-based VC firm Unity Venture, in an interview with TechNode last month.
Fear of economic hardship is not the only factor stopping venture capitalists from making deals with startups, said Xu. The national lockdown from late January to the end of March also got in the way of VC firms’ on-the-spot investigations of companies.
Meanwhile, VC firms raised less money from their backers. Chinese VC firms amassed a total of RMB 207.2 billion from limited partners in the first quarter, a year-on-year decrease of 19.8% and a quarter-on-quarter falloff of more than 40%, according to Zero2ipo Research.
A few companies have gotten funded even in hard times. You may not be surprised to hear that they’re in the strategic fields of semiconductors and biotech.
In the first quarter, companies in the biotech industry closed 41 venture capital funding rounds, raising a total of RMB 11.7 billion. Semiconductor companies, in the meantime, raised RMB 10.2 billion in 22 deals.
State-backed funds, which usually prefer semiconductors and manufacturing industries, became more active this year because of both the post-virus stimulus and Beijing’s push for high-tech self-reliance.
China’s second semiconductor-focused investment fund, which raised RMB 204 billion last year, began to make investments in March. The RMB 2.3 billion first deal of the state-backed “big fund” went to Shanghai-based chip-designing company Unisoc, according to Shanghai Securities News (in Chinese).
China also announced a so-called “new infrastructure” initiative, motivating local governments and enterprises to increase investment in seven key areas, including 5G networks, artificial intelligence, and data centers. Analysts expect the amount of investment from the public and private sectors into new infrastructure projects to reach RMB 1 trillion in 2020.
According to Itjuzi, in the first quarter, there were 85 acquisitions in China’s tech VC market, compared with 122 in the same quarter last year. However, more companies exited by listing their shares, powered by increasingly tech-friendly rules on mainland exchanges. The number of initial public offerings of tech companies rose to 66 from 44 a year earlier as early-stage companies came home for exits.
2020 has been a bad year for Chinese tech companies trying to raise funds in the US financial market. Short-sellers released a series of reports accusing some US-listed Chinese companies of committing fraud, including beverage chain Luckin, video-sharing platform IQiyi, and online education firm GSX, denting confidence in fast-growth China stories.
Last week, US President Donald Trump said his administration will study ways to safeguard American investors from the risks of investing in Chinese companies. On May 21, the US Senate passed a bill that could block some Chinese companies from listing shares on American stock exchanges.
Meanwhile, China continues to open its financial markets to tech firms. The country launched STAR Market, a Nasdaq-style high-tech board last year. In late April, China announced it would bring the listing process used by Shanghai’s STAR Market bourse to Shenzhen’s ChiNext startup board, in the country’s step to further mobilize private capital to assist companies hit by the outbreak and accelerating financial market reforms amid increasing scrutiny of Chinese firms in overseas stock markets.
In the first quarter, the Shanghai Stock Exchange and Shenzhen Stock Exchange were the most popular destinations for Chinese tech companies, with 35 and 18 firms going public on the two bourses, respectively, according to Itjuzi. Through the quarter, only four Chinese tech companies listed on Nasdaq, and one on the New York Stock Exchange. By comparison, 24 out of 149 newly listed Chinese tech companies chose Nasdaq last year, according to another Itjuzi report.
In the worst-case scenario, US markets will be shut down to many small Chinese companies. Q1 data shows startups are already moving back from New York to Shanghai and Shenzhen, meaning money flow to China’s tech sector will become less international. Chinese startups may lose appeal to investors looking to exit with “hard currency” in order to bypass China’s strict foreign exchange controls.
Tony Verb, co-founder and managing partner at Greaterbay Ventures & Advisors
Tony Verb is a serial entrepreneur, urban innovator, venture capitalist, and film producer from Hungary, based in Hong Kong. Greaterbay Ventures & Advisors is an integrated investment and consulting firm specializing in modern urban development and smart cities.
What is the impact of the Luckin scandal on China’s venture capital market?
The Luckin coffee thing is a big deal. It’s a pretty big one in terms of the numbers and the distortions, and Luckin coffee was such a celebrated, high-optics example of the fast growth China story. It’s a major shame for the Chinese startup ecosystem that this happened, because people in the West are always questioning how much they can trust and rely on numbers in China.
I don’t think, ultimately, things will change too much. People will be investing in Chinese companies and Chinese IPOs. I think it’s more of a reputational thing, and it’s more likely to hurt the China brands. It is not the case that Chinese companies cannot raise funds anymore. But definitely, investors will be much more cautious and do stricter due diligence, which I think ultimately will be a good thing.
What does stricter due diligence mean for Chinese startups?
Investors can only do as much due diligence as the information they have access to. Ultimately, it might hurt the valuations of startups. Because when investors may take the risk of fraud into consideration, they’ll calculate that risk and it potentially hurts the premiums. From a macro perspective, it won’t change too much. It will just make investors more cautious and keep certain investors away from riskier-looking opportunities.
Chinese companies have been recently facing increasing scrutiny in the US capital markets. Recently the US Senate passed a bill that could delist some Chinese companies from US stock markets. How will this backlash affect China’s private equity market?
I think this means the exit strategy will be different for Chinese companies. I’m based in Hong Kong; it’s definitely not a bad piece of news for the Hong Kong Exchange. And we’ve been seeing the dual-listing trend going on in Hong Kong. Alibaba has listed its shares in Hong Kong, and JD.com is about to list. In the past years, Chinese companies have already been advised not to list in the US because of the risk they are facing right now.
Will Hong Kong be the next destination for Chinese tech startups? What’s Hong Kong’s appeal compared with China’s STAR Market and newly reformed ChiNext startup board?
The appeal of Hong Kong has not changed—it’s an international market for companies and entrepreneurs exiting in hard currency, which is very different from RMB. As long as China still has capital controls, Hong Kong will enjoy benefits over Shenzhen and Shanghai. Especially for Chinese companies that want to be positioned as more international, Hong Kong will always have more PR value and practical value over other exchanges.
Are Chinese companies’ dual-listings in Hong Kong a trend? Why is this happening?
I think this will be absolutely a trend, especially if what President Trump said becomes true. Some of the dual listings happened because companies want to mitigate the potential risk of such steps. Also, since dual-class shares have been allowed on the Hong Kong stock exchange, frankly, there isn’t much reason for not to list in Hong Kong. And it is closer to home.
As I said, as long as there is access to the international financial markets and foreign exchange in Hong Kong, this trend is going to increase. And as long as the risk in the US will be present, this trend will continue.
]]>Tiktok apologized Thursday to users after many accused the popular short video app of censoring certain hashtags related to the current protests that were upload by black creators.
Why it matters: Tiktok, owned by Beijing-based startup Bytedance, faces increasing scrutiny in the US over alleged content censorship. It was previously reported that the app censors specific topics that were deemed politically sensitive to the Chinese government.
Details: Tiktok users accused the platform last week of censoring hashtags #BlackLivesMatter and #GeorgeFloyd amid nationwide protests in the US against the death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man who was killed during a police arrest on May 25.
Cotext: Before this, many Tiktok users launched a campaign by changing their profile pictures to a black power symbol after accusations that the app censored content uploaded by black creators, according to CNN.
Liu Zhen, senior vice president of Bytedance, has resigned, the Tiktok owner confirmed to TechNode on Friday. Liu’s departure comes amid reports that the Chinese internet giant is shifting its center of power away from its home country to focus on global expansion.
Why it matters: A series of organizational changes are taking place in Bytedance as the company moves the decision-making and engineering capabilities of its international businesses out of China, according to a Reuters report published Friday.
READ MORE: Kevin Mayer might be exactly what Bytedance needs right now
Details: Liu resigned from the company because of “personal reasons,” Bytedance said Friday.
Context: TikTok has been under increasing scrutiny in the United States over its Chinese ownership. The company has recently stepped up efforts to comfort US regulators by improving its operation transparency and hiring executives locally, including naming former Disney streaming head Kevin Mayer as TikTok’s CEO last week.
Chinese internet giant Tencent announced Tuesday it will invest RMB 500 billion (around $69.9 billion) into cloud computing and other technologies over the next five years.
Why it matters: While the Shenzhen-based company said the investment plan is a response to Beijing’s call for investment in so-called “new infrastructure,” it is also strikingly similar to a plan announced by e-commerce giant Alibaba last month.
Details: Key sectors of Tencent’s investment plan include cloud computing, AI, blockchain, data centers, supercomputer, and cybersecurity, Dowson Tong, Tencent’s executive vice president, told reporters Tuesday.
Context: Tencent’s announcement came days after Chinese Premier Li Keqiang called for investment in new infrastructure during his government work report speech at the opening of the National People’s Congress on Friday.
Productivity tool Notion said Monday its service is no longer accessible from within China, weeks after a Chinese company launched a similar app that has been accused of copying the US startup.
Why it matters: Sites inaccessible from within China are usually services that provide information or methods of communication. It is rare that productivity tools like Notion are restricted from offering services in the country.
Details: Notion’s status Twitter account tweeted Monday its service had been “blocked by a firewall in China” and that the company is “monitoring the situation.”
Context: Just weeks before Notion was blocked in China, a Chinese company launched a Notion clone called Hanzhou.
Chinese lawmakers have asked the government to set up appropriate mechanisms to handle personal data collected during the Covid-19 outbreak.
Why it matters: Strict epidemic prevention measures taken in China have given authorities at all levels more legitimacy to gather people’s sensitive data, including their ID numbers, travel history, and contact information. The data is also provided to non-official entities such as shopping malls, train stations, and property management companies by individuals in exchange for access.
Details: Lian Yuming, a member of the CPPCC (Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference), filed a proposal to the political advisory body, calling for the upcoming Personal Data Protection Law to consider listing citizens’ sensitive information as “special category data” and protecting them as part of citizens’ right to privacy, according to Caixin.
Context: Chinese officials have a poor record of handling personal data they have collected. In February, residents of Wuhan, the capital city of Hubei province and the center of the outbreak, found their information including their phone and ID numbers, home addresses circulating online. They had previously filed their personal information to local officials tasked with monitoring the movements of people coming from areas hit by the virus.
]]>As the US moves to cut Huawei off from global chip manufacturing, experts say the domestic market doesn’t offer a replacement. Flagship domestic semiconductor fabrication company SMIC can’t handle state of the art products, and itself is vulnerable to being disrupted by a US export ban.
The Chinese telecommunications equipment manufacturer and handset maker could be cut off from global chip manufacturing by a new regulation announced by the US Department of Commerce May 15. The regulation requires companies around the world to obtain licenses for sales to Huawei of semiconductors made with US technology.
Affected Huawei suppliers include Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker that produces high-end chip design for Huawei; Taiwan’s Win Semiconductors, which makes Huawei’s radio frequency chip designs; and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics, which ships memory and storage to the Chinese company.
Guo Ping, the rotating chairman of Huawei, told reporters Monday that the rule would “inevitably harm Huawei’s business to a great extent” and that the company is confident that it would find a solution soon.
“If Huawei finds no way around this and TSMC closely follows the US ban, this would be a severe blow to Huawei’s business—which is exactly what the US administration is aiming for,” Jan-Peter Kleinhans, director of the project IT Security in the Internet of Things at the Stiftung Neue Verantwortung, told TechNode.
READ MORE: Export controls and the rise of US-China techno-nationalism
On the same day the Commerce Department rule was made public, two Chinese state-backed funds announced they would inject a total of $2.2 billion into a domestic chipmaker, Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC). The investment is seen as China’s measure to foster chip-making capacity at home amid international supply chain uncertainty faced by Chinese companies. Experts say the company is the only domestic supplier comparable to TSMC.
SMIC also uses US-made equipment, but it is unlikely to cut ties with Huawei at Washington’s behest.
Huawei reportedly had started shifting some production of its chip designs from TSMC to SMIC by April, but the new export ban may drive Huawei to accelerate the transfer. The Nikkei Asian Review reported Monday that TSMC, a key manufacturer of chips designed by Huawei’s Hisilicon, has halted new orders from Huawei in response to Washington’s new rule change.
However, experts said SMIC may not have the capacity or capability to produce chips Huawei needs, including its 5-nanometer Kirin 1100 processor for servers and 7-nanometer Kirin 810 chip for smartphones. Hisilicon, a subsidiary of Huawei, designs those chips.
“SMIC has no production capabilities for anything close to 7-nanometer,” said Kleinhans.
SMIC has the capability to produce 14-nanometer wafers and the company has already started producing the Kirin 710 chipset for Huawei’s low-end Honor smartphones, according to Kleinhans. However, the company currently only has a production capacity of 6,000 14-nanometer wafers per month, which, according to an expert cited by Chinese media The Paper, is nowhere near enough for Huawei.
Losing access to higher-end chips produced by TSMC, such as Kirin 1100 and Tiangang, a 7-nanometer chipset designed for 5G base stations, would leave Huawei unable to make its flagship smartphones and 5G towers.
The $2.2 billion injections from state-based funds will go to a SMIC wafer plant. The company said the investment would help the plant to increase capacity of 14-nanometer wafers to 35,000 per month.
Nomura Holdings, a Japanese securities firm, said in a report recently the defect rate of 14-nanometer chips made by SMIC was around 70% and it would take the company one to two years to demonstrate proficiency, according to Chinese media Caixin.
“SMIC can’t produce anything smaller than 10-nanometer and the cutting edge chips that Hisilicon needs for the Kirin chips is 5nm…It’s generations behind,” said Alex Capri, visiting senior fellow at the National University of Singapore Business School.
Trendforce, a Taiwan-based semiconductor research firm, said in an investment note that the defect rate of 14-nanometer chips produced by SMIC is so high that Huawei will have no choice but to rely on TSMC to produce wafers under 16nm.
SMIC is also vulnerable to pressure from Washington, because the Chinese company also uses US technologies to produce chips. American authorities will likely claim it is a violation of the new rules if it continues to supply Huawei.
“About 50% of all the microchips that are made anywhere by anyone involve US manufacturing equipment,” said Capri. An even higher percentage of chips have use American-made design software, he added.
The US hasn’t targeted the Shanghai-based contract chipmaker yet, but a deeper collaboration with Huawei would potentially enrage the US government.
“The US could just put SMIC on a restricted entity list. In which case, you would have the same situation,” said Capri.
]]>Tiktok announced Tuesday it has hired Kevin Mayer, formerly The Walt Disney Company’s top streaming executive, as the chief executive officer of the popular short video app.
Why it matters: The company is intensifying its efforts to address concerns around its Chinese ownership. Tiktok’s Chinese parent, Beijing-based Bytedance, has stepped up efforts to separate the app from its Chinese operations by hiring executives in the US, including cybersecurity veteran Roland Cloutier, the chief information security officer who began in April, and former Youtube executive Vanessa Pappas, who began running its US operations last year.
Details: Bytedance appointed Mayer as its chief operating officer and Tiktok’s chief executive officer, the company said in a statement Monday.
“Kevin’s wealth of experience building successful global businesses makes him an outstanding fit for our mission of inspiring creativity for users globally. As one of the world’s most accomplished entertainment executives, Kevin is incredibly well placed to take Bytedance’s portfolio of products to the next level.”
— Zhang Yiming, Bytedance founder and CEO
Context: Mayer served as the chairman of Disney’s Direct-to-Consumer & International subsidiary that includes several streaming businesses. He led the global launch in November of its Disney+ streaming service, which amassed more than 50 million subscribers in five months.
A high-level executive of Huawei said Monday the company will find a solution to a new rule announced by the Trump administration that effectively cuts the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker off from global chip suppliers.
Why it matters: This is Huawei’s first official response to the new rule change made public on Friday. The company said it is still evaluating the impact of the new restrictions.
Details: The Commerce Department’s rule would “inevitably” harm Huawei’s business to a great extent, said Guo Ping, the rotating chairman of Huawei, in a press conference Monday at the company’s headquarters in Shenzhen. He added that the company is confident that it would find a solution soon.
“The US believes being in the lead in technology is a base of its global supremacy, and that any country with advance technology would pose a threat to its supremacy. Unfortunately, Huawei is taking a lead in the information and communications technology (ICT) sector.”
Guo Ping, rotating chairman
“Huawei categorically opposes the amendments made by the US Department of Commerce to its foreign direct product rule that target Huawei specifically. This new rule will impact the expansion, maintenance, and continuous operations of networks worth hundreds of billions of dollars that we have rolled out in more than 170 countries”
Huawei spokesman Joe Kelly, reading from a company statement during the press conference.
“Ultimately, this will harm US interests.”
Huawei in the published statement
Context: The Trump administration’s new rule, effective Friday but with a 120-day grace period, will block companies around the world from using American-originated equipment and software to design or produce chips that are supplied to Huawei or its subsidiaries.
China’s state-backed funds injected more than $2 billion into domestic chip maker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) as the country pushes for semiconductor independence from the US.
Why it matters: China has stepped up efforts to build a chip designing and making ecosystem inside the country with the help of massive state-based investment schemes and a financial market that allows more private capital to access.
Details: Shanghai-based SMIC said Friday that the China National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund and the Shanghai Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund would invest $1.7 billion and $750 million respectively into one of its wafer plants.
Context: The Trump administration announced Friday a new rule that will block companies around the world from using American-made components and technology to design or produce chips for Huawei or its subsidiaries.
Long-suffering Chinese console gamers were disappointed yet again when the global hit game Animal Crossing vanished from Taobao a month ago.
With only three Nintendo Switch games licensed for sale in China, gamers have long relied on the grey market for imported consoles and game cartridges.
Using sales volume data from market analyst firm Niko partners and public price information, TechNode estimates that Nintendo sold $32 million worth of the Switch console in 2019. We estimate that sales of consoles in China on the grey market amounted to $183 million.
For all consoles, the grey market is also believed to be much larger than the legal one. Niko Partners estimates that 60% more consoles were sold illegally in China in 2018 compared to legal ones. Based on TechNode’s observations, imported consoles sell for 1.5 times the price of domestic ones. Multiply this out and you get a grey market 240% the size of the licensed one.
Bottom line: Much like news and films, Chinese authorities are keen to regulate imported console games. The approach is very similar: A frugal licensing regime approves very few games. But content controls haven’t stopped fans from tracking down the latest Japanese releases. Chinese developers are facing an uphill battle to compete with billion-dollar incumbents that have nursed the console industry. So far, they haven’t come up with a game or console to compete with blockbusters by Sony and Nintendo. With tacit support from Japanese console makers, it’s unlikely that the grey market will ever die out.
Banned but tolerated: Owning a forbidden title won’t get you in trouble, but selling them might land you in jail.
“If the door’s locked, isn’t there a window? And if the window’s shut, isn’t there a doggie door?”
A Weibo user commenting about attempts to restrict gamers’ options (our translation).
Playstation: Sony’s digital store is divided into regions, but it’s easy to jump regions.
Switch: Nintendo has tried harder to comply with regulations, driving fans away from China market consoles
Weak local competition: China doesn’t have competitors to Japan’s titans. Independent Chinese studios have released a few well-liked console games, but no blockbusters, while attempts at a Chinese console have gone nowhere. Titles in series like Call of Duty, Tomb Raider, or Grand Theft Auto cost tens, often hundreds, of millions of dollars to make.
Other priorities: China has a world-class games industry, but consoles are not its priority.
Tough crowd: Gamers tend to demand the biggest, latest thing, and Chinese gamers want the same titles as their peers in Seoul and Cincinnati. It’s hard to get between them and a popular title. Restrictions on popular titles are met with staunch resistance.
Shocked, shocked! Ultimately, censoring the market would require console makers’ cooperation. With not much legal market to lose and big money in grey market sales, they don’t seem to care.
Admitting defeat? Authorities may be coming around to a more lenient stance on console releases. The Nintendo Switch Lite, PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X are expected to see legal releases in China in 2020. With a lighter hand, regulators could finally get control over the market.
Censors and console makers are in an intricate negotiation process. As consoles are rising in popularity among Chinese gamers, this is a story to watch.
]]>Popular video-conferencing app Zoom has suspended individual users in China from hosting meetings on the platform. One of the company’s Chinese resellers announced the changes earlier this month.
Why it matters: US-based Zoom has become one of the most popular choices for Chinese business professionals working from home to host meetings amid the Covid-19 pandemic. It is also widely used by individuals to host webinars and give online courses.
Details: Zoom has suspended free users in China from hosting meetings starting from May 1. Individuals are no longer allowed to purchase its services, said Shanghai Donghan Telecommunications, one of Zoom’s Chinese partners which runs the website zoom.com.cn.
Context: Chinese users of Zoom began to switch to localized versions of the app, including those provided by Shanghai Donghan and Shanghai Huawan in September after the service was blocked in the country in the same month.
The US President Donald Trump extended Wednesday for another year an executive order that bans telecommunications equipment and services from foreign companies that could pose a threat to national security. The order effectively bans US businesses from working with Huawei.
Why it matters: The order, originally signed by Trump in May 2019, is widely seen as a measure against Chinese telecoms equipment makers such as Huawei and ZTE, even though it doesn’t list any countries or companies by name.
Details: Trump announced Wednesday the extension of the exclusive order signed in May 2019 that invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which authorizes the president to regulate commerce after declaring a national emergency in response to any unusual threat to the US with a foreign source.
Context: The Commerce Department added Huawei and 70 of its affiliates in May 2019 to a trade blacklist that bars US companies from doing business with them without government approvals. It gave Huawei a 90-day grace period soon after the ban was imposed. The reprieve was later extended in August, November, and then in February.
Tencent reported Wednesday better-than-expected revenue for the first quarter thanks to a surge in gaming incomes.
Why it matters: The Covid-19 outbreak gave a boost to the company’s gaming revenue as people turned to online entertainment while stuck at home.
By the numbers: The company booked RMB 108 billion (around $15.2 billion) in total revenue in the quarter ended March 31, an increase of 26% compared with the same period of time last year, the company said Wednesday.
Headwinds: However, Tencent has also warned the upsurge could be temporary.
“We expect in-game consumption activities to largely normalize as people return to work, and we see some headwinds for the online advertising industry.”
Context: Shares of Hong Kong-listed Tencent have climbed by 14.4% since the beginning of this year, compared to a 15% decline in the Hong Kong exchange’s Hang Seng index.
Apple has advised one of its Airpod factories in China to make a major investment in a key supplier as the company moves to create an alternative to its longtime Iphone assembler, Taiwan’s Foxconn, according to a Nikkei Asian Review report.
Why it matters: The deal would bring Luxshare-ICT, a lesser-known Chinese assembler of Apple’s Airpods, closer to producing Iphones, grabbing share from Foxconn.
Details: Luxshare has been in talks with Taiwan’s Catcher Technology, the world’s second-largest metal casing provider, for more than a year and has recently entered a deeper round of negotiations, according to the Nikkei report, citing a person familiar with the talks.
Context: Luxshare will help Apple produce 3 million to 4 million Airpod units in Vietnam in the second quarter as the California-based tech giant further diversifies its production out of China, according to another Nikkei report published last week.
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Japanese gaming giant Sony suspended services for its Chinese Playstation Store on Sunday for “system security reasons.”
Why it matters: China is stepping up regulations on foreign games. The suspension follows orders from authorities to remove listings for physical copies of a popular Nintendo game from e-commerce platform Taobao, and to close an Apple App Store “loophole” that allowed foreign game developers to bypass China’s gaming license system.
Details: Sony said in a statement on Chinese social media platform Weibo that the suspension would start at 7 a.m. on Sunday and that it doesn’t have a timeline for resumption of service.
Context: Sony introduced the Playstation console to the Chinese market in 2014 after the country lifted a ban on the sale of foreign-made gaming consoles.
It has been one month since short seller Wolfpack Research accused Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi of inflating 2019 revenue by up to 40%. Iqiyi has provided no solid evidence to defend itself besides an indignant statement denying all the accusations, but neither has it made a sudden confession like fellow short-seller prey Luckin Coffee.
Investors still seem optimistic about the company, and shares are around where they were before the report. Is this a case of “fool me twice”? Or is there a better case for Iqiyi than there was for the hot drink humbugs?
Bottom line: Iqiyi is not Luckin. Three-year-old Luckin is a failed attempt to blitz-scale a coffee chain that never proved its model. Iqiyi, founded 10 years ago, is one of the few survivors of the ruthless competition in China’s video-streaming market and it has a mature business model. The company has its problems, but the short report seems to have missed its mark.
It’s short season for China tech stocks after Luckin Coffee (as the Bard writes) “exits, pursued by a bear.” Can you trust people who win when companies lose? Who’s going to be next? Check out the highlights of TechNode’s recent webinar on Luckin and short sellers (free to members) for an expert take.
A glancing blow: The share price of Iqiyi dropped only briefly by up to 11.2% when Wolfpack dropped the report on April 7 morning, and ended the day up 3.2%. In the following month, shares of the company fluctuated within a normal range, and now are at about the same level as before the report was released.
Like Luckin? Shares of Luckin Coffee behaved similarly after the first accusations surfaced in a report made public by short seller Muddy Waters in early February, wobbling without a sharp move. The nosedive came after the company made a surprise confession on April 2 that several employees, including its COO, had fabricated transactions for much of 2019, amounting to an estimated RMB 2.2 billion (around $311 million) in falsified sales. Shares of the company were wiped out by nearly 80% the same day.
What did the short report say? In a report published April 7 and tweeted by Muddy Waters, Wolfpack claims that Iqiyi had inflated its 2019 revenue by between approximately RMB 8 billion to RMB 13 billion, or 27% to 44%.
What did Iqiyi say? Iqiyi said in a statement on April 8 that the report “contains numerous errors, unsubstantiated statements and misleading conclusions and interpretations.” But the company didn’t provide any details to back up its claims.
Problems with the Wolfpack report: Iqiyi may have a reason for its faint response: Wolfpack’s report has serious flaws in evidence and reasoning. It’s sloppy, too, about details, wrongly listing the cities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen among China’s four provincial-level metropolises. Guangzhou and Shenzhen are both in the province of Guangdong.
Over-generalization: In places, Wolfpack goes out on a limb to find figures to debunk. I’m not entirely convinced that Iqiyi ever really made some of the claims Wolfpack tries to disprove.
Comparison of apples and oranges:
Problems with Iqiyi: Iqiyi certainly has real problems. It is often called China’s Netflix, and to some extent, it is. The company earns more than half of its revenue from paid membership services in the fourth quarter of 2019. However, memberships are not a profitable business yet, while other sources of revenue are in decline.
Conclusion: Iqiyi is not Luckin, but neither is it Netflix. There’s no solid evidence of fraud, and there’s clearly a real business there. But by ordinary business metrics, it could well be overvalued. Iqiyi is not going to zero, but it could be headed for a drop.
Correction: An earlier version of this article, which appeared in TechNode’s Distilled newsletter on May 9, incorrectly stated Iqiyi’s content expenses as RMB 5.7 in the fourth quarter of 2019. The company’s content costs for the quarter were RMB 5.7 billion.
]]>A Dutch privacy regulator said Friday it would investigate how short video app Tiktok handles the data of teenagers and children on the platform, Reuters is reporting.
Why it matters:The popular social media app, owned by Beijing-based Bytedance, is under increasing scrutiny in overseas markets, including the United States and the European Union, over its data protection practices.
Details:The Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA) announced Friday that it would examine whether Tiktok clearly states how it uses data and whether “parental consent is required for Tiktok to collect, store and use children’s personal data.”
Context: In March, Tiktok announced a “transparency center” in its US office to address concerns over the security and privacy of its product.
Huawei has helped China’s biggest mobile network operator to bring 5G connectivity to the summit of Mount Everest with a base station at an altitude of 6,500 meters.
Why it matters: Establishing 5G coverage on the summit of Mount Everest, the Earth’s tallest mountain above sea level, is a largely symbolic move that nonetheless signals China’s massive 5G buildout plan continues, undeterred by the Covid-19 outbreak.
Details: Huawei has teamed up with state-owned carrier China Mobile to build three base stations along the climbing route of Mount Everest’s north face, the side of the mountain facing China, according to a statement from Huawei on Thursday.
Context: Huawei has helped China’s three major carriers, including China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom, to roll out 5G services on Mount Everest to provide coverage to camps along the north-side climbing route.
Smartphone sales in China fell 22% in the first quarter as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak, according to a report released Wednesday, with embattled Chinese smartphone maker Huawei the only manufacturer that saw a growth in the quarter.
Why it matters: The coronavirus outbreak has accelerated a downward trend in the world’s largest smartphone market.
“The drastic fall in Q1 China market was primarily dragged down by the dismal sales of smartphones in February (-35% YoY)… However, during the lockdown period in China, local e-commerce giants such as Alibaba and JD.com managed to sustain efficient business operations and delivery services in major Chinese cities outside of Hubei province. For the strong support from these e-commerce players, China’s smartphone sales appeared less negative than our original expectation.”
—Flora Tang, research analyst at Counterpoint Research
Details: Huawei was the only smartphone vendor in the top five that posted positive year-on-year growth of 6% in the first quarter, according to the report. The Shenzhen-based company retained the top spot in China’s smartphone market with 39% share.
Context: Huawei said last week its total revenue for the first quarter grew only 1.4% year on year to RMB 182.2 billion (around $25.7 billion). During the same period, China’s GDP contracted 6.8%.
TikTok owner Bytedance has quietly launched in overseas markets the video-editing app hugely popular in its home territory under the moniker, Viamaker.
Why it matters: The Chinese version of Viamaker, or Jianying, has been among the top 10 most-downloaded free apps on Apple’s App Store in China for more than 90 days, according to data from app store intelligence firm Sensor Tower.
Details: Bytedance initially launched Viamaker on April 24, according to the app’s page on Google’s Play store, which showed that its downloads exceeded 100,000 as of Wednesday afternoon.
Context: The app was developed by Shenzhen Lianmeng Technology, a startup Bytedance acquired in 2018 for $300 million.
With contributions from Eliza Gkritsi.
China announced Monday a reform that brings the Nasdaq-style registration-based listing process used by Shanghai’s STAR Market bourse to Shenzhen’s Chinext startup board.
Why it matters: China is stepping up efforts to mobilize private capital to assist companies hit by the coronavirus outbreak and accelerating financial market reforms amid increasing scrutiny of Chinese firms in overseas stock markets.
Details: The new IPO system allows companies that have yet to turn a profit to list on the Chinext startup board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, according to a draft rule (in Chinese) by the bourse on Monday.
Context: China opened the STAR Market on the Shanghai Stock Exchange for trading in July, making it the first registration-based board in the country. A total of 99 companies were trading on the STAR market as of Tuesday.
Does Tencent have a monopoly on China’s instant messaging market? You might think so. It has nearly 1.2 billion monthly active users, the same company owns QQ, with more than 800 million users. It’s hardly possible to live in Chinese cities without using WeChat to make contact, pay bills, and recently, pass health checkpoints.
But a recent attempt to prove that Tencent is a monopoly in a Chinese court collapsed in January, according to court files made public on April 17.
The failed attempt indicates how limited China’s current antitrust law has been applied to internet firms. The lack of antitrust enforcement in the digital world has also given internet giants the implicit nod to abuse their market power to crack down against competitors, said experts.
Zhang Zhengxin, a lawyer at Beijing-based Yingke Law Firm, sued Tencent a year ago for banning WeChat users from accessing links to Taobao, an online marketplace owned by e-commerce giant Alibaba.
Attempts to access Taobao links on WeChat will yield a warning page that asks users to copy “relative links”—links that users tend to visit—to their browsers, even though WeChat provides an in-app browser that allows users to access the web.
The Beijing Intellectual Property Court held a hearing on the suit in December, in which the two sides fell into a standoff around whether WeChat is a market monopoly.
Zhang accused Tencent of “effectively turning down his transaction request” because of WeChat’s Taobao ban and cited China’s Anti-monopoly Law, which bans such behavior. However, the clause only applies to a company when it “enjoys a dominant market position.”
The 2008 law has outlined how to define a company as having such a dominant market position. However, the law came into effect before the internet became a big thing in China and, so far, there were no internet companies in the country that have been identified as a market monopoly.
A recently proposed revision to the antitrust law could give law enforcement agencies and market regulators a better legal basis to take action. The experts we talked to, however, doubt whether regulators really want to rein in the country’s booming internet industry.
Zhang, representing himself, filed the lawsuit against Tencent last April over WeChat’s blockage of links to Taobao and Bytedance’s short video app Douyin, known as TikTok in overseas markets, citing the country’s Anti-monopoly Law. He claimed in an indictment to the court that by blocking those links, Tencent is “effectively turning down his transaction request” and that such behavior is banned by the Anti-monopoly Law.
One of the focuses of the hearing in court is whether Tencent is a monopoly in the so-called “instant messaging (IM) service market,” according to court files recently made public.
Zhang claimed that Tencent’s WeChat holds a dominant position in China’s IM market since its market share by user base and usage is far more than 50%. As a matter of fact, the share could be much bigger. According to a report (in Chinese) by Qianzhan Industry Research Institute, nearly 93% of Chinese mobile IM users have installed WeChat in 2018.
Tencent, however, argued that it doesn’t hold a dominant position in the IM market because there is no such market due to the dynamic characteristics of the internet.
The company claimed that the relative market in which a company is deemed to be a monopoly should be inferred from users’ specific demands. Zhang’s demand was to share links of Taobao to other users, so any products that could fulfill such a function should be included in the “relative market,” the company said during the December hearing.
A Tencent representative declined to comment on the case when contacted by TechNode.
China’s current Anti-monopoly Law said companies with more than 50% share of the “relative market” can be presumed to be dominant players. It also requires law enforcement agencies to consider factors of their abilities to control the supply chain and the market access threshold of competitors.
While in cyberspace, the definition of a “relative market” can be vague—Tencent’s argument is proof of how nebulous they can get. Legal experts have long criticized (in Chinese) the law because it was designed to regulate companies in traditional industries: it hardly took the internet, a more and more important sector to the country’s economy, into consideration.
In January, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), the country’s top antitrust regulator, announced a draft revision of the Anti-monopoly Law, which expanded the definition of what forms a dominant position.
When delimiting whether internet companies enjoy dominant market positions, law enforcement agencies should also take factors such as network effect as well as their scale and ability to deal with data into consideration, said the proposed amendment.
Nevertheless, some have questioned whether the proposed overhaul would really change China’s antitrust enforcement.
China’s current legal framework is enough for antitrust authorities to take action against internet companies, but the authorities are just being very cautious because they may be afraid of getting it wrong in what are mostly very dynamic and fast-moving markets, said Adrian Emch, a partner at law firm Hogan Lovells in Beijing.
If China’s market regulators were to decide to carry out more aggressive enforcement against internet companies, then it could be undertaken within the existing legal framework, Emch wrote in a paper published in December.
As a matter of fact, before it proposed revisions to the antitrust law, the SAMR already tried to curb internet companies over potential antitrust violations.
The agency launched in January 2019 what is known as China’s first “internet antitrust investigation” into Tencent Music Entertainment’s dealings with the world’s three largest record labels after rivals complained that Tencent paid excessive fees for the initial rights and then passed those costs along to competitors.
Observers were cheered (in Chinese) that the investigation would open a new era where internet companies also fall into the rule of China’s antitrust law.
However, the SAMR decided to suspend the probe in January, according to Bloomberg. The regulator didn’t disclose how far the investigation went and why it was terminated, but it came after Tencent Music reached a music licensing deal with Bytedance in late 2019.
“If you look at the market, there are many large and competitive internet players in China, so the antitrust authorities may ask themselves how much intervention, if any, is really necessary,” Emch told TechNode in an interview.
“Antitrust enforcement doesn’t take place in a vacuum, but is done against a specific legal and factual background. In China the background is different from, say, Europe where most of the main players in the internet industry are US companies. In China, the largest internet players are domestic players and the local regulatory and policy framework is different from Europe.”
Zhang said the overhaul of the Anti-monopoly Law is a “cheering step” made by regulators.
“I believe [the revision] will give market regulators a greater legal basis to launch antitrust probes into internet companies and curb their ‘unfair competition’ including blocking links of competitors,” he said.
His challenge to Tencent, however, didn’t see the proposed revision becomes effective.
He applied to the Beijing Intellectual Property Court in January to withdraw the case, according to a court file released on April 17 on a website (in Chinese) maintained by the country’s Supreme People’s Court.
He told TechNode after the court file was released that he dropped the case because he “felt there was a lack of evidence.”
While Zhang refused to give more details on the lawsuit, he told TechNode in an interview on April 9 that China’s current antitrust legal framework has done little to reach its power to the internet sector.
It looks like internet firms are immune to China’s antitrust law, he said.
]]>China Unicom and China Telecom have given the majority of their 5G base station contracts to Huawei and ZTE. Combined with previous contract awards from China Mobile, the two telecoms equipment makers now account for more than 80% of China’s 5G base station contracts.
Why it matters: The contracts of the three major carriers show that state-owned telecoms firms have a strong preference for homegrown players in the buildout of their 5G networks even though Beijing has pledged to give foreign companies “equal opportunities.”
“China always sticks to equal and fair principles when purchasing 5G telecom equipment. We never preset the market shares for domestic and foreign enterprises.”
—Miao Wei, minister of China’s top telecom regulator, last year during at keynote speech at the World 5G Conference
Details: Huawei and ZTE were awarded more than 80% of China Unicom and China Telecom’s latest bid for a fifth generation network they are jointly building, according to Chinese media Caixin.
Context: China Unicom and China Telecom announced last year that they would team up to jointly build a 5G network to cut costs.
Xiaomi has hired the president of an online bank to lead the smartphone maker’s budding consumer finance business, the company announced Thursday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is actively seeking new growth opportunities outside smartphones as global handset sales shrink. The company has been trying to leverage its massive global handset user base to boost other business segments such as personal cloud service and consumer finance service.
Details: Xiaomi has appointed Zhao Weixing, the former president at Sichuan Xinwang Bank, as the vice president of its fintech branch, the company said on social media platform Weibo (in Chinese) Thursday.
Context: In January, Chinese regulators gave Xiaomi the green light to set up a consumer finance company in the southwest municipality of Chongqing.
A group of Chinese investors who lost money on Luckin Coffee have filed the first in a batch of lawsuits to a local court over the beverage chain’s alleged accounting fraud, the lawyer representing them told TechNode Thursday. They are suing the company for making false financial statements that led to investor losses.
The US-listed Chinese company may fall under Chinese courts’ jurisdiction for fraud, thanks to a recent revision to China’s Securities Law. The new law, which came into effect March 1, added a clause that expanded its authority to cover overseas-listed Chinese companies that have domestic investors.
Yang Zhaoquan, director of Beijing Vlaw Law Firm, said it is the first time investors have tried to hold a company accountable in China for fraud perpetrated in US markets.
He told TechNode that he has sent out documents for the first lawsuit to a court in the southeastern coastal city of Xiamen, where Luckin is headquartered.
Luckin announced on April 2 that a preliminary internal investigation showed that it reported an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($311 million) worth of phony sales to investors, from the second to the fourth quarter of 2019.
Shares of the company plummeted 75.6% on the disclosure that day. Shares of the company were suspended from trading on April 7. The closing price of its shares was $4.39, only 8.8% of its all-time high.
Luckin did not immediately respond to TechNode’s request to comment on the news.
Read more: Luckin fraud admission leaves more questions than answers
Vlaw law firm began recruiting (in Chinese) plaintiffs for lawsuits against the company on April 7, looking for Chinese investors and China-based expats who held or purchased Luckin shares from Nov. 13 to April 2.
Yang expects to file a total of 10 independent cases over the coming days, each representing a single investor. The plaintiffs seek to recover the money they lost on Luckin’s stock, as well as commissions paid to brokers, Yang said.
Yang said that one of the investors lost 70% of their investment when the stock crashed.
While the current suits name only Luckin as the defendant, Yang said he and his clients will consider listing auditors and brokers that participated in Luckin’s stock issuance as respondents depending on the development of the cases.
The company already faces lawsuits in the US from law firms that launched investigations into it on behalf of the company’s US investors.
Foreign investors have long complained that Chinese firms listed in the US get away with fraud because of a legal loophole between the two countries: China’s old Securities Law didn’t claim jurisdiction over Chinese companies listed overseas, while US courts and regulators who do have jurisdiction have little to no power to enforce judgments in China.
“In the last 10 years, we’ve been responsible for delisting over a dozen China-based companies for fraud, but nobody has gone to jail, nobody has paid a fine. It is not illegal in China to steal from US investors,” Dan David, the founder of Wolfpack Research, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on April 7.
On the same day, the US-based short seller and securities analysis firm released a short-selling report, accusing Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi of inflating its 2019 revenue by up to 44% and overstating user numbers by up to 60%.
“Prior to this, investors couldn’t claim in China for their losses because of overseas-listed Chinese companies’ financial misconduct,” Yang said. This is the first case trying to achieve that and it could set a precedent that such misconduct has consequences, he said.
However, the new law allows only Chinese and China-based investors to sue in Chinese courts. Most American investors will still count on claiming any cash through US courts.
While the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s top securities regulator, denounced Luckin’s financial chicanery, legal experts have questioned whether the company falls under Chinese securities laws’ rule.
Liu An, a securities lawyer at Beijing-based law firm Dentons China, said in an interview with reporters on April 3 that the new law may not apply to Luckin if it can prove that its fraud stopped before the law came into effect this March.
The new Securities Law also added a clause that bans foreign securities regulators from investigating or gathering evidence in China, making formal an obstacle some US investors have complained about for years. The law, however, said foreign regulators can team up with their Chinese counterparts to investigate publicly traded companies.
“The CSRC pays high attention to Luckin Coffee’s financial misconduct and condemns the company for those financial misconduct behaviors. Publicly traded companies, wherever they are listed, should strictly comply with relevant markets’ law and regulations and fulfill their duties of accurately revealing financial information,” the agency said in a statement on March 3.
Cao Yu, vice president of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission” said on Wednesday that Luckin’s accounting fraud is a “harsh lesson,” while saying that the commission has a “zero tolerance” attitude towards such behavior.
Liu said during the interview that Nasdaq-listed Luckin does not fall under the CSRC’s jurisdiction, so the commission could only release a statement condemning it.
However, the CSRC said in the statement that it would launch an investigation into Luckin Coffee’s alleged financial misconduct “based on arrangements around international securities regulations.”
“It doesn’t seem possible that the CSRC will launch the investigation on its own initiative. It may choose to cooperate with the US Securities and Exchange Commission,” Yang told TechNode.
]]>China’s Huawei reported Tuesday sharply slower revenue growth in the first quarter of 2020 as the company faces both trade restrictions from the US and the global coronavirus outbreak.
Why it matters: The dismal revenue numbers for Q1 provide a picture of how the Covid-19 outbreak has affected China’s electronics manufacturing sector and smartphone market.
Details: Huawei’s revenue for the first quarter grew only 1.4% year-on-year to RMB 182.2 billion (around $25.8 billion), according to a company statement published Tuesday.
Context: Huawei reported 23.2% year-on-year revenue growth in the first half of 2019. This was shown by the company as proof that the US sanctions had a limited impact on its business.
The president of Alibaba’s e-commerce site Tmall has asked the company to launch investigations against himself following an affair accusation made by his wife on social media platform Weibo, local newspaper Beijing News reported Saturday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Read more: INSIGHTS | Founders behaving badly
Why it matters: Jiang Fan, the president of Tmall and Taobao, another Alibaba online marketplace, is one of the most important executives of Alibaba and was widely seen as a potential successor of Zhang Yong, the current CEO of Alibaba Group.
Details: Jiang has apologized for the “impact on the company and colleagues” because of “remarks made by one of his family members on Weibo” in a post published on Alibaba’s internal website, Beijing News reported. He is calling for the investigation because of the “bad effects” the scandal may have on the company.
Context: Jiang, 35, is a Google veteran who joined Alibaba in 2013 after the company acquired his mobile app analytics startup, Umeng.
Bytedance has revamped a 15-year-old online encyclopedia site under its own brand, expanding the functionalities of its new search engine as it pushes further into the search market.
Why it matters: Bytedance’s launch of its own answer to Baidu’s online encyclopedia, Baidu Baike, escalates the rivalry between the rising star and the established search engine giant.
Details: Bytedance has rebranded Baike.com into a site named Toutiao Baike, the online encyclopedia arm of Toutiao Search, the search engine it rolled out in August.
Context: Founded in 2005, Hudong Baike is a for-profit online encyclopedia that focuses on Chinese content.
Beijing is promising big spending on “new infrastructure” amid post-virus stimulus. The government says it will focus on electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure, an upgraded electrical grid, artificial intelligence, 5G networks, improved transportation systems, and data centers to drive the economy towards recovery.
While China has not announced official figures, analysts from China Sinolink Securities, which has produced the most comprehensive and widely cited estimates, expect the total to reach RMB 1 trillion (around $141.3 billion) in 2020.
Bottom line: Don’t count on high-tech infrastructure to overcome a recession—it’s outweighed by traditional projects. But this investment gusher is accelerating deployment of technologies like connected roads, improved telecommunications networks, and electric vehicle charging stations.
A familiar remedy: China has typically turned to infrastructure spending in the face of economic troubles. During the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis, the government issued billions of yuan in treasury bonds to increase investment in roads, utilities, railways, and telecommunications.
Apart from traditional road infrastructure projects, China is looking to build intelligent transport systems that incorporate technologies such as 5G, artificial intelligence, and the Internet of Things. While Beijing has not outlined a budget for connected roads, Sinolink expects (in Chinese) the government to spend nearly RMB 450 billion on supporting technologies.
Read more: China’s AV edge? It’s the infrastructure
Baidu does well: China’s search giant Baidu has become a major beneficiary of China’s recent drive to increase spending on new infrastructure projects that incorporate these sorts of technologies.
A head start in a race to set standards: Early mass implementation of China’s standards for C-V2X could lead to wider adoption around the world, and more money for Chinese companies, as deliberation over opposing systems grows.
The official cliché is that 5G is the “highway of the information age.” The next-generation wireless network is also seen by state media (in Chinese) as the “bellwether” for the seven key areas of the new infrastructure projects.
Some are more equal: While Beijing has repeatedly said that foreign companies have “equal opportunities” to participate in the rollout of its 5G networks, most of the budget will probably go to domestic vendors such as Huawei and ZTE.
At the heart of the national policies for global leadership in technology, electric vehicles were not left out of the big funding boost. Beijing has announced plans to spend RMB 10 billion on the country’s scattered charging network in a bid to increase EV uptake.
Much needed: A charging station buildout could help the struggling EV industry draw in customers.
A tough business: Charging infrastructure could use the help—experts warn that it’s hard for companies to succeed with it in market terms.
Unprecedented support from Beijing could drive a surge of capital flow into technology sectors, however, the impact to shore up the entire economy might be limited.
Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei is shifting production of its in-house designed chips away from a major Taiwanese chipmaker.
Details: The Shenzhen-based telecommunications company is moving its chip production towards Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC), said a report by Reuters, citing sources familiar with the matter.
Context: A federal ban by the Trump administration last May barred American companies from exporting components and technology to Huawei without government approvals.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has spent $64.5 million on buying back its shares in the past two days, company filings show.
Why it matters: The buybacks come during a slump in Asian markets, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index falling 1.9% on Wednesday and the Japanese market benchmark Nikkei 225 index down by 1.7%.
Details: Xiaomi spent HKD 250 million (around $32.3 million) on a share buyback on Wednesday following a similar repurchase of HKD 249.6 million on Tuesday, according to company filings to the Hong Kong bourse.
Context: Shares of Xiaomi have dropped by nearly 20% since March, canceling out the company’s gain since its HKD 12 billion share repurchase announcement.
]]>Watch: We got our hands on Xiaomi’s new super secret phone. Here’s our review.
TikTok owner Bytedance has started a new round of hiring, looking to add around 10,000 employees to its global ranks, according to a Bloomberg report on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based internet giant is moving towards a target of creating 40,000 new jobs this year to reach a goal of 100,000 employees globally. Once it achieves that goal, the startup’s headcount will be on par with e-commerce behemoth Alibaba’s, and exceed WeChat owner Tencent’s by around 58%.
Details: Bytedance has launched a recruiting campaign and asked employees to provide candidate referrals for 10,000 open positions, according to Bloomberg, citing information from an internal website.
Context: Bytedance’s global headcount has exceeded 60,000 and the number is expected to reach 100,000 by the end of the year, Zhang Yiming, company founder and CEO, said in an internal letter in March.
Handset sales in China surged 241% in March compared with the previous month though were still down 23% from a year earlier, according to official data released Monday.
Why it matters: China’s handset consumption has started to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic but its aftershocks continued to weigh.
Details: China’s handset sales in March were 21.8 million units including 6.2 million which are 5G compatible, according to the MIIT.
Context: Despite the rebound in monthly sales, observers were not optimistic about China’s smartphone market over the long term. According to a recent report by market research firm Strategy Analytics, 37% of Chinese consumers have delayed plans to upgrade their handsets.
Taobao has taken down physical copies of Japanese game maker Nintendo’s widely popular video game Animal Crossing from its marketplace.
Why it matters: The game, running on Nintendo’s Switch video game console, has taken the world by storm after the release of its latest in a series, New Horizons, last month—while a global pandemic has forced the world to find entertainment at home.
Details: A Taobao seller of the physical copies of Animal Crossing confirmed to TechNode Friday that Taobao has taken down the items for “violating the site’s rules,” but the platform didn’t give specific reasons. The seller prefers to remain anonymous due to the sensitivity of the topic.
Context: A few days before the removal of the game, Bloomberg reported that pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong have started to post anti-government posters on the island life simulation game. Users can visit other players’ virtual islands in the game using the Nintendo Network.
China’s three major telecommunications operators jointly launched Wednesday a 5G-powered messaging service. The service enables users to send rich communication messages using the next-generation wireless technology.
Why it matters: The feature could pose a big threat to existing instant messaging players such as WeChat by leveraging the huge user base of China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom.
Details: The three state-owned carriers published Wednesday a 5G messaging service white paper advocating smartphone makers to support the new function and provided technical details on how to integrate it with their handsets.
Context: The rise of instant messaging services such as WeChat means Chinese telcos are making less revenue from text messages. SMS income for Chinese carriers had been dropping consecutively from 2014 to 2017, but saw a slight rise of 0.02% year on year in 2019, according to China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (in Chinese).
A short seller firm has accused Chinese video-streaming platform Iqiyi of reporting inflated revenue figures and user numbers in 2019, following just days after US-listed Luckin Coffee’s explosive revenue fraud disclosure on Thursday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company often referred to as the “Netflix of China” is another high-profile target for short sellers following beverage chain Luckin Coffee’s spectacular downfall, as US-listed Chinese companies find themselves under increasing scrutiny.
Details: Muddy Waters Research tweeted a link to a Wolfpack Research report on Tuesday, alleging that Iqiyi had inflated its 2019 revenue by 27% to 44% and overstated user numbers by 42% to 60%.
What’s next: Dan David, the founder of Wolfpack Research, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV Wednesday that the downside of the report to Iqiyi would be “unlimited” if there was a “truly independent investigation” into the company’s alleged fraud.
“In the last 10 years, we’ve been responsible for delisting over a dozen China-based companies for fraud, [but] nobody has gone to jail, nobody has paid a fine. It is not illegal in China to steal from US investors.”
— Dan David, the founder of Wolfpack Research, on Bloomberg TV
Context: Iqiyi’s share prices fell 11.2% Tuesday morning before bouncing back to gain 3.2% by market close.
Venture capital investments into China’s tech sector declined 31.3% year on year in the first quarter as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak hitting its already-shrinking venture market, according to a recent report.
Why it matters: The data indicates China’s venture capitalists are cautious because of the pandemic that is expected to further drag on the country’s economic growth.
Details: Investment in China’s so-called new economy sector was RMB 119.1 billion (around $16.8 billion) in the first quarter, compared with RMB 173.6 billion in the same period last year, according to a recent report (in Chinese) by Itjuzi.com.
Context: China’s tech startups have been experiencing a period of financing hardship known as a “capital winter”—a significant slowdown in investment and fundraising activities—over the past year.
China’s top securities regulator denounced Luckin Coffee on Friday after the beverage chain disclosed that one of its top executives and other employees had faked billions of yuan in sales over most of 2019.
Details: The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said in a statement published Friday that it would launch an investigation into Luckin Coffee’s alleged financial misconduct based on arrangements around international securities regulations.
“The CSRC pays high attention to Luckin Coffee’s financial misconduct and condemn the company for those financial misconduct behaviors. Publicly traded companies, wherever they are listed, should strictly comply with relevant markets’ law and regulations and fulfill their duties of accurately revealing financial information.”
— CSRC in a statement (our translation)
What the lawyer says: Nasdaq-listed Luckin does not fall under the CSRC’s jurisdiction, so it could only release a statement condemning it, Liu An, a securities lawyer at Beijing-based law firm Dentons China, said in an interview with reporters on Friday.
Context: Luckin announced Thursday that a preliminary internal investigation showed that it reported an estimated RMB 2.2 billion ($310 million) worth of phony sales to investors, from the second to the fourth quarter of 2019.
Xiaomi said Tuesday it has resumed production capacity by 80% to 90%. However, they also warned that demand for smartphones in overseas markets would be hit by the spread of Covid-19 in March and April.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based smartphone maker has a strong presence in overseas markets such as India and Europe. It is likely to see a drop in sales in the first half of the year as the pandemic spreads around the world.
Read more: Xiaomi wants to be exempted from an e-commerce ban in India
Details: Xiaomi’s production was severely impacted in February when the coronavirus outbreak intensified in China, but its production capacity has been resumed to 80% to 90% of the normal state, according to Wang.
Context: Market research firm IDC estimated that smartphone sales in China may fall as much as 40% in the first quarter compared with the same period last year.
TikTok owner Bytedance could now be worth up to $100 billion based on recent prices for the Chinese company’s shares on secondary markets, according to the Financial Times.
Why it matters: The new price tag for the Beijing-based tech startup is around one-third higher than its latest known valuation of $75 billion from 2018.
Details: Investors have given Bytedance an implied valuation of between $90 billion to $100 billion after the company’s shares were sold recently on secondary markets, the Financial Times reported Monday, citing several people familiar with the transactions.
Context: The Financial Times reported in October that Bytedance was eyeing an initial public offering in Hong Kong in the first quarter of this year. The company denied the report at the time and said it had no immediate plans to go public.
Chinese handset makers including Xiaomi and Realme are asking the Indian government to list smartphones as an essential commodity so that they can be sold on e-commerce platforms during the nationwide lockdown in India.
Why it matters: India is one of the most important overseas markets for many Chinese smartphone makers, and a 21-day national lockdown in the country, starting Wednesday, is expected to severely hit handset sales.
Details: Xiaomi and Realme have united with two industrial bodies to seek an exemption for deliveries of smartphone along with other electronic devices during the national lockdown, The Economic Times reported on Monday.
Context: Xiaomi is India’s biggest smartphone vendor with a market share of 27% in the fourth quarter, while Realme is the fifth-largest with an 8% market share.
Tencent has signed a deal with Huawei to set up a laboratory to develop a cloud gaming platform, the Chinese gaming giant said in a statement Friday.
Why it matters: Tencent is the world’s largest gaming company and it is actively building up cloud gaming services, a function that runs games on remote servers and streams them directly to a user’s device.
Details: The collaboration will leverage the computing power of Huawei’s Kunpen processor to build Tencent’s cloud gaming platform, GameMatrix, the company said in a statement (in Chinese).
Context: Tencent launched its cloud gaming service, Start, in March 2019. The company started to beta test popular video game “Fortnite” on the platform in December.
]]>A few years ago, Chinese app developer Cheetah Mobile was a solid, medium-sized software company with a global user base. Backed by investments from Tencent and Bytedance, its utility apps for Android—including Clean Master, a browser, and a popular keyboard—were some of the most downloaded apps ever on Google’s Play Store.
Today, it’s a wounded gazelle, battling for survival. The company has been cut off from major mobile ad platforms, including Facebook. The company’s apps were removed from Google’s store in February as part of a purge of apps identified as malicious by Google, Android’s parent company, company executives said on a Tuesday earnings call.
Cheetah reported on Tuesday that its fourth-quarter revenue fell 55.7% year on year to RMB 612 million (about $86 million), and warned that the worst was yet to come.
The company booked a net loss of RMB 821.2 million in the fourth quarter, compared with net income of RMB 733.3 million in the same period a year ago.
The NYSE-listed company has seen its share price drop 43% since the start of the year, and its market cap has shrunk by nearly 94% from a historical high of $4.8 billion in May 2015.
What went wrong? The truth is that Cheetah has faced serious questions about data collection and ad practices for years, but until recently privacy and security questions haven’t been a serious threat to companies like Cheetah. Changing political contexts have sharply reduced the tolerance of US partners like Facebook and Google for small companies with mixed reputations.
In February, all of Cheetah Mobile’s apps and mobile games were removed from the Google Play store. Though Q4 results do not include the impact from the removals, company CFO Thomas Ren warned that the removals were “a bigger threat to the company than the coronavirus outbreak” during the earnings call.
Google said its reason for removing Cheetah Mobile apps, along with hundreds of apps from other developers, was that they displayed “disruptive ads” some of which were full-screen ads that covered the interface of their host apps.
Per Bjorke, Google’s senior product manager for ad traffic quality, told BuzzFeed News in a February interview that the apps removed were “mainly from developers based in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and India.”
Cheetah said it generated around 22.6% of its total revenue from Google in the first nine months of 2019 and that the removal would “adversely affect” its ability to attract new users and generate revenue from Google platforms.
The end of its relationships with US tech companies comes as they’re under increasing pressure to reassure their users about security. Cheetah, whose at least sloppy and allegedly fraudulent advertising and data collection practices have been criticized at length by Buzzfeed, faces a context in which such allegations are hard to ignore.
Data security is increasingly critical to Chinese tech companies that target users in the US. Beijing-based Bytedance’s popular short video app TikTok is struggling to assuage US lawmakers’ growing scrutiny over its content moderation policies and data security practices. Huawei, meanwhile, has been banned from importing components from American companies as a result of the Trump administration’s concerns that the company may hand over US telecom user data to the Chinese government.
Company founder and CEO Fu Sheng said during the call on Tuesday evening that its sinking revenue was due to a dropoff in online advertising income from its utility apps, which accounted for 80.4% of its total revenue in the quarter. Utility app ad revenue, Fu said, fell on an annual basis as a result of a suspension of its collaboration with Facebook on mobile ads in December 2018, but he didn’t provide further details.
The suspension of Cheetah Mobile’s “collaboration” with Facebook followed a November 2018 Buzzfeed News report, which said that seven apps developed by Cheetah Mobile available on the Google Play store have been “exploiting user permissions as part of an ad fraud scheme that could have stolen millions of dollars,” citing research from app analytics company Kochava.
The company said in a statement to TechNode Thursday that “the issue was caused by third-party advertising software development kits (SDKs),” and that it was not the company’s apps that performed fraudulent activities.
Cheetah’s offerings include a wide range of utility tools from file management applications to antivirus software for mobile devices. Its flagship utility tools are Clean Master and Security Master, which together have been downloaded more than 4.1 billion times globally, according to the company’s website. Unable to distribute them on Google’s Play store, the company has started to provide the .apk install files of some products for Android users on its website.
Gabi Cirlig, a researcher at cybersecurity company White Ops, told Forbes earlier this month that four apps made by Cheetah Mobile, including Clean Master and Security Master, had been “collecting all manner of private user data, including users’ browsing history, search engine queries, and Wi-Fi access point names” and sending them to a web server based in China.
White Ops said it informed Google about the suspicious data transmissions in December, according to the report. It’s unclear whether the accusation by White Ops was the reason Cheetah’s apps were removed. Google did not respond to TechNode’s request for comment on Tuesday.
Cheetah Mobile said in a statement to TechNode that the company “need to obtain some level of data permissions” in order to “provide corresponding app services and continually improve user experience.”
“For example, the Wi-Fi hotspot which is mentioned in the article is used to detect security risks associated with Wi-Fi networks. Data in relation to ‘web browsing’ is used to protect our users from security risks or to provide a better user experience,” said the company.
But however bad Cheetah’s practices were, it took years for US tech majors to object to them. The company has been a major Android player since 10 years ago. Google’s ban more than a year after accusations against the company were first published by Buzzfeed.
LatePost cited an anonymous industrial insider as saying that the reason was that Google is cracking down on developers with a bad reputation, not targeting specific apps.
Fu, however, doesn’t think so. He said in the interview that Google removed all of Cheetah’s apps because “Chinese companies are becoming less important to American companies.”
Some of Cheetah Mobile’s apps that run no ads, such as livestreaming platform LiveMe, were also taken down from the Play store, company CEO Fu told Chinese business news outlet Late Post in an interview.
Cheetah has been singled out by US politicians as a security threat. US Senator Mark Warner told BuzzFeed News in an interview in December 2018 that he was particularly concerned about the huge amount of user data that is collected from Americans by companies such as Cheetah Mobile and Kika Tech, another Chinese app developer that runs a popular keyboard app.
In February, Cheetah said it had contacted Google to appeal the ban. But the effort didn’t pay off. The company said in a statement on Tuesday that Google had rejected its appeal.
“We are still in talks with Google [about restoring apps to the Play store], but it really depends on [Google’s] attitude. We can’t make any predictions,” Fu said during the call with analysts on Tuesday.
In addition to the app removal, Google also suspended Cheetah Mobile’s Google AdMob and Google Ad Manager accounts, meaning that the company is no longer able to earn income from Google’s mobile advertising platforms, including apps already downloaded to users’ phones.
If Cheetah is going to survive, it’ll probably be as a Chinese company.
The removal from Google’s app store is likely to have the biggest effect on Cheetah Mobile’s overseas revenue from mobile games and utility apps because most of Google’s services are not accessible from China, including the Play store. The company relies on domestic app stores such as Xiaomi’s Mi App Store and Huawei’s AppGallery to distribute apps in China.
The company’s revenue from utility tools was RMB 298.6 million in Q4, accounting for 48.7% of its total revenue, while it earned RMB 285.1 million from mobile games, comprising 46.6% of revenue.
Overall, the company earned more than half of its total revenue from overseas markets during the quarter, or RMB 330 million.
The Google ban has forced the Chinese company to retreat to its home market. Fu told analysts during the earnings call that the company will pivot its utility tool business to focus on China. “China’s mobile internet market is big enough,” he said.
The company will find other partners in overseas markets to distribute its mobile games, said Fu, without providing detail.
UPDATE: The article has been updated to add a statement from the company responding to White Ops’s report provided after publication, and to, at the company’s request, change a metaphor used to describe Cheetah Mobile to “wounded gazelle.”
]]>A district government in the eastern Chinese city of Qingdao has started distributing coupons to citizens via instant-messaging app WeChat as the country pushes to increase consumption.
Why it matters: While cities in eastern China such as Nanjing in Jiangsu province and Ningbo in Zhejiang province have started to provide government coupons, Qingdao is the first to deploy the vouchers on WeChat.
Details: The Chengyang District of Qingdao in eastern China’s Shandong province began issuing RMB 10 million (around $1.4 million) in government coupons to residents on Saturday, according to Chinese newspaper Beijing Youth Daily.
Context: Retail sales in China declined 20.5% year on year in January and February, brought by the Covid-19 outbreak, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of China.
Correction: changed sentence to identify Qingdao as a city in Shandong province which had incorrectly stated that it was in Jinan province.
]]>Luo Yonghao, the founder of struggling Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan, announced Thursday he is embarking on a new business endeavor: an e-commerce livestreaming business selling gadgets, groceries, and snacks.
Why it matters: Luo is an internet celebrity as well as one of China’s most iconic tech entrepreneurs with a number of outrageous antics under his belt. But he is also ridden with debt after notching a series of failed businesses including an e-cigarettes startup and a synthetic “shark skin” manufacturer.
Details: Luo will form a team to sell products including tech gadgets, books, furniture, groceries, and snacks on livestream platforms, he said in a post on his social media account on Thursday.
Context: In November, Luo was placed on an official blacklist for debt defaulters, which barred him from spending on travel and other major purchases. A court record showed that he along with Smartisan, the smartphone company he founded, owed RMB 3.7 million to suppliers.
Short video app TikTok has formed a group of outside experts to advise on its content-moderation policies, it said on Wednesday, the latest in a series of steps it has taken to address data security and content censorship concerns in the US.
Why it matters: Content moderation has become an increasingly pressing problem for social media platforms including Twitter, Facebook, and Google’s YouTube. Coronavirus-related misinformation is rampant on the internet, meanwhile a US presidential election—perhaps ground zero for the phenomenon—approaches.
Details: The group, which the company calls a content advisory council, will provide “unvarnished views” and advice around its content-moderation policies and practices, TikTok said in a statement on Wednesday.
“It’s clear that the social media sector has attracted a great deal of interest and potential regulatory oversight in recent years from a number of US government entities. I have been impressed by TikTok’s efforts to voluntarily address these types of concerns, not for the purpose of avoiding such scrutiny but in order to establish itself as a cooperative partner in an effort to achieve these goals for the benefit of consumers and society.”
—Dan Schnur in an email to TechNode
Context: TikTok announced last week it plans to open a content moderation transparency center in its US office to show outside experts how the app moderates content on the platform.
Updated to include comments from Dan Schnur.
]]>Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) announced better-than-expected fourth quarter results on Monday, showing solid growth in paid user subscriptions across its apps.
Why it matters: Tencent Music is one of the few Chinese music-streaming services that have made progress in converting the country’s massive number of online music listeners into paying users.
Details: Paid subscribers jumped 47.8% year on year to 39.9 million in the fourth quarter, the company said in a statement on Monday.
Context: Tencent Music has stepped up efforts to license music to boost paid subscription users. In December, a consortium led by TME and its parent Tencent Holdings bought 10% of Universal Music Group, the world’s biggest music label.
]]>Share prices for ZTE plunged 23% on Monday on reports that the US Justice Department is investigating the Chinese telecommunications company for bribery.
Why it matters: The free fall in share price signal that investors are panic selling on fears that the US may again sanction the company as it did in 2018.
Details: ZTE share prices on the Hong Kong stock exchange dropped 23% as of publishing on Monday following reports by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal that said the US Justice Department is investigating the company for possible bribery of foreign officials.
Context: China’s stock market also tumbled Monday, with the benchmark Shanghai composite index closing 3.4% lower while the Shenzhen composite slipped 5.3%.
Bytedance, the owner of TikTok, keeps butting up against Tencent, one of China’s biggest tech companies. Bytedance started as a news aggregator but has quickly moved into social media. Now, with their new gaming division, they’re moving into Tencent’s home turf. Tencent, meanwhile, has done its utmost to block competitors from piggybacking growth off their social network—most recently by blocking links to Bytedance’s enterprise productivity platform.
Bottom line: Bytedance isn’t going after just Tencent—it’s trying to grow in every direction all at once. Its gaming play doesn’t look like a serious threat to the king of gaming. For now, keep an eye on it but don’t sell your Tencent stock.
A gaming play: Last week, the Beijing-based startup obtained its first license for one of its mobile games from Chinese regulators. It is now able to legally publish it to China’s multi-billion-dollar gaming market. Bloomberg reported in January that the company is also building a gaming division that will hire more than 1,000 employees and there are already two games on the team’s launching pipeline. The company’s casual mobile game Combat of Hero became the most downloaded free iOS title in Japan for four consecutive days since March 7, South China Morning Post reported.
Try everything once: To understand what Bytedance is doing in gaming, you have to understand its unique approach to corporate strategy. In an internal letter (in Chinese) sent to employees Thursday, CEO Zhang Yiming reminded the company about their motto: “Develop a company as a product.”
The basis of the company’s products is a recommendation algorithm with a particular approach: it’s willing to make a low stake bet on anything. The algorithm takes every post a user makes on, say, Douyin, and shows it to around 100 people. If those 100 people like it, it shows it to a few more, and a little more, until the post stops getting likes or it’s been seen by every person on earth (and the three on the international space station). Zhang is likewise willing to countenance any harebrained business idea for a little bit, and then add resources if they work out.
No planning: For Zhang, business strategy is a numbers game: the more apps they launch, the more chances they have for lightning to strike. Chinese media calls the approach an “A/B testing” model. The company has a unique flat-corporate structure, according to a report by The Information. It enables its many product managers to report directly to Zhang, and positions such as chief marketing or chief technology officer are absent from the company.
Under that structure, project managers have a high degree of discretion. They are encouraged to try new projects without weighing the pros and cons ahead of launch. The apps are then judged on their market performance. High-performing apps receive more resources from the company while poor performers are quickly discarded.
Plenty of failures: You’ve heard of Bytedance’s successes. But it’s put people on dozens of projects you’ve never heard of. As a former Bytedance employee told Chinese media, the apps people know are just “the tip of the iceberg”—“You see a few tens of apps being released, but in the meanwhile, there are probably a few hundred being developed.” Most never see the light of day.
Bytedance has tried to get the data itself. In 2019, Bytedance launched two messaging apps—Feiliao, or Flipchat in English; and Duoshan, a Snapchat clone. Neither got a foothold against WeChat. Feiliao, an app that combines instant message and forum functionalities, was downloaded around 10,000 times worldwide in February, while Duoshan was 400,000 times, according to data from Sensor Tower. WeChat, by comparison, saw around 3 million downloads in that month.
Beyond Bytedance’s well-known apps, it’s also made little-known plays such as Gogokid, an online education platform; Everphoto, a cloud storage service; and the Smartisan e-commerce platform.
Gaming is an experiment: The 1,000-employee gaming division looks like an army, but compared to Tencent’s five divisions it looks like an indie studio. The promised 1,000 employees would make up just 1.7% of Bytedance’s global headcount. If its games get traction, that number will go up—but it could just as easily go down if they bounce off the market. Tencent is clearly watching Bytedance closely and sees a threat, but it’s not that scared yet.
But some experiments pay off: Bytedance’s approach can pay off big—sometimes. Baidu’s learned this the hard way with search and advertising. Xiaomi, the country’s fourth-largest smartphone vendor, has altered (in Chinese) its handsets’ default search engine with Toutiao Search. The eight-year-old company has already become the second-biggest single destination for Chinese users’ attention and it overtook Baidu in 2019 to grab the third spot in China’s advertising market.
Tencent’s barrier: Tencent has one huge thing Bytedance needs: social network data. With the recommendation system, which the company says is powered by artificial intelligence and deep-learning algorithms, Bytedance has got a lot of insight into what people like, but not who they know.
WeChat, China’s biggest social network, contains immense amounts of data about how people are connected. So it’s the natural way to get people to import social connections to Lark or Duoshan. But Tencent has moved to lock this data down from Bytedance.
Recently, WeChat blocked links to Bytedance’s Lark after more users of the enterprise messaging app started to invite their WeChat connections to join their workspace on Lark as remote work becomes common in China.
Last March, a local court in the eastern city of Tianjin ruled to bar Bytedance from using handles and profile pictures that originate from Tencent’s WeChat and QQ when recommending new friends to users on Douyin and Duoshan.
How far can it go? : Bytedance isn’t a competitor—it’s an invasive species. It’ll spread everywhere it finds a niche—including overseas. But you shouldn’t take every move that seriously. Much like Google, Bytedance is happy to kill products that don’t meet its goals. However, if it finds an opening it’ll threaten not only the BATs but every big tech company in the world. Just ask Mark Zuckerberg—Tiktok is the first real threat to Facebook he hasn’t been able to buy or clone.
]]>TikTok owner Bytedance announced Thursday a major leadership reshuffle with company founder and CEO Zhang Yiming shifting to take charge of the company’s overseas business.
Why it matters: Zhang’s direct takeover of Bytedance’s overseas operations indicates that the Beijing-based company is still vigorously expanding its presence in markets outside of China at an accelerating pace despite the increasing scrutiny its flagship TikTok app faces in the US.
Details: Zhang assumed the role of Bytedance’s global CEO and will focus on overseas markets, particularly in Europe and the US, he said in an internal letter sent to employees on Thursday as the company celebrates its eight-year anniversary.
Context: Bytedance was founded in 2012 and was initially known as Jinri Toutiao, a popular news aggregator app. The company now has a lineup of popular products including TikTok, Douyin, and Lark, and has become the world’s most valuable startup with a valuation of $78 billion.
]]>TikTok said Wednesday it plans to open a content moderation transparency center in its US office to address concerns over the security and privacy of its short video platform.
Why it matters: The Chinese-owned app faces increasing scrutiny from US lawmakers concerned about content censorship and the potential that personal information from its American users may be shared with the Chinese government.
Details: TikTok plans to set up a content moderation center in its Los Angeles office to show outside experts how the app moderates content on the platform, the company said in a statement Wednesday.
Context: TikTok has stepped up efforts in recent months to address concerns over its alleged content censorship in the US and its ties to the Chinese government.
The Trump administration has extended the grace period of a trade ban on Huawei through May 15, allowing US companies to continue doing business with the Chinese telecommunications equipment giant.
Why it matters: The reprieve has already been extended four times and allows Huawei’s existing customers to keep purchasing its equipment. However, it is a concession more for rural US carriers than the telecommunications company.
Details: The US Commerce Department announced on Tuesday it was seeking public comment on whether a license allowing US companies to continue doing business with Huawei should be further extended, and that it had extended the license through May 15 to provide an “opportunity for public input.”
Context: The Commerce Department added the company to an “Entity List” on May 16, which bars American companies from selling or purchasing with the firm without government approval.
TikTok owner Bytedance was on Friday granted its first mobile game license from Chinese regulators, according to records from an official database.
Why it matters: The license, issued by the Chinese National Radio and Television Administration (CNRTA), allows Bytedance to earn revenue from mobile games.
Details: A Bytedance subsidiary was granted on Friday a game license for a mobile game named “Fighting Girl Run” (our translation), according to the NRTA’s license database (in Chinese).
Context: Bytedance tapped the mobile game market with the release of its in-app mini-game feature on its short video app Douyin last year.
As doctors in Xinchang County, Zhejiang test patients for Covid-19, they’re using a tool borrowed from the Jetsons: flying robots are helping them move testing samples and supplies faster than they could go on roads.
The semi-rural county offers a preview of a world many expect to live in soon. People have talked about airborne deliveries for years. With the Covid-19 crisis, the players are lining up to make it happen.
When doctors at the People’s Hospital need to send a sample for testing, they go to an Antwork landing pad. At the tap of a smartphone, a heavy six-bladed drone lifts off, carrying a briefcase-sized payload on the approximately 2.5-mile-trip to the local public health testing center.
Antwork, a Hangzhou-based startup, has put its drone logistics system into practice a few months ahead of schedule to deliver nucleic acid testing samples between two hospitals to local public health authorities in Xinchang county.
In the wake of the highly infectious illness, Chinese tech companies, especially takeaway and on-demand service platforms, have proposed a “contactless delivery” initiative, appealing to food delivery drivers or couriers to avoid direct contact with customers.
While “contactless delivery” may avoid potential contagion among people, pickup and delivery service platforms are facing a more serious problem: a workforce shortage.
The epidemic in China has stopped millions of migrant workers, a key source of delivery drivers, from returning to big cities after the Spring Festival holiday. Some companies have started to pilot unmanned technologies to meet the huge demand for food and e-commerce deliveries.
Food delivery platform Meituan rolled out a driverless delivery service in Beijing earlier last month to deliver groceries to customers in the city. JD.com, the e-commerce giant, said it had completed its first delivery of medical supplies via autonomous vehicles in Wuhan last month.
While the two big companies have been talking about drone deliveries also, the Hangzhou startup is the first one in China to send pilotless aircraft to the sky during the coronavirus outbreak.
The system that Antwork has been developing for nearly five years uses airborne drones and autonomous road vehicles to deliver packages in cities. The company plans to use the flying drones for longer trips between a network of helipad drone stations, and earthbound robots for last-mile delivery.
The Xinchang county network, which was first put into use in early February, skips the cars and flies parcels directly to stations placed on hospital grounds.
The company was already planning to start with hospitals. “We were planning to launch the drone logistics system for commercial medical uses later this year anyway, but the epidemic outbreak has pushed us to put it into real-life use now,” Zhao Liang, co-founder and chief operating officer of Antwork, told TechNode.
The company said in a statement (in Chinese) that the system it set up in Xinchang county delivers medical supplies and nucleic acid testing kits between two downtown locations and one satellite town.
The company said in the statement that the initial flights showed that the system saved more than half of the time needed to deliver using ground transport.
In a crisis, bureaucracy acted fast, cutting red tape to get drones in the sky.
Zhao told TechNode that Antwork started to reach out to local governments in different cities after Jan. 23, when Wuhan, where the epidemic started, announced a lockdown. After a short negotiation, the local government in Xinchang county accepted the company’s offer, and the company soon got approval from China’s aviation regulators.
“It took us around one week to get a license to conduct drone deliveries in Xinchang from the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC),” said Zhao. He said that the process usually takes a few months.
Regulators are, understandably, usually very cautious about allowing experimental robots to fly at low altitudes in Chinese cities. Antwork sought permission in 2019 for a trial in Hangzhou, which required it to pass the CAAC’s Specific Operations Risk Assessment, a multi-stage process of risk evaluation for certain unmanned aircraft operations.
Zhao told TechNode in an interview last year that the whole process lasted more than six months because the CAAC was very “cautious and strict” about the assessment. In July, the company was granted a one-year license to conduct urban parcel delivery using drones in Hangzhou.
The crisis got drones in the sky quickly—but will it make a difference to the long term trajectory of the industry? The company says its plans haven’t changed much.
Antwork’s technology was designed to use drones and autonomous vehicles to make deliveries instead of human labor to cut costs in China’s multi-billion food delivery and courier markets. Last year, it completed an experimental delivery for fast-food chain KFC in Hangzhou.
However, the company says it has no present plans to deploy its system to deliver food or packages.
“Compared to the demands of medical supplies in hospitals, people’s needs to order takeaways appears to be a less important matter,” said Zhao.
For now, the company is focused on crisis response. The system used in Xinchang county is free of charge at the moment. The company plans to mass-deploy the technology in different sectors in the future, but, Zhao says, that will need approval from regulators.
“[The one-year] license could be extended under normal circumstances,” he said, adding that the company is still applying to expand the service to other cities.
]]>Bytedance is preparing a major update of its enterprise messaging app Lark as soon as this month, bringing the app closer to Google’s office collaboration kit known as G Suite, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.
Why it matters: The TikTok owner is actively exploring new sources of revenue beyond short video and news aggregator platforms, and enterprise services is playing an increasingly important role for the company’s future plans.
Details: Bytedance will update Lark, known in China as Feishu, to focus on cloud-based file management as well as document and spreadsheet editing. The rollout will begin in China as soon as this month, according to Bloomberg citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: Beijing-based Bytedance in April launched Lark in overseas markets. It was reported that it planned to expand the size of the Lark team to 1,000 by the end of 2019.
TikTok owner Bytedance has released a music-streaming app in India and Indonesia, offering what the company calls a “social music streaming” service.
Why it matters: The move is the Chinese internet giant’s first push into the music-streaming sector, putting it in competition with Spotify and Apple Music.
Details: The music app, named Resso, is now available on Apple’s App Store and for Android devices in India and Indonesia.
Context: The global music-streaming market is dominated by Spotify, which held 35% of the market, and Apple Music with 20% share in the first half of 2019, according to market research firm Counterpoint.
Foxconn warned Tuesday that its first quarter revenue may decline 15% as a result of the Covid-19 epidemic as the Taiwanese manufacturer struggles to restore normal production levels in its China factories.
Why it matters: The warning from Foxconn, China’s biggest private-sector employer, highlights the effect that the Covid-19 outbreak has had on the country’s economy, especially in the electronics industry.
Details: Foxconn said its revenue would drop 15% year on year in businesses including consumer electronics and enterprise products in the first quarter, Reuters reported, citing company Chairman Liu Young-Way.
Context: Foxconn booked NTD 1.054 trillion (around $35.2 billion) in revenue in the first quarter of 2019.
Huawei is testing a new search app similar to Google for its smartphone ecosystem in a bold new step to further challenge the US search giant on its home turf.
Why it matters: The Chinese telecom and smartphone giant has been working on replacing all Google apps and services for its in-house Huawei Mobile Service (HMS) framework on Android phones.
Details: Huawei is recruiting users in the UAE to test its new Huawei Search app, according to a forum post published on Feb. 26 on the company’s website.
Context: Citing security reasons, Google last month warned users against loading its apps through unofficial channels to new Huawei devices made available to the public after the trade blacklist.
TikTok owner Bytedance said Saturday that Tencent’s popular instant messaging platform WeChat has started blocking links to its enterprise messaging app and productivity tool Feishu.
Why it matters: The dispute signals intensifying competition between the two companies as Bytedance expands its businesses to instant messaging and gaming, segments that Tencent has dominated for years.
Details: WeChat began to block links from Feishu on Friday afternoon, making links to the app’s website and online conferencing tool inaccessible when linking from within the messaging app, Bytedance said in a statement sent to TechNode on Sunday. The company first aired its grievances on its popular news aggregator platform, Jinri Toutiao, on Saturday.
Behind the scenes: The blocked links were first reported by Chinese tech news outlet 36Kr on Saturday. However, the article has now been taken down from 36Kr’s website.
Context: WeChat has a history of aggressively defending its interests, and has engaged in a number of legal battles with rivals.
Updated: The story has been updated with comments from WeChat in the “Details” section.
]]>From short video to live streaming and gaming, the coronavirus outbreak in China has driven people confined at home to spend their time consuming online content. Products such as short video app Douyin and Kuaishou and mobile games have seen a surge in downloads and active users. These are good times to be in the online entertainment business—but we still don’t know if platforms can bank lasting gains.
Bottom line: Online content platforms provide a replacement for people to kill their time when they are not able to dine out or go shopping, but they will not be indispensable when things go back to normal. Companies still need to address quite a few challenges before they can turn new users into regulars. In a protracted downturn, entertainment can be a resilient sector, but reliance on ads for monetization could mean unprofitable eyeballs.
Windfall users: The Covid-19 outbreak in China which has led to more than 2,700 deaths is pushing the country’s already tech-savvy population further online for entertainment, groceries, and healthcare, wrote TechNode reporter Emma Lee.
Challenges: One of the biggest challenges for online content platforms is how to turn new users seeking novelty into recurring users.
An inferior good? Belt tightening potentially cuts both ways for online platforms. Economics suggests that digital entertainment may be an “inferior good”—i.e., consumers will pay for more of it as overall budgets decrease. A month of premium Bilibili costs less than a night out at the cinema or drinking with friends.
But most of the money in online entertainment isn’t subscriptions. Rather, platforms sell ads—or, in the case of e-commerce live streaming, sell luxury goods directly. If consumers aren’t willing to buy stuff sold on these platforms, more eyeballs could still mean less revenue.
Slow growth ahead: The surge of new users for online content platforms is caused by a “black swan”—the coronavirus—not the improvement of their content quality or increased marketing budget. Once the crisis is under control, companies will inevitably see growth slow down and face an uncertain future as the country’s economy recovers from the impact of the virus.
]]>Bytedance has launched a standalone search engine app, further challenging Baidu’s dominance in China’s online search market.
Why it matters: Bytedance, which owns video-sharing apps TikTok and Douyin, is increasingly positioning itself as a direct rival to Baidu.
Details: Bytedance has released the Toutiao Search app on major Chinese Android app stores including Wandoujia, the Xiaomi App Store, and Huawei’s App Gallery.
Context: Bytedance in August introduced the in-app search function for Jinri Toutiao. The product was not seen at the time as a direct rival to Baidu’s offering because it was not a dedicated search engine.
Chinese internet and gaming giant Netease said Thursday its revenue for the fourth quarter increased 9.2% year on year to $2.26 billion, beating analyst estimates.
Why it matters: Netease’s strategy of focusing on its gaming business by spinning off its other units has started to pay off.
Details: Net revenues for the fourth quarter increased 9.2% year on year to $2.26 billion, the company said in a statement on Thursday, beating analysts’ average estimate of $2.18 billion.
“Our online game services net revenues continued to grow, propelled by the sustained and growing popularity of our existing titles, again demonstrating the longevity of our game franchises… We will continue to bring more masterpieces to both domestic and global players in 2020.”
— Willian Ding, founder and CEO of Netease, in the statement
Context: Netease narrowed its focus on its gaming and entertainment businesses last year by spinning off its e-commerce and online education units.
Apple is requiring game makers worldwide to submit their license numbers gained from a Chinese content regulator if they want to monetize their products in mainland China.
Why it matters: Apple is adhering more strictly to a Chinese government rule that requires all paid games or games that use in-app purchases to obtain a publication license before they can be uploaded to app stores.
Details: Apple has sent a notice to developers requiring them to submit license numbers for paid games or games offering in-app purchases before Jun. 30 if they want to distribute in mainland China, according to a report from AppInChina, a mobile service company that helps foreign apps enter the country.
Context: The NRTA issued a notice in 2016 requiring mobile games to obtain approval from the administration before publishing.
A factory of iPhone assembler Foxconn in central China is reportedly offering bonuses of up to RMB 7,000 (around $996) to each new recruit in an effort to lure workers back to plants and restore normal production levels.
Why it matters: The Taiwanese contract manufacturer is struggling to resume production in China after the deadly Covid-19 virus stopped millions of migrant workers from returning to work after the Spring Festival holiday.
Details: Foxconn’s main iPhone assembly factory in Zhengzhou in central Henan province is offering RMB 7,000 as an incentive to new workers who meet certain requirements, Chinese business news site Star Market Daily reported on Sunday.
Context: China is pushing people to get back to work as the “world’s factory” tries to balance containing the Covid-19 outbreak that has killed more than 2,600 people and offsetting the hit to its economy.
Huawei launched an upgrade to its foldable smartphone on Monday, putting on offer for overseas users its proprietary ecosystem to replace the Google app and services it has been banned from.
Why it matters: In launching its self-developed app ecosystem to users outside of its home turf, the Chinese tech giant is ratcheting up its competition with Google in the Android service market. It has stepped up efforts to lure users and developers to switch to its alternative to the Google Mobile Services (GMS) framework, which it lost access to in May.
Details: Huawei launched the Mate XS in an event live-streamed from Barcelona. The new model is an upgrade of the Mate X phone that it showcased last year which features a flexible screen that can fold into a 6.6-inch smartphone and unfold into an 8-inch tablet.
Context: Google has banned Huawei from using GMS on new phones as a result of a US trade ban imposed in May.
What with all the panic over the past month, you could be forgiven for forgetting there’s a tech war on. But for Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei, there’s no forgetting ongoing threats from the US.
The phase one trade deal signed in January between the US and Chinese governments created the illusion of a turning point in the ongoing dispute. However, Huawei’s predicament and the uncertainties arising from it are far from over.
Bottom line: The phase-one trade deal offered little relief for Huawei. The deal, which included provisions on intellectual property theft and halted some tariff hike in the past years, didn’t mention the Huawei situation at all.
The Shenzhen-based company still has to confront the technology and supply chain blockage from the US. It is now facing more legal charges brought by the Trump administration. The last few weeks have made Huawei’s situation clearer as US and European views of the company split further. Threats from the US are intensifying, while in Europe bans are being ruled out. The company is signaling that it will fight Google on its own OS turf, preparing alternatives to Google services for the Android platform
Endless lawsuits: Huawei’s US challenges are intensifying as its fight with the US government and competitors moves into the courts.
HMS push: Huawei’s phone sales outside China are threatened by its loss of access to Google apps and services on Android phones. It is actively pushing in-house replacements for Google offerings, bringing it in direct competition with the search engine giant.
Fighting Google on its own turf: It has been widely reported that Huawei is going to use an in-house mobile operating system called HarmonyOS to replace Android. But recent efforts like HMS demonstrate that Huawei is sticking to Android. But with the absence of Google, it has to develop alternatives to all of the Google offerings on its phones.
Since the standard Google Play app store is not part of the open-source Android package, Huawei will have to build a new ecosystem around its own app store. To make it viable the company must solve a chicken and egg problem: it needs enough apps to bring in consumers and enough consumers to bring in app developers.
Huawei has already seen a declining trend in smartphone sales in Europe, its biggest overseas market. The company’s smartphone shipments in the continent dropped by 16% and 7% in the third and fourth quarter last year, according to market research firm Canalys.
A full switch to HMS may risk losing some users in overseas markets, but it could also turn into a profitable business for Huawei and help it take a large portion of Google’s share in the Android service market.
Google parent Alphabet is estimated to have earned around $29 billion from the Play store last year, accounting for nearly 18% of its total revenue. The earnings come from GMS pre-installed on billions of Android smartphones worldwide.
For Huawei, the number is smaller but still significant. It is the second-largest smartphone vendor in the world and has sold 230 million smartphones last year. Huawei has said it had no plans to return to using Google’s mobile services even if the US government decides to lift the trade ban.
5G updates: The UK finally made its “Huawei decision” in late January, allowing the Chinese company to play a limited role in Britain’s 5G networks. It appears that the EU is following a similar approach, opting for risk management frameworks rather than bans.
The UK’s limitations include:
The decision from Downing Street has irritated the US government with President Trump’s White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney warning there could be “a direct and dramatic impact” on the sharing of intelligence between the US and UK.
Following the UK’s decision, the European Commission published a “toolbox” of risk mitigation measures to guide EU members’ 5G rollouts. The kit doesn’t name Huawei or China, but it agrees that a supplier’s relationship with foreign states could affect its risk profile.
Tough tests ahead: With Europe rejecting US calls to ban Huawei, it’s clear that the company had dodged a bullet on market access. US export bans remain the most pressing threat, although it remains to be seen whether the bans will be upgraded to the point that the company cannot source essential components. Equally uncertain is whether a critical mass of consumers and app developers outside China will be willing to move to a new Android ecosystem that lacks Google’s popular apps and services.
]]>China’s three major telecommunication carriers have rolled out a text-based service that allows users to request a list of their locations over the past two weeks as a measure to help people report their recent travel history to the authorities.
Why it matters: The government has launched country-wide traffic control measures in an effort to contain the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Some cities are requiring people to disclose their recent whereabouts to get a pass, data that is difficult for the authorities to verify.
Details: The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the country’s telecommunications regulator, has helped China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom roll out a service that allows users to send a text message to their carriers and receive list of cities they have traveled to over the past 14 days, the ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.
Context: Some people with ID cards issued in Hubei province have had trouble proving their travel details and have thus been unable (in Chinese) to return to their homes in other cities or check in to hotels.
Huawei will launch in Europe next week its first smartphone that will run on the company’s in-house service framework instead of Google’s, as the Chinese handset giant moves to offset a US trade ban’s impact on its overseas smartphone sales.
Why it matters: The move marks Huawei’s efforts as the world’s second-largest smartphone maker to challenge Google’s dominance in the Android ecosystem in markets outside of China.
Details: The Shenzhen-based company has chosen not to substitute the open-source Android mobile operating system that its handsets all run on. Instead, it developed alternatives to popular Google apps and services that it lost access to as a result of a US trade blacklisting that took place in May.
Context: Huawei has accelerated its pace to promote HMS and lure more developers to its app platform.
US federal prosecutors have added new charges against Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei and its US subsidiaries, accusing the company of conspiring to steal trade secrets and conducting business and technology projects in sanctioned countries.
Why it matters: The indictment adds pressure on Huawei from the US, which has been campaigning for its allies to avoid using its equipment on their next-generation 5G networks.
Details: The US prosecutors filed the new indictment Thursday in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, charging the Chinese company with conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), a 1970 federal law that aims to control organized crimes, according to the Department of Justice.
Context: Washington placed Huawei on a trade blacklist last year, banning US companies from selling components and technology to the Chinese firm.
China’s biggest smartphone makers are delaying new product launches that had been scheduled around the Mobile World Congress (MWC) after the event organizer announced it was calling off the world’s largest mobile phone trade show this year.
Why it matters: The annual event held in Barcelona is one of the most important stages for Chinese smartphone makers to unveil new products to an international audience. The exhibition’s cancellation and forced delays for product launches could hurt revenues from overseas markets, compounding expected losses in domestic sales brought by the Covid-19 outbreak.
Details: GSMA, the MWC organizer, announced Wednesday that the event this year was cancelled due fears about the virus outbreak in China which has spread to countries in Europe and North America.
Context: Multiple telecommunication firms including Ericsson, Nokia, Intel, LG, Sony, and Amazon, as well as hardware companies had pulled out from the MWC prior to GSMA’s announcement.
Chinese video-sharing app Kuaishou generated RMB 50 billion (around $7.2 billion) in revenue in 2019, with live-streaming revenue accounting for the largest share, Chinese media Jiemian reported on Monday.
Why it matters: Kuaishou is one of China’s most popular short-video apps and a major rival of Bytedance’s Douyin, the domestic version of TikTok.
Details: Kuaishou’s revenue from livestreaming reached RMB 30 billion in 2019 and its earnings from gaming and e-commerce were several billions of RMB, Jiemian reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: Kuaishou has stepped up efforts to monetize its services such as e-commerce and gaming in recent years.
Top Chinese smartphone makers including Xiaomi, Huawei, Oppo, and Vivo are teaming up to form an alternative to Google’s Play store to distribute Android apps to users outside China, Reuters reported Thursday.
Why it matters: The four Chinese handset giants together accounted for around 40% of global smartphone shipments in the fourth quarter, underscoring the potential for the partnership to take a chunk of business from Google’s Play store in the international Android app distribution market.
Details: The four companies are forming a group known as the Global Developer Service Alliance (GDSA) which aims to make it easier for developers of games, music, movies, and other apps to market their products in overseas markets, according to the Reuters report citing anonymous sources.
Context: The four companies use respective self-developed Android app stores in addition to third party app stores in the China market because Google services are not accessible in the country.
Huawei has filed two lawsuits against Verizon, alleging that the US carrier infringed on 12 patents held by the Chinese telecommunications company.
Why it matters: The move is a sign of escalating intellectual property (IP) disputes between the US and Huawei, which has long been accused of IP theft.
“We invest heavily in R&D because we want to provide our customers with the best possible telecommunications solutions…Verizon’s products and services have benefited from patented technology that Huawei developed over many years of research and development.”
—Song Liuping, Huawei chief legal officer, in the statement
Details: Huawei has filed lawsuits against Verizon in the US District Court for the Eastern and Western Districts of Texas, seeking compensation for the US company’s use of technology that is protected by 12 of Huawei’s patents, according to a company statement sent to TechNode on Thursday.
Context: Huawei asked Verizon to pay licensing fees for more than 230 of its patents and sought more than $1 billion, Reuters reported in June.
]]>This article was co-authored by Wei Sheng.
China’s tech stocks have dropped sharply since Jan. 13, when an epidemic disease known as novel coronavirus went global. On Tuesday Feb. 3, they started to recover, but most have a long way to recover from January losses.
E-commerce giant Meituan Dianping opened at HK$109.20 (about $14) on Jan. 13, dropped to HK$99.50 by the end of the day Feb. 3, and has climbed back to HK$100.50.
The stock rise coincided with a strong monetary boost from Beijing on Tuesday. The People’s Bank of China injected RMB 400 billion (about $57 billion) of liquidity to the banking system and strengthened the yuan exchange rate to support the economy.
The liquidity injection was the largest in the past year, sending a strong message to markets that the government will support the Chinese economy during the virus outbreak.
Manufacturers of surgical masks, now widely used and sometimes mandated in China for protection against airborne viruses, have seen a surge in share prices. Stock for three Chinese firms TechNode analyzed have gained 40% in share price since Jan. 13, indicating that investors expect a prolonged health crisis.
But things are looking up this week in tech. Stocks on Shanghai’s tech board started to climb on Tuesday, gaining back on the past few weeks’ losses. The benchmark SSE Composite Index, in which the STAR Market is listed, has gained close to 3% since Tuesday.
China’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market has been on a roller coaster ride after it reopened on Monday. Most shares dropped during the first day of trading after the week-long break with 43 out of 79 listing companies seeing their share prices reach the tech board’s daily limit of 20% downside.
The e-commerce sector has been hit the hardest among those analyzed, as expectations for consumption were low in the past few weeks. Share prices of the six companies TechNode analyzed saw a 9.4% decrease on average until Feb. 3, and have since won back 5.4%.
Millions of people are staying at home this week due to obligatory work-from-home policies, adding on the fact that fears of the virus spreading is running high. But fear of the virus might prove beneficial for e-commerce companies.
“Alibaba and Meituan’s share prices dipped slightly, but are now on an upward trajectory, as investors price in how important e-commerce will be over the coming months,” Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina, told TechNode.
Cities across China have ordered entertainment venues to shut down and shopping malls to take strict entry measures during the Spring Festival break which went from Jan. 23 through Feb. 2 after a last-minute extension.
“Over the coming weeks, the default for many folks’ consumption will be e-commerce,” Norris said. E-commerce and delivery platforms have already implemented “no-contact delivery,” meaning the delivery driver doesn’t come in person with the person receiving the goods. This scheme meets consumer desires and “the stock market has responded positively to these developments,” Norris said.
Luckin Coffee shares have dropped by 29%, from $44.17 on Jan. 13 to $31.35 on Feb. 3, the biggest drop among the companies analyzed. On Saturday, the US investment firm Muddy Waters delivered a further blow to China’s largest coffee chain, saying that it believes the company is inflating sales numbers. Luckin Coffee stock has increased by 24.56% this week, recovering to $39.05.
Smartphones and telecommunications companies have also seen a drop. The five companies TechNode analyzed showed a 2.3% decrease since Feb. 13.
“We predict the overall smartphone shipment in China to drop by 15% to 20% year on year in the first quarter,” said Fang Jing, chief analyst at Cinda Securities, a Beijing-based investment firm.
The drop is attributable to the government’s calls remain during the Spring Festival holiday in an effort to contain the spread of the virus, Fang said.
The holiday is usually considered a barometer of Chinese private consumption because of the traditions of gift-giving and family reunions. However, fears of the deadly coronavirus that has killed 491 people and sickened 24,363, based on official data, have kept shoppers away from the streets.
“We have seen shipments of smartphones through offline channels drop by 70% during the Spring Festival holiday,” said Fang. “If the situation is not going to take a turn for the better, the percentage will likely increase.”
Instead, people are going online for electronics consumption. Online shipments of smartphones are expected to account for as much as 40% in the first quarter, Fang said, adding that the proportion was only 28% in the same period last year.
With a small store footprint, Xiaomi relies on online sales, which makes it a strong contender for the coming months when e-commerce will become an even bigger pillar of consumption. Its stock climbed 3.29% in the time period analyzed, making it the only rising stock in the smartphones and telcos category.
Compounding on Xiaomi’s relatively good outlook in China, are good results in India. The Beijing-based company remains the top smartphone brand in India, according to research by market intelligence firm Canalys published on Jan. 29.
The epidemic also creates challenges and disruptions for supply chains in China, especially after authorities in some big cities announced rules barring companies from resuming operations for a certain period of time following the break.
Companies in Shanghai, for example, are not allowed to re-open offices before Feb. 10, meaning either remote work or a longer holiday. In the meantime, jobs that require the physical presence of employees, like factories, remain closed.
DingTalk, WeChat Work overburdened as hundreds of millions work remotely
Car manufacturer Hyundai had to close all its factories in South Korea after it ran out of critical components coming from China. The world’s fifth-largest automaker said it would take three to four weeks to switch to parts made outside China.
“We expect that most consumer electronics manufacturers will resume operations on Feb. 9 or Feb. 10, which means a delay of roughly one week,” said Fang.
“But, given that the first quarter is always a low season for electronics consumption in the year, the impact is limited. We expect that orders affected by the delay will account for less than 2% of smartphone makers’ annual orders.”
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article erroneously reported Meituan Dianping’s stock price as though it were listed in US dollars. The company’s shares are priced in Hong Kong dollars.
]]>Ongoing trade tensions and a technology cold war between the US and China may spur a “de-Americanization” of global supply chains, according to a report by global trade nonprofit Hinrich Foundation.
Why it matters: US export restrictions on major Chinese tech companies such as Huawei will force global semiconductor companies to source non-American parts, causing a reconfiguration of supply chains to meet thresholds set by the US government, according to the report.
Details: The methods by which global suppliers legally circumvent export controls by moving parts of the value chain to workable locations will determine whether the US trade restrictions have the desired effect, Alexander Capri, research fellow at Hong Kong-based Hinrich Foundation and author of the report, told TechNode.
Context: The Trump administration placed Huawei on a trade blacklist in May, effectively barring the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker from buying US components and technology without government approval.
The stock exchange of Hong Kong proposed allowing companies to hold shares with extra voting rights for new Hong Kong listings in an attempt to lure more tech companies to list on the bourse.
Why it matters: Tech companies tend to list with shares carrying so-called weighted voting rights (WVR) to maintain the influence of founders and management after they go public. A change to the listing rules may help Hong Kong to attract more tech unicorns in Asia, especially China, to go public.
Details: The Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) said in a consultation paper published Friday that the latest proposals were designed to attract innovative companies to Hong Kong and add diversity to an exchange dominated by financial services and property companies, according to Reuters.
Context: The Hong Kong exchange remained the world’s biggest IPO market in 2019 despite a year-long political turmoil in the Asian financial hub, according to a report by KPMG.
Two Chinese films that were set to open during the week-long Spring Festival holiday instead premiered online on streaming platforms amid an outbreak of a deadly coronavirus in the country.
Why it matters: Chinese streaming and gaming companies have received more traction as cinemas, along with other entertainment venues, were forced to close amid government calls for the public to remain sequestered indoors in an effort to contain the spread of the virus.
Details: “Enter the Fat Dragon,” a Hong Kong remake directed by Wong Jing, debuted on video streaming platforms iQiyi and Tencent Video on Saturday, two weeks ahead of its planned opening in theaters scheduled for Feb. 16.
Context: At least seven major film releases that were expected to dominate the holiday season were canceled because of a coronavirus outbreak in China which have killed more than 300 and sickened more than 17,000 as of Monday.
WeChat is testing a new feature that allows users to post videos to an audience beyond their social circles in a bid to boost user engagement as competition from rivals Douyin and Kuaishou intensifies.
Why it matters: WeChat has released a series of updates in recent months, signaling that the most popular social media app in China is stepping up efforts to lock in more users and boost growth.
Details: Channels allows users to post videos up to one minute or up to nine photos at a time plus a link, said Jiang Hongchang, an editor at Miniapp.com, a site that was allowed to participate in the beta test.
Context: WeChat’s monthly active users reached nearly 1.2 billion as of September, according to parent company Tencent’s Q3 earnings report.
News of a research fellow who was suspended from a prestigious Chinese university on Sunday became a top trending topic on social media after he admitted the “homegrown” programming language he created, Mulan, was a Python fork.
Why it matters: “Homegrown technology” achievements are often trumpeted by Chinese officials and state-owned media as the country pushes aggressively to build up technological self-reliance amid trade conflicts with the US.
Details: Liu Lei, a research fellow at the Institute at Computing Technology (ICT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told state news agency China News Service Wednesday that he and his team had released a “fully autonomously designed” programming language.
Context: Chinese companies and academics have been known to create forks for open source programs and claim that they are original.
Xiaomi is spinning off a premium smartphone brand it created for users in India as an independent company, a company executive announced on Friday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based smartphone maker began its multi-brand strategy in 2018 in a bid to target different user segments and drive growth for its biggest business. Smartphones accounted for 60% of the company’s revenue in the third quarter.
Details: Xiaomi global vice president Manu Kumar Jain said in a tweet that Poco had “grown into its own identity” and will become independent from Xiaomi.
Xiaomi’s Q3 growth slows amid dwindling smartphone sales, Huawei competition
Context: Xiaomi reported in November the company’s slowest-ever quarterly revenue growth since its July 2018 listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange. It has decelerated in the face of aggressive competition from rival Huawei in China’s saturated smartphone market over the past few quarters.
Huawei released Thursday a new version of its developer tools aimed at replacing Google’s similar offering as the world’s second-largest smartphone maker struggles to gain independence from US technology.
Why it matters: The company has stepped up efforts to create an app and mobile service ecosystem to replace Google Mobile Service, which it lost access to after a US export ban imposed in May.
Details: Huawei released HMS Core 4.0, a collection of features open to developers, adding capabilities such as Quick Response (QR) code extraction, near-field communication (NFC), and identity authentication, according to a company statement on Thursday.
Context: Earlier this week, Huawei announced it had shipped over 240 million smartphones in 2019, a 16.5% increase compared with the previous year based on data from IDC.
WeChat announced Wednesday it is testing a new feature which allows publishers on the social media app to add paywalls to their posts.
Why it matters: WeChat is becoming one of the few online content platforms in China to move into paid content, still a niche business for the Chinese internet users.
Details: WeChat is testing a paid content feature for some official accounts and will give access to some “qualified” accounts owners, a WeChat spokesperson confirmed to TechNode on Wednesday.
Context: WeChat, the most popular social media app in China with 1.15 billion monthly active users as of September, has stepped up efforts to monetize its services with a series of major updates.
With contributions from Emma Lee
WeChat rolled out a series of updates last Thursday, laying bare Tencent’s ambitious plans for mini programs—to build a vast online marketplace for traders and sellers. The move puts China’s most popular social media app on a collision course with Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo in the e-commerce space.
The new changes include a customer review mechanism, tools for brand protection and shipping, as well as a consumer protection platform, among others. The features bring the these WeChat sub-applications closer to resembling an online marketplace.
“It definitely looks like WeChat is setting up features to create an online marketplace,” said James Hull, professional investor and co-host of the China Tech Investor podcast (powered by TechNode). “They’ve tried e-commerce before, so it’s safe to assume they want to get into the space,” he added.
WeChat mini programs are lightweight applications that run within the super app. Users don’t need to download or upgrade them via app stores. Some 2.4 million mini programs already operate on WeChat as of August, according to a report (in Chinese) from mini program service provider Jisu App.
WeChat’s monthly active users hit 1.2 billion at the end of September, according to parent company Tencent’s third-quarter earnings report. By comparison, MAUs of Alibaba’s e-commerce apps were 693 million for the same quarter.
Online shopping transactions made up just shy of one-third of the total trade volume for WeChat mini programs that use Jisu App’s services for the first half of 2019, according to a company report.
WeChat can leverage its copious amounts of user data, its business-to-consumer ecosystem, as well as its advertising operation to build an e-commerce platform, said Hull.
“As we’ve seen with Pinduoduo, social e-commerce is powerful and it doesn’t get more ‘social’ in China than WeChat,” he said.
Tencent’s goal for mini programs in 2020 is to “help developers build their own business closed-loop,” said Du Jiahui, deputy general manager of WeChat’s Open Platform, at an event keynote speech in the southern city of Guangzhou last week. Du’s team is responsible for mini-program functions.
To get there, he announced plans to add more e-commerce friendly features to the mini program platform. They include:
Additionally, WeChat said it would open up mini program developers with three modules—live streaming, QR codes for goods, and technology for cameras to recognize objects—that could enhance their ability to engage with customers.
Live stream e-commerce took off in China in 2019 and the market is worth an estimated RMB 440 billion ($83.8 billion). During last year’s Singles Day shopping event on Nov. 11, Taobao Live from Alibaba racked up sales of RMB 20 billion. The live streaming-based sales made up 7.5% of the group’s overall sales.
WeChat’s plan to develop more e-commerce and retail-friendly features is a “natural reaction” to new business models in the e-commerce sector, according to Sheryl Shen, analyst at market consulting agency ChinaSkinny. Adding live streaming “will be the standard practice to boost traffic and revenue given the sales numbers we saw from the past Singles Day,” she said.
Tencent is trying to rebalance its financial structure by growing its WeChat revenue, Shen said. The firm derives a huge chunk of revenue from gaming and was hit hard when the government froze new title approvals in 2018.
The whole consumer-to-consumer (C2C) landscape is shifting because of changes to regulatory policies, especially after the new e-commerce law came into effect in early 2019, she said.
The law requires most online vendors to gain approval from authorities before selling and was a huge blow to China’s daigou shuttle sellers. The merchants typically buy goods abroad and import them for resale online back home.
WeChat has carried out “the strictest yet” policy to crack down on personal shoppers who mainly use WeChat and other social media, Shen said. The platform “is also preparing the way for its future development in e-commerce and retail mini programs to eliminate potential competitors,” she added.
WeChat announced at last week’s event that the total transaction value from mini programs on the app exceeded RMB 800 billion in 2019, a 160% year-on-year increase.
Though the figure is a fraction of Alibaba’s fiscal year total transaction value of RMB 5.72 trillion, WeChat’s massive user base could pose a threat to the established e-commerce player, according to Hull.
“It would take some time before it could challenge Alibaba’s dominance, but all the companies already on the WeChat Open Platform and with mini programs give them a jump-start,” he said.
]]>Huawei announced last week changes to its organizational structure and management team, creating a fourth business group for its cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI) divisions in a sign that the telecommunications giant is priming to ramp up its efforts in this sector.
Why it matters: The changes echo Huawei’s “Cloud Only” strategy announced (in Chinese) in April, in which the company pledged to invest more resources and funds to build a “full-stack cloud platform.”
“The future of computing is a massive market worth more than two trillion US dollars. We’ll keep investing with a strategy that focuses on four key areas. We will push the boundaries of architecture, invest in processors for all scenarios, keep clear business boundaries, and build an open ecosystem.”
— Ken Hu, Huawei deputy chairman, in a company statement from September
Details: Huawei appointed Hou Jinlong president for the cloud computing and AI business group, the company confirmed to TechNode on Tuesday. Finance news outlet Yicai first reported the news, citing an internal company document. Hou had previously led the same team, but his title had been president of the business unit.
Context: Huawei Deputy Chairman Ken Hu said in September that the company would invest $1.5 billion over the following five years to attract developers to work in its cloud platform.
]]>Venture capital funding for Chinese technology startups dropped by 51.5% year on year in the fourth quarter, according to a report by government institute released on Friday.
Why it matters: The decline affirms the so-called “capital winter“ which affected companies and investors in China’s tech sector over the course of 2019. The term refers to a significant slowdown in investment and fundraising activities.
Details: Chinese tech startups closed 403 funding rounds and raised a total of around $6.8 billion from venture capital investors in the fourth quarter, according to a report (in Chinese) by the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, a research institute under China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Context: Some 336 startups in China were forced to cease operations in 2019, according to the Financial Times. These companies collectively raised RMB 17.4 billion from investors.
]]>China’s top telecommunications regulator has given the green light to another state-owned enterprise to operate 5G networks, making it the country’s fourth provider of next-generation wireless services.
Why it matters: While the entrance of China Broadcasting Network breaks a monopoly held by the country’s three major carriers—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—it lacks infrastructure and experience, and is seen as unlikely to provide reliable 5G services.
Details: The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said it had assigned a 5G bandwidth in the 4.9 GHz frequency band to China Broadcasting Network and allowed it to deploy the service in 16 cities, according to a statement (in Chinese) published on the ministry’s website on Jan. 3.
Context: Founded in 2014, China Broadcasting Network was issued a license to provide basic telecommunications services in the country in May 2016. However, the company failed to become a household name and major wireless player like its three competitors.
]]>Lenovo and Xiaomi may be in for a legal dispute after the head of the personal computer giant’s smartphone business jumped ship to the smartphone maker on Thursday.
Why it matters: The move followed a leadership reshuffle at the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker in late November in which the roles of as many as eight high-ranking executives were affected. Xiaomi ceded significant share in the domestic smartphone market to rivals last year, falling to 9% in the third quarter from 12% in Q2, according to market research firm Canalys.
Details: Lenovo said it would take legal action on Thursday, the day Chang announced he had joined Xiaomi.
Context: Chang joined Lenovo in 2000 as a research and development director at Lenovo’s laptop business unit.
Huawei said Tuesday the company’s revenue in 2019 is expected to jump 18% year on year despite a series of campaigns led by the Trump administration against the telecommunications gear maker this year.
Why it matters: The growth rate is slightly lower than last year. In 2018, the company’s revenue grew 19.5% year on year.
Details: In a New Year’s message to employees, rotating Chairman Eric Xu said they expected revenue in the year to reach a record RMB 850 billion (around $121.7 billion). He added that the figures failed to meet the company’s predictions earlier this year.
“Survival will be our first priority…We will focus on the following four areas: sustaining growth, improving our capability, optimizing our organization, and controlling risks.”
—Eric Xu, in his New Year’s message to employees.
Context: Huawei said in October that its revenue for the first three quarters grew 24.4% year on year to RMB 610.8 billion. It announced in July that revenue in the first half of the year grew 23.2% year on year to RMB 401.3 billion.
Bytedance hit back on Monday against a lawsuit brought against it by Baidu. Earlier this month, Baidu sued the content company over allegations of manipulating results in its in-house search engine.
Why it matters: Bytedance is moving aggressively to build its search engine, a potential rival to search giant Baidu. The company could easily threaten Baidu’s monopoly in China’s search market with its 1.5 billion monthly active users.
Details: In the lawsuit, Baidu claimes that Bytedance deliberately directs users away from Baidu products that are similar to Bytedance offerings. Bytedance’s search arm, Toutiao Search, responded in a statement, saying that the company is working to better protect brands on its platform.
Context: Both tech giants have been increasingly litigious against each other this year.
China became the largest market globally for smart speakers earlier this year with some 10.6 million units shipped in the first quarter. In fact, three of the world’s five leading smart speaker vendors in the third quarter were Chinese, according to market research firm Canalys.
The top Chinese players are household names: e-commerce giant Alibaba, search operator Baidu, and handset maker Xiaomi. They all rely on a little-known startup called SoundAI for critical voice interaction technology.
The backstory: The Beijing-based startup makes voice recognition and artificial intelligence (AI) software, helping smart speakers from leading manufacturers to listen to and process users’ requests.
Unique selling point: SoundAI’s technology is found in more than 20 million products, ranging from smart speakers and conference systems to robots and connected cars. It also runs a strong research and development (R&D) arm with more than 1,000 patents secured so far, according to its website.
“Voice is the most natural way of communication, and smart speakers will see great demand in the near future. Our voice technology has been used in the smart speaker offerings from top players including Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, Huawei, and Xiaomi. Our cooperation with these firms is not easy to replace.”
—Chen Xiaoliang, founder and CEO of SoundAI, in an interview with TechNode
The investors: The company has closed four rounds of investment to date, bringing in investors such as Baidu, FreesFund, Qihoo 360, Aplus Capital, and the Bank of Beijing.
Present condition: The company has a team of around 200 employees, mainly from top Chinese universities such as Tsinghua and Peking University, as well as tech companies including Google, Broadcom, Tencent, and Baidu.
The landscape: Global smart speaker shipments grew by more than half year on year to hit 34.9 million units in the third quarter, according to market research firm Strategy Analytics. China accounted for 36% of global shipments.
China’s tech giants battle for smart speaker supremacy as price war rages on
Prospects: The company is likely to maintain growth as the smart speaker becomes a fixture in the “vast majority” of Chinese households. Baidu’s recent move to pull out of the price war by cutting subsidies indicates organic demand is increasing.
Beijing’s communications office announced on Thursday that the capital has become the first city in China to be fully covered with 5G service in the urban center, with nearly 15,000 towers activated.
Why it matters: China’s three state-owned carriers are sparing no effort to build infrastructure for the next-generation of telecommunications technology. The central government wants to blanket 50 cities by the end of this year and build the world’s largest commercial fifth-generation mobile network.
Details: The area inside Beijing’s 5th Ring Road, considered as the boundary of the capital’s urban center, has been covered with 5G signal “without any holes” (our translation). 14,577 base stations have been activated, according to a notice (in Chinese) published Thursday on the Beijing Communications Administration’s website.
Context: China launched its nationwide commercial fifth-generation mobile network on Oct. 31 with the three carriers offering 5G plans starting at RMB 128 (around $18.3).
To much fanfare, Chinese officials last week greenlighted the country’s “first root server,” which acts like a phonebook of sorts for the internet, translating internet protocol (IP) addresses into recognizable webpage domains. State mouthpieces claimed the server would “break the western monopoly” and prevent foreign powers from cutting off China’s access to some websites.
The only problem is that this isn’t true.
Editor’s note: A version of this article first appeared in TechNode’s exclusive Distilled newsletter on Dec. 21, 2019. Become a member and read it first!
“China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) has approved the establishment of a domain name system (DNS) root server by a research institute,” state news agency Xinhua said in a report on Dec. 8.
Authorities had rubber-stamped the setup of a root server at the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT), an institute under the MIIT, according to the report.
“Breaking the monopoly held by the United States and Europe, the MIIT approves the establishment of a root name server,” stated another story the same day, this time from the Global Times, a state-owned newspaper.
The excitement stems from a false conspiracy theory circulating online in China that the US could cut access to the international internet using its root name servers. The theory claimed that a homegrown root server would eliminate this threat.
Experts say the US cannot cut one country’s access to the internet. A controlling position of the international domain name system doesn’t change that.
MIIT’s official statement said that the CAICT had received approval to set up an instance that mirrors the contents of root servers, which is nothing new, even in China.
The CAICT’s Beijing office told TechNode that “official statements would prevail should there be any inconsistencies,” in reference to the ministry’s notice.
There are only 13 virtual root name servers around the world, named in logical form operated by 12 organizations in the US, Europe, and Japan, according to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a US-based nonprofit organization responsible for IP numbers and domain name system roots. It also operates one of the servers.
The global root server system consists of 1,033 physical instances that mirror the 13 main servers as of Dec. 19, states the website of the Root Server Technical Operations Association (RSTOA), a body under US-based Internet Systems Consortium, another of the 12 root name server operators.
When a user types a domain name into a browser, the DNS looks up records from the nearest mirror server to translate the domain to a numerical IP address, Huang Jue, a Shenzhen-based network engineer, told TechNode.
“If there is no record found on the mirror server, the system will send queries to its upper-level servers, all the way up to the 13 root name servers,” he said. “Therefore, controlling the root name servers means controlling the distribution of IP addresses and domain names.”
China is already home to 10 root server instances, according to a map on the RSTOA site.
The fear that the US is in the catbird seat is growing in China this year, especially after the Trump administration put Chinese telecommunication giant Huawei on a trade blacklist in May.
According to the conspiracy theory, the US could also cut China’s access to the internet if it wants to.
An unverified article published on the website of the Global Times in June 2018 claimed that: “During the Iraq War in 2003, the US stopped resolving Iraq’s domains meaning that websites ending with “.iq” disappeared from the internet. In April 2004, the US shut down Libya’s internet, making it unavailable for three days,” (our translation) without providing dates or sources.
“Many people voiced their worries: What can we do if the US does the same thing to China?” the article added.
Chinese media have a history of inflated claims about homegrown technology. Officials and state-owned media laud any effort toward autonomy as the trade war with the US continues, giving rise to concerns over a technology “decoupling” between the world’s two largest economies.
Sometimes the hype has a basis, like Huawei’s Harmony mobile operating system, memory chips produced at state-backed enterprises, or database management tools made by domestic firms. Chinese companies, and the government are enthusiastically pursuing homegrown alternatives to foreign technologies.
In this case, they mentioned another homegrown version of the root name server system, called the Yeti DNS Project. The project is closely related to a Beijing-based private company named Beijing Internet Institute (BII) Group. A source identifying themself as a representative of BII and a participant in Yeti told TechNode the project was jointly launched by BII Group and a few other international organizations.
The source said that BII does “a large amount of the work” on Yeti. According to an article (in Chinese) published by an institute under BII Group, BII chairman Liu Dong, is also the “executive chairman” of Yeti project.
“Led by China with participation from Japan’s Widely Integrated Distributed Environment (WIDE), the Yeti DNS Project established 25 root name servers in 16 countries in 2016,” the Global Times story said last week, without giving a source.
The story does not appear to be true as published.
Yeti says that their servers are not intended to function as live root servers. According to its website, its servers are testbeds for next-generation communications protocol IPv6, which is still in an early stage of deployment. According to Yeti’s website, it is actually associated with 24 root servers maintained by 15 operators, located in 16 countries as of Dec. 20.
Lars-Johan Liman, senior systems specialist and co-founder of Swedish root server operator Netnod, told TechNode in an email that the Yeti project is “a testbed for DNS experiments,” rather than a public service for the global internet. The global DNS root service is currently carried out by the 12 traditional root server operators and “the service capacity of the system widely exceeds that of the Yeti testbed,” he wrote.
Founded in 1985 by three Japanese universities, WIDE is one of the 12 root name server operators. The organization didn’t reply to TechNode’s request for clarification.
However, some experts believe Yeti could one day be used as a substitute root system, setting off “the mother of all fragmentations.” A World Economic Forum report authored by William Drake, Vint Cerf, and Wolfgang Kleinwachter wrote that “While its proponents assert that it is not intended to provide an alternate root, it does, in effect, do exactly that.”
The BII representative declined to comment on these issues due to the project’s “sensitivity.”
Yeti is not the only organization attempting to build alternative DNS roots. Projects such as Namecoin, New Nations, and OpenNIC are already offering their own domain resolution services outside the current root name server system.
Editor’s note: The circumstances surrounding Yeti and its project is currently unclear. As you can see, there are competing claims about what Yeti is and what they are trying to accomplish. We will be looking more into this company. Expect more information about them soon.
However, Huang, the network engineer, disagrees with the theory that the US could cut China’s international internet access, even as nine out of the 12 root server operators are in the States.
“Instances in a specific region form a wide area network and connections between countries in the network are not subject to US interference,” he said.
If one of the root servers stops operating, there are hundreds of other mirror servers to carry the load, wrote Liman in an article published on Netnod’s website.
“There remains no defined process for how to replace an existing operator with a new one, and it’s a question that the community does need to consider. But it is worth noting that, from a technical perspective, the disappearance of an entire operator is not a particularly big deal,” he wrote.
The scope for bad behavior by a rogue root server operator is “greatly limited” because an encrypted version of DNS protects the system, he wrote.
The farce reveals anxiety among Chinese people and the government, especially at a time when the rising power pushes to build up its self-reliance in technology and pledges to dominate the sector, but it also faces pushback from the US. Nevertheless, the reality is, the copy-to-China approach, and the media train that comes with it, are not helping the country meet the ambitions, or relieve the pain.
]]>WeChat tested a new feature in a canary release of its photo-sharing function Moments that allows users to comment with stickers. This is a sign that the popular instant messaging app is trying to engage more users amid an aggressive monetization push.
Why it matters: The Tencent-owned app is vigorously working on monetizing its 1 billion daily active users with more advertisements being introduced to the popular Moments feature. On Moments, users can share texts, photos, and short videos with friends and families. The move has seen a backlash from some users.
Details: Many users were quite happy when they found the new feature, released on Monday night. Previously, only texts were allowed.
Context: In January 2015, WeChat started to run ads on Moments and allowed users to interact with them.
Investors are running scared after China’s semiconductor-focused investment fund announced Friday plans to cut its stake in three chipmakers. Shares of three chipmakers fell by up to almost 8% when the market opened on Monday.
Why it matters: The move came after the National Integrated Circuitry Investment Fund, dubbed the “Big Fund,” closed a new mass-fundraising in October amid China’s pushes to mobilize public and private funds into the sector.
Details: Shares of Beijing-based flash memory designer Gigadevice Semiconductor, fingerprint identification chips maker Shenzhen Goodix, and Hunan Goke Microelectronics tumbled during the weekend. On Friday night the Big Fund announced it would reduce stakes in them by around 1% each during the next three months.
Chinese chip makers speed up plans to list on the STAR Market: report
Context: The “Big Fund” raised RMB 204 billion (around $29.1 billion) in October in its second financing round.
Chinese augmented reality (AR) headset maker Nreal filed on Tuesday a motion to a California court, seeking to dismiss a lawsuit brought by its US-based rival Magic Leap accusing the company and its founder of stealing its technology.
Why it matters: The June lawsuit brought by a US firm against a Chinese company over intellectual property (IP) reflects the broader dispute between the world’s two largest economies over technology theft.
Briefing: American AR startup accuses Chinese ex-employee of IP theft
Details: In a motion filed with a federal court in San Jose, Nreal claimed that Alibaba-backed Magic Leap is “filing lawsuits to slow down new entrants in the AR market,” according to a company statement.
“We will fight Magic Leap’s meritless legal claims and will not allow them to distract us from innovating and delivering unparalleled augmented-reality products.”
— Xu Chi, Nreal founder, in a statement
Context: Founded in January 2017, Nreal received $16 million Series A+ from investors including Everbright and Baidu’s online video unit iQiyi in January. The valuation is unknown.
Liu Chuanzhi, the founder of Chinese computer giant Lenovo Group, will announce his retirement and step down as the chairman of Lenovo parent company, Legend Holdings, on Wednesday, according to Chinese media reports.
Why it matters: The 75-year-old entrepreneur is widely regarded as the godfather of China’s emerging powerhouse economy and his founding of Lenovo three decades ago still ranks as one of the biggest technology success stories in China.
Details: Legend Holdings will issue a public notice announcing Liu’s retirement after the Hong Kong stock exchange closes on Wednesday afternoon, Shanghai-based media outlet the Paper reported on Monday, citing anonymous sources.
Context: Founded in 1984, Lenovo’s businesses range from producing personal computers, smartphones, and servers, to information technology (IT) management software and electronic storage devices.
Norwegian telecommunications company Telenor clarified on Sunday that Huawei will participate in building the country’s 5G network as a “non-core” equipment provider, Reuters reported, after saying it would phase out the use of the company’s equipment from its current networks over the next five years.
Why it matters: The announcement marks Huawei’s second contract with a major European carrier in the past week despite warnings from the US government to exclude Huawei. However, neither deal is for Huawei to supply gear for core, or controlling, networks, a sign that European carriers are still treading cautiously following US allegations that Huawei gear poses cybersecurity risks.
Details: Telenor will work with Huawei both to maintain the current 4G network and upgrade to 5G coverage in “selected areas of Norway,” according to the report, citing Hanne Knudsen, Telenor vice president for communications.
Huawei nabs German 5G network contract, regulator approval pending
Context: State-controlled Telenor is Norway’s biggest telecommunications provider, and operates in other Nordic and Asian countries, serving around 183 million customers.
Apple’s iPhone shipments in China dropped by more than 35% in November compared with the same period last year, Reuters reported, citing a report by Credit Suisse.
Why it matters: The November figures are the iPhone’s second consecutive double-digit decline despite Apple’s efforts to lure more Chinese consumers by significantly lowering the price of its newly released iPhone 11 series.
Details: Total iPhone shipments in China in the September-November period dropped 7.4%, said Credit Suisse analyst Matthew Cabral in the report, citing data from China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Huawei widens lead in China smartphone market after US ban: report
Context: Apple has had a tough time in China this year. The company’s smartphone shipments in China fell 28% year on year in the third quarter, while unit shipments for Huawei, its biggest rival in China, surged 66% in the same period, according to data from market research firm Canalys.
Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei has won a bid from one of Germany’s biggest telecommunications companies to help build the country’s 5G network.
Why it matters: The deal with Telefónica Deutschland, the German branch of a Spanish telecommunications giant, is a sign that German wireless operators are willing to source 5G equipment from Huawei despite warnings from the US government and experts that the company’s products pose cybersecurity risks.
Details: Telefónica Deutschland, operator of Germany’s second-largest wireless network, chose Huawei along with Finland’s Nokia as suppliers of its less-sensitive radio access network. The carrier said it would invest up to 18% of its revenue next year to accelerate the deployment of its 5G mobile infrastructure.
Context: German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas questioned last month whether the country should allow Huawei access to its 5G network rollout, citing Huawei’s ties with the Chinese government.
Beijing has ordered the offices for all government agencies and public institutions to remove foreign computer equipment and software from their offices within three years, the Financial Times reported.
Why it matters: The government directive, which comes as Washington attempts to limit the use of Chinese technology and is cracking down on some of China’s biggest tech companies including telecommunications equipment maker Huawei and artificial intelligence firm SenseTime, is likely to be a blow to US tech firms such as HP, Dell, and Microsoft.
Details: It is estimated that 20 million to 30 million pieces of foreign-made hardware will need to be replaced, and that the process will begin next year, said the Financial Times report, citing unnamed analysts at state-backed broker China Securities.
Context: Smartphone and laptop maker Huawei announced its in-house operating system, the HarmonyOS, in August in August as a response to the US government’s blacklisting of the company.
Chinese drone maker Ehang seeks to raise up to $46.4 million in its US listing, according to company filings, less than half of the $100 million placeholder used when it filed its application in late October.
Why it matters: Founded in 2014, the Guangzhou-based company specializes in commercial and aerial photography drones, and was the first to receive a license to test unmanned aerial passenger vehicles in China.
Details: Ehang’s market capitalization could reach $742 million through its initial public offering (IPO) of 3.2 million American depositary shares (ADS) at a price range of $12.5 to $14.5 offered on Nasdaq, according to its renewed Form F-1 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday.
Context: The company filed its IPO application on Oct. 31, joining a wave of Chinese IPOs on US markets during the month.
Huawei has filed a lawsuit against a top US telecommunications regulator over its decision last week to bar state-subsidized carriers from buying equipment from the Chinese company, Huawei chief legal officer Song Liuping announced Thursday.
Why it matters: Huawei has filed a number of lawsuits challenging the US government’s attempts to exclude it from the country’s telecom market, though they are widely considered a component of a global public relations campaign.
Details: Huawei filed a lawsuit on Thursday with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans against the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) over an order that bars US carriers receiving federal subsidies from purchasing equipment from Huawei and its rival ZTE, Song announced at a press conference at Huawei’s headquarters in Shenzhen.
“It’s simply shameful pre-judgment of the worst kind. The rule of law, to which the United States proudly adheres, does not permit this kind of arbitrary and unfair action by a government agency. Under the rule of law in the United States, agencies have to have legal authority for taking actions, they actually have to have actual evidence for the facts that they purport to find.”
— Glen Nager, lead counsel for Huawei and partner at Jones Day
Context: In March, Huawei filed a lawsuit against the US government over a law that prohibits federal agencies from using its equipment.
The Trump administration may reconsider a stalled plan that would ban Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei from the US financial system, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: The potential move could adversely affect Huawei’s overseas businesses, including its telecommunications equipment and smartphone segments, since almost all dollar payments clear through the US banking system.
Details: White House considered adding Huawei to the Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list earlier this year as part of its sanctions against the company, said Reuters citing three people familiar with the matter.
Context: In May, the Trump administration added Huawei on a commerce department “Entity List,” barring the company from importing components and technology from American companies without US government approvals.
Huawei has come under fire on Chinese social media after a former employee of the embattled Chinese telecom giant was wrongly detained for 251 days, relating to severance pay from last year.
Why it matters: Weibo users expressed anger at Huawei’s treatment of the former employee, reversing some of the firm’s positive sentiment generated online following its US blacklisting.
Details: Shenzhen authorities detained Li Hongyuan, a former Huawei employee of more than 12 years, last December before his official arrest in January for alleged blackmailing and extortion, according to a procuratorate filing circulating on Chinese social media.
Brief timeline:
Context: Chinese tech companies have been drawing the ire of China’s netizens for their harsh employee treatment this year.
Note: This article has been updated to provide clarity on the timeline of events.
]]>Xiaomi co-founder and chairman Lei Jun has stepped down as the company president for China, according to an internal company letter, following a drop in smartphone market share since he took the position in May.
Why it matters: Besides Lei, the company reshuffled seven other high-ranking executives within the ranks of the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker.
Details: Lei retained his roles as the company chairman and CEO while Lu Weibing, the former brand manager for the company’s budget phone spin-off brand Redmi, will replace Lei as the company president for the China region, according to an internal letter sent to Xiaomi staff on Friday, Chinese business newspaper Time Weekly reported on Sunday.
Context: Xiaomi last week reported 5.5% year-on-year growth in Q3 revenue, in the company’s slowest-ever growth since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong.
Xiaomi’s Q3 growth slows amid dwindling smartphone sales, Huawei competition
Updated: added that Lei Jun will also remain in his role as CEO at Xiaomi.
]]>Chinese tech companies that are better known for e-commerce services or consumer electronics are pivoting towards business-to-business (B2B) models as they look to grab a slice of the promising industrial internet of things (IoT) sector.
B2B IoT is expected to grow into a $1 trillion market in the next five years. It remains emergent and lucrative as factories, carmakers, and telecom players pursue large-scale digital transformation strategies.
JD.com announced a partnership last week with the State Grid to integrate the e-commerce player’s IoT platform with devices and meters at the state-owned utility, in a push to expand its IoT business into the energy sector.
In the same week, Xiaomi announced three IoT kits targeting different industrial businesses, as the Beijing-based electronics maker branched out from consumer-facing IoT efforts and smart home initiatives.
Worldwide spending on IoT is expected to come to $726 billion by the end of this year and hit a staggering $1.1 trillion in 2023, according to market research firm IDC, with an influx of expenditure in industrial segments.
Spending on IoT deployments from three commercial industries—discrete manufacturing, process manufacturing, and transportation—will account for nearly one-third of the worldwide spend total in 2023, said the report.
“While organizations are investing in hardware, software, and services to support their IoT initiatives, their next challenge is finding solutions that help them to manage, process, and analyze the data being generated from all these connected things,” said Carrie MacGillivray, group vice president of IoT research at IDC.
China’s long-awaited nationwide roll-out of commercial 5G last month could encourage companies to accelerate digitalization plans. The next-generation wireless technology promises faster speeds as well as low-latency connections, and is expected to drive growth in IoT technology.
Meanwhile, tech companies are scrambling to replicate their consumer market successes in the industrial IoT sector, and quickly forge out new revenue streams as their B2C segments meet with growth bottlenecks.
Xiaomi reported Wednesday 5.5% year-on-year growth in third-quarter revenue, in the company’s slowest-ever growth since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong. The slowdown is partially due to declining smartphone sales, which dropped by 8% year on year in the quarter.
Xiaomo and JD’s steps join a trend in China’s internet sector where consumer-facing firms are branching out to B2B segments in the past few years. Social media giant Tencent, which owns WeChat, and e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba both have pushed into areas such as enterprise software and cloud computing.
The partnership, officially announced on Nov. 19, will provide the State Grid with access to JD’s IoT platform across its devices and meters on its electrical network nationwide, the e-commerce giant said in a statement to TechNode.
The devices include electricity meters, power distributors, humidity sensors, and temperature sensors, said JD, adding that a centralized IoT platform could “eliminate data islands, while collecting and analyzing information about energy usage across different devices” for its new partner.
The utility’s nationwide power grid operation generates a large amount of data and it requires a platform to handle and analyze it all in an appropriate fashion, John Zhou, head of JD’s IoT division, told TechNode.
“The most important thing is that these devices can provide feedback on their [the State Grid’s] electricity generation, consumption, and storage and be processed in a data center to improve efficiency,” said Zhou.
JD started its IoT venture in 2014 focused around home appliances and it grew into a key contributor to company e-commerce income, said Zhou. The Beijing-based firm expanded into industrial sectors after it gaining enough experience from the consumer market, he added.
“The whole digital economy is extending from the consumer side to the industrial side, so we are also looking for opportunities in the industrial IoT sector,” he said.
On the same day as JD’s announcement, another Beijing firm Xiaomi unveiled a suite of B2B IoT solutions for companies working in the real estate, hospitality, and enterprise services fields.
The hospitality solution will allow hotels to install Xiaomi’s smart speakers, smart television sets, and multifunctional gateways in their guest rooms, Fan Dian, general manager of Xiaomi’s IoT unit, said at an event in Beijing.
The industrial IoT solutions leverage the firm’s successes in the consumer IoT segment, offering products and services found in its smart home ecosystem to businesses.
The enterprise services kit, for example, provides offices with devices such as connected air purifiers and smart light switches, which are already sold to Xiaomi customers as part of its smart home ecosystem.
Founded in 2011 and better known as a handset maker, Xiaomi has been aggressively expanding into IoT. The company announced in January that it would pour over RMB 10 billion (around $1.4 billion) into the development of artificial intelligence and IoT within five years.
Before last week’s announcement, Xiaomi’s IoT strategy was squarely focused on the consumer market with most of its connected devices designed for household use.
The company’s earnings from its IoT and lifestyle segment, which includes sales of smart home devices such as smart television sets, air conditioners, and smart locks, surged 44% annually to hit RMB 14.9 billion in the second quarter, according to company filings (in Chinese).
“We have to make good use of our existing advantages as we explore the industrial IoT market,” Fan told TechNode on the sidelines of the event.
“But we do have the ability to provide independent solutions for other industries and we will do that at an appropriate time,” he said.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi reported 5.5% year-on-year growth in third quarter revenue on Wednesday, in the company’s slowest-ever growth since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong.
Why it matters: The underwhelming earnings report reflects the mounting pressure on Xiaomi as it faces aggressive competition from rival Huawei in China’s saturated smartphone market in the past few quarters.
Details: The company’s revenue in the third quarter rose to RMB 53.66 billion (around $7.6 billion) from RMB 50.85 billion the same period a year earlier, a 5.5% year-on-year increase.
“We are in a transitional period from 4G to 5G and the smartphone market is under great pressure… We are very confident about the 5G era because we are good at bringing new technologies to consumers” (our translation).
—Shou Zi Chew, at the earnings call on Wednesday
Context: Xiaomi in September launched the country’s cheapest 5G-compatible smartphone, the Mi 9 Pro, at a starting price of RMB 3,699.
Xiaomi to launch first manufacturing plant in December: chairman
China’s telecommunications ministry launched Wednesday the country’s long-awaited mobile number portability program that allows mobile users to keep their phone numbers when switching to a new network provider, reported state-run news agency Xinhua.
Why it matters: The service has been under discussion for years and faced resistance from the country’s three major telecom carriers because it removes a bar for mobile users seeking to change their service providers.
Details: The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), China’s top telecoms regulator, on Wednesday opened mobile number portability and urged mobile operators “not to interfere in free user choice.”
Context: The MIIT said in March that number portability between the three major carriers and virtual network operators would not be viable until 2020, according to Beijing Daily (in Chinese). However, portability between the three primary carriers is effective as of Wednesday.
Huawei launched Monday a new lineup of its MateBook D laptops with the Windows 10 operating system pre-installed, days after Microsoft was granted a license from the US government to export software to the company.
Why it matters: The move shows Huawei’s multi-billion dollar consumer business is still restrained by a US trade ban imposed in May that bars the company from purchasing components and technology from American firms.
Details: The company launched two laptops on Monday, the MateBook D 14 and MateBook D 15, which will ship with Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system, said Yu Chengdong, head of Huawei’s consumer business, at an event in Shanghai.
Context: Microsoft said on Thursday it had been granted a license from the US Department of Commerce to export “mass-market” software to Huawei on Nov. 20, Reuters reported.
Chinese companies have filed one-third of essential patents related to 5G technology, according to a report by state-run media on Sunday, a signal that the country is pushing to the forefront in the race for dominance in next-generation wireless networks.
Why it matters: The news shows that China’s efforts to dominate in 5G technology are beginning to pay off despite an ongoing US crackdown on Chinese communications companies such as Huawei and ZTE.
“In 4G, the situation was very much the Chinese players having to pay royalties to license these patents from the Western companies… Now that the Chinese companies own such a significant share of the patents, the Western companies need to pay to license from them.”
—Edison Lee, a telecom analyst at Jefferies in Hong Kong, to the Wall Street Journal in February
Details: Chinese companies have accounted for 34% of worldwide standard essential patent applications for 5G communication systems, ranking the country first in global patent applications, Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily (in Chinese) reported Sunday.
Context: While Chinese firms have filed the highest number of 5G-related patents, they may not necessarily be the biggest 5G patent owners, according to a report by data analytics firm IPlytics.
Updated: Added information about China’s prospects for eventually receiving approval for many of its 5G patents.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is building a “smart plant” in Beijing to manufacture its flagship handsets, company chairman Lei Jun said at an event on Thursday, with production to begin at the end of December.
Why it matters: The manufacturing plant is a first for Xiaomi, the fourth-largest smartphone maker in the world.
Details: The plant will be capable of producing 1 million smartphones during the initial operation phase, Lei said at the World 5G Conference in Beijing, which the company later said would last one year.
Context: In March, Xiaomi announced its cooperation with Shenzhen-based OEM BYD to mass-produce the Mi 9, the company’s flagship handset launched in February.
China has set up a $21 billion state-backed fund to boost its manufacturing industry, according to a filing by one of the fund’s investors, amid a marked slowdown brought in part by a year-long trade war with the US.
Why it matters: Funded by the country’s finance ministry and several state-owned enterprises, the government-led fund together with a similar $29 billion chip-focused fund set up last month signals Beijing’s determination to mobilize support from its public sector for industries it wants to lead.
Details: The National Manufacturing Transformation and Upgrading Fund (our translation) was set up on Monday, and raised RMB 147.2 billion (around $20.9 billion) from the Ministry of Finance, local government-supported funds, and state-owned firms such as China National Tobacco, according to a filing (in Chinese) by state-owned CRRC Corp, the largest rolling stock manufacturer in the world.
“The manufacturing fund will probably give priority to listed companies, thus encouraging more private capital to participate, and maximizing its goal to upgrade the manufacturing industry” (our translation).
—Dong Dengxin
Context: China’s manufacturing sector, the main engine of the country’s economy, grew at an annual rate of 4.7% in October, down from 5.8% in the previous month, in a slowdown that has lasted for six consecutive months, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has started to pre-install an earthquake early warning system on a recent version of an operating system installed on its smartphone and television sets, the company announced on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is one of the first handset vendors to provide the potentially life-saving service.
“Earthquakes are small-probability events and people are not willing to install alert apps on their phones when they don’t happen… It is significant that Xiaomi pre-installs the earthquake early warning system on televisions and smartphones, because people will not need to download related apps to be warned of earthquakes” (our translation).
—Wang Tun, to TechNode on Tuesday
Details: The warning system is pre-installed on Xiaomi’s MIUI 11, the company’s user interface (UI) for smartphones and smart TVs based on Google’s Android operating system released on Oct. 22. Devices shipped with the UI installed will receive the alerts, Fan Dian, the general manager of Xiaomi’s Internet of Things (IoT) platform department, said at a tech event in Beijing on Tuesday.
Context: In June, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yibin, killing 13 people and injuring 199.
Embattled Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei released a position paper on cybersecurity last week, arguing that security assessments of 5G network suppliers should focus on the products, not the country of origin.
Why it matters: While few of the points expressed in the document are new, the release of the position paper comes as the UK and Germany near deadlines on deciding whether Huawei should be allowed into their 5G network infrastructure.
Details: System failure and human error constitute the greatest risk, and political suspicions have done nothing to solve the issues of cybersecurity, Huawei said in the paper dated November 2019.
“Today, cybersecurity is increasingly intertwined with political suspicions and trade barriers and falling trust between nations… Frequently, cybersecurity is used simply as an excuse to erect trade barriers, and this has further obscured the real issues.”
—Huawei
Context: The UK and Germany are on the verge of making their decisions on whether to allow Huawei to participate in their 5G network rollouts. Governments in both countries have indicated that the cybersecurity issue is a major concern.
Huawei’s long-awaited Mate X foldable phone sold out within seconds of being made available in China on Friday, months after the planned mid-year launch.
Why it matters: The RMB 16,999 (around $2,419.7) device has become the second consumer-ready foldable phone in China after Samsung launched its Galaxy Fold last week, which also sold out soon after sales opened.
Details: Huawei began selling the Mate X smartphone, which is compatible with next-generation 5G networks, on Friday morning on the company’s e-commerce platform Vmall.
“People want smartphones to be as small as possible when they carry them, but they want them to be as big as possible when they use them… and the foldable phone is a good solution” (our translation).
—Kevin Ho at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Tuesday
Context: The Mate X, which was first released in February at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, features a flexible screen that can fold into a 6.6-inch smartphone and unfold into an 8-inch tablet.
HarmonyOS phone tech is ready but lacks ecosystem: Huawei executive
The technology needed to run Huawei’s in-house mobile operating system, the HarmonyOS, on smartphones is ready, but the ecosystem is still lagging behind, said Kevin Ho, the president of Huawei’s handset product line, on Tuesday.
Speaking at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019, Ho said that millions of applications are needed to perfect the mobile OS ecosystem, and this remains the toughest problem for Huawei to solve at present.
The OS, officially unveiled in August, is widely considered as an alternative to Google’s Android. Yu Chengdong, CEO for Huawei’s consumer business group, said at the launch that HarmonyOS would support a wide range of devices from personal computers to smartwatches, as well as virtual reality glasses, without mentioning any plans for installation on smartphones.
Huawei’s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all
Ho reaffirmed that Huawei doesn’t have a plan to launch a smartphone running the HarmonyOS and that the company is still sticking to Android.
HarmonyOS is able to run on multiple internet of things (IoT) devices so developers need only to build one version of an app to deploy it through different platforms, he added.
“Currently we are working with developers around the world [to build the ecosystem],” said He, who called developers to build apps based on Huawei Mobile Services, the company’s alternative to the Google Mobile Services (GMS), the apps and services by Google that often come pre-installed on Android.
The GMS is currently unavailable on new Huawei phones due to the US export ban on the company which bars sales of components and technology from American companies to Huawei.
The company launched the Mate 30 series in September in Europe, marking its biggest smartphone market outside China. It sold without Google apps and services pre-installed, a move which experts believed would slash the appeal of the new models in the West.
Tiago Alves, vice president for Asia Pacific at Portugal-based Android app store Aptoide, told TechNode in an interview in June that no consumers in Europe would want a phone without Google services.
However, he said it would be possible for Huawei to build an ecosystem without Google, and the process should be a “joint effort,“ where those alternatives to Google apps and services such as the Google Play Store, YouTube, and Gmail are populated by many different developers.
If the Huawei OS can offer all of these Google services—something that will take a while to develop—then users will buy a phone that uses the system, said Alves.
]]>Chinese companies may have filed the most patents globally last year, but that doesn’t necessarily equate to breakthroughs in innovation, said Ryan McCarthy, the principal and chief representative at the Shenzhen office of intellectual property (IP) law firm Fish & Richardson. He called for efforts to boost the quality of these filings.
“When you see more patents filings, that’s typically a very clear sign of innovation,” he told TechNode in an interview at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Monday. “But the number of patents that are actually issued is probably a better sign of quality.”
The National Intellectual Property Administration of China, the country’s top patent office, received some 1.54 million patent applications in 2018, accounting for nearly half of total filings globally, according to World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) report last month.
China’s rise to become top patent-filer worldwide coincides with the country’s push for complete technology self-reliance amid its ongoing trade conflict with the US.
McCarthy said a lot of patents that were filed locally by Chinese firms purely to qualify for government subsidies.
Among the vast amount of patents filed, only around 25% of those from local firms gained patent office approval. The approval rate for non-Chinese companies in the country is about 50% to 60%.
“There is a very significant quality issue [with those filings],” he said. “My impression of the reason why there are so many filings is that the Chinese government, from what I’ve seen, has been really promoting intellectual property.”
Forced technology transfer by Chinese companies and governments was a key sticking point in the trade negotiations between China and the US, with the US asking for better protection of American IP in China.
McCarthy, however, deems the transfer of technologies to be “a cost of doing business“ in China because they can choose not to create joint ventures with local partners and find other ways to enter the market.
“But again, they are still here doing business, and that’s because they decided that it’s worth that cost to continue to do business,” he said.
Late last month, one of China’s vice-commerce ministers promised that the country would no longer force foreign firms to transfer technologies to access the market. Beijing pledges to bar the use of “administrative tools” to making companies hand over trade secrets.
“But if that is changing, where there is not any type of required technology transfer, I think that’s going to improve things in terms of companies from outside of China being more encouraged to come into China,” he said.
]]>Chinese regulators are planning to overhaul rules to revive interest from domestic firms listed on overseas stock markets including a significantly lower market-capitalization threshold and marked easing of the country’s strict capital controls, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Why it matters: The move is part of China’s ongoing efforts to lure tech companies to list domestically including making the initial public offering (IPOs) process less painful, as well as new draft rules from last week which will allow foreign companies to list on its stock exchanges.
Details: The Shanghai Stock Exchange and the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CARC) could unveil the new rules for public consultation as soon as in the next few days, people familiar with the matter told the WSJ.
Context: Signaling that opening the country’s capital market is a priority, China has made some radical changes to its stock markets recently.
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While global expectations are high on the potential for 5G technology to fast-track the development of cutting-edge sectors such as autonomous driving and artificial intelligence, a Hong Kong telecom executive has warned that superfast mobile networks could be more vulnerable to cyberattacks than their predecessors.
“The 5G systems are built around cloud-based technology and functions, so the cybersecurity threat is there. We have to protect our networks better than before,” KL Ho, senior vice-president of strategic wireless technology at Hong Kong Telecom (HKT), told TechNode on the sidelines of the electronicAsia trade fair in the special administrative region last month.
The debate over 5G and cybersecurity has become a global geopolitics issue, involving countries including the US, China, and EU members, as well as Chinese gear makers such as Huawei and ZTE.
The US, along with some of its closest allies such as Australia and Japan, has banned Huawei from participating in their 5G network rollouts. It is also actively lobbying other countries, especially EU nations, to exclude Huawei equipment from their 5G upgrades.
Though no EU nations have complied with the US’ call so far, the group published a report earlier this month warning that “hostile third countries” may force 5G suppliers to facilitate cyberattacks serving their own national interests. The reports’ findings echoed US government sentiment that Beijing could use a 2017 Chinese law to force Huawei to hand over network data to the government.
State-backed actors are perceived to pose the most serious threat, as they “can have the motivation, intent and most importantly the capability to conduct persistent and sophisticated attacks on the security of 5G networks,” according to the report.
Ho, however, believes that no “decent“ 5G equipment suppliers would assist their governments in conducting cyberattacks against other nations because such behavior would discredit them.
“The point is once they were found with solid evidence that they ever engaged in such conduct, they will fail in no time and nobody will trust them anymore,” said Ho.
HKT is undergoing a comprehensive tender process for vendors that intend to provide equipment for its 5G networks, Ho told TechNode, adding that the company’s principle of choosing 5G suppliers is “vendors with the best performance both technically and commercially.”
HKT, the biggest wireless carrier in terms of subscribers in the special autonomous region, plans to launch 5G services in the city in the second quarter of 2020.
Ho confirmed that the release of 5G in Hong Kong had been delayed by six months to one year, compared with other economies.
In June 2018, HKT called on the local government to make “radical changes” to its spectrum policies and management to avoid “disastrous consequences” for the city’s role as a regional telecom hub.
The company secured the 4.9 GHz band spectrum for the provision of 5G last month from the city’s Office of the Communications Authority.
Ho believes that 5G will bring plenty of opportunities for startups to assist telecom operators in fields such as network construction and maintenance.
With the automation of 5G networks, he said, “we can not rely on engineers to manage the networks manually. We have to rely on some sort of artificial intelligence solutions.”
“Those are the areas where startups can bring in their expertise to help operators to build those solutions.”
With contributions from Coco Gao
]]>Video-sharing app TikTok reiterated its independence from China in a letter to US lawmakers after company executives declined to testify at a congressional hearing on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The virally popular short-video app, owned by Beijing-based tech firm Bytedance, is attracting growing scrutiny in the United States following reports that it censors videos deemed politically sensitive by the Chinese government.
“TikTok claims they don’t store American user data in China. That’s nice. But all it takes is one knock on the door of their parent company based in China from a Communist Party official for that data to be transferred to the Chinese government’s hands.”
—Josh Hawley, a Republican senator, at a hearing of a Senate Judiciary subcommittee on Tuesday
Details: TikTok said in the letter that it had hired a US-based auditing firm to analyze its data security practices, according to Reuters, which has seen a copy of the letter.
Context: On Tuesday, executives from TikTok declined to attend a hearing organized by Hawley to explore privacy and security concerns brought by social platforms and whether they comply with China’s domestic censorship rules.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Monday questioned whether the country should allow Huawei access to its fifth-generation wireless network rollout because the company is compelled to hand information over to the Chinese government, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: The remarks came just weeks after German authorities drafted security guidelines calling for would-be suppliers to 5G network operators to pledge that they won’t reveal data to their home governments under legal pressure, a strong sign that Berlin may exclude Huawei from its 5G network build.
Germany wants Huawei to self-declare its trustworthiness to join 5G push
Details: Maas told reporters in Berlin that Huawei was a company dependent on the Chinese state due to its national security laws. A 2017 law requires organizations and citizens to “support, assist and cooperate with the state intelligence work.”
Context: The US has been urging European nations to exclude Huawei from their 5G network rollouts, saying its equipment could be used by the Chinese government to spy on their communications. Huawei has repeatedly denied the allegations.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is planning to enter the Japanese market next year as the company expands its global presence to offset sluggish market conditions and fierce competition at home.
Why it matters: Revenue for the Beijing-based company grew 15% year on year in the second quarter to RMB 51.9 billion (around $7.4 billion) aided by an increase in overseas sales, which accounted for more than 40% of the company’s total revenue.
Details: Wang Xiang, head of Xiaomi’s international operations, disclosed on Monday Xiaomi’s plans to enter the Japanese smartphone market in the next year, according to Nikkei.
Context: In January, Xiaomu announced that it would set up a business unit to expand on the African continent, appointing its Vice President Wang Lingming (no relation) to head up the new unit.
Huawei widens lead in China smartphone market after US ban: report
The high-profile founder of struggling Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan has been placed on an official blacklist for debt defaulters, which bars him from spending on travel and other major purchases, a local court document showed.
Why it matters: The public debt blacklist, maintained by China’s top court and including contributions from municipal-level courts, is part of the country’s growing push to curb nonperforming loans.
Details: Beijing-based Smartisan, along with its founder and former CEO Luo Yonghao, were put on the blacklist for defaulting on payments toward RMB 3.7 million (around $527,000) of debt owed to Jiangsu-based electronics suppliers, according to a consumption restriction order by a local court published on Sep. 24.
Context: Beijing-based Bytedance licensed in January a number of Smartisan’s patents to ramp up its online education business. The TikTok owner also recruited dozens of employees from Smartisan later that month.
For years, tech firms have argued that the era of the “smart home” is here. Hardware makers and internet companies have all stepped up efforts to try to grab a slice of this multi-billion-dollar market, going up against traditional white goods giants.
However, their efforts to gain market share have resulted in a fragmented market, in which multiple ecosystems exist that are incompatible with each other. Not only does this restrict their growth, but it also impacts users’ choices.
Smart homes are not like smartphones—it’s all about building ecosystems. To dominate the market, players need to aim for industry-wide standards and build a hub compatible with devices made by other players.
What it is a lot like is mobile phone operating systems, in which most applications are built around two monopolistic systems—Android and iOS. In the smart home sector, connected devices must be compatible with the hub so they can be controlled.
The bottom line: Companies are scrambling to gain a foothold in the smart home market. As an “ecosystem” category, players believe that hooking consumers up with discounted hubs will land them in a strategic position in the fast-expanding sector. But so far, the market is extremely fragmented—Xiaomi, the leading ecosystem, has only a 16% share.
The market: The smart home market volume in China was $11.6 billion in 2018 and will reach $32.9 billion by 2023, according to market data provider Statista.
Dropping in on Xiaomi: On Wednesday, TechNode paid a visit to a new smart home exhibition at Xiaomi’s Beijing headquarters, a 300-square-meter area decorated just like an Ikea-style show house.
Every device in the fancy show house is either produced by the company or by companies belonging to the so-called “Xiaomi ecosystem,” a set of startups that are invested, acquired, or in close cooperation with Xiaomi.
While most of the core devices, such as the smart speaker that controls the whole system, the smart television set in the center of the living room, and the smart lock that allows doors to be opened via fingerprint-scanning, are made and branded by Xiaomi, other devices are supplied by Xiaomi ecosystem players.
For example, the Xiaomi-invested Guangdong-based home appliance maker Viomi is responsible for the smart refrigerator on show. It comes with a huge screen to display the expiry date of the foods inside.
An automated curtain setup—of course, controlled via mobile phones and voice commands—attracted many onlookers, also made by a Xiaomi backed firm. This time it was Shenzhen-based startup Aqara.
However, a Xiaomi spokeswoman told TechNode that its home hub is not limited to Xiaomi partners, adding that third-party hardware manufacturers can also build compatible products.
What’s included: A smart home system usually consists of a security system, lighting system, a home entertainment system, and most importantly, a smart home hub that monitors and controls all the connected devices from a single point.
The hub: Tech firms such as Xiaomi and Baidu tend to build their smart home systems around voice-controlled smart speakers.
Conclusion: While every player in the market is trying to build the smart home hub to host their ecosystem, consumers will have to choose from the outset which brand they will be tied to. And they won’t like it because it could limit their ability to make their own choices.
China on Thursday announced that its long-awaited commercial 5G networks are ready, with the country’s three state-owned telecom operators to offer the service beginning Nov. 1 and ahead of an earlier plan to debut the cutting-edge technology in 2020.
Why it matters: The launch is a milestone in China’s push to become a 5G superpower amid a prolonged trade war with the United States and sanctions on Chinese telecommunications equipment giant Huawei.
Details: During a launch ceremony at the PT Expo China in Beijing on Thursday morning, Chen Zhaoxiong, the country’s vice-minister of industry and information technology, announced the official rollout of China’s 5G service.
MIIT summit agenda hints that China may launch 5G services this week
Context: China’s launch follows South Korea’s April kickoff of the world’s first commercial 5G service, and some carriers in the US, UK, and Australia, which have also rolled out the service in limited areas this year.
Net profits for Transsion, the Chinese smartphone maker, in the first three quarters of the year surged 732% year on year to RMB 1.3 billion (around $180 million), according to the company’s filing, while revenues continued to slow.
Why it matters: This is the first quarterly earnings report released by the Shenzhen-based budget mobile phone seller since its listing on China’s tech-focused STAR Market in September.
Details: Revenue growth during the three quarters ended Sept. 30 is slowing for the mobile phone maker, down significantly from 12.9% in 2018 and 72.2% in 2017, according to its prospectus filed in April.
Transsion’s lead in African phone market under threat from fellow Chinese rivals
Context: Founded in 2016, the company went public on the STAR Market on the Shanghai Stock Exchange last month, raising RMB 2.8 billion.
A high-profile wireless industry summit to commence Thursday may be the launch event for China’s long-awaited commercial 5G service, nearly five months after the country issued licenses for the next-generation wireless network.
Why it matters: The move marks a major step forward for China in its battle with the United States for 5G supremacy, though its pace has been hampered by the blacklisting of Chinese telecommunications equipment makers Huawei and ZTE.
Details: The agenda for the PT Expo China event, which runs from Thursday to Sunday, features a “launch ceremony” in the morning of its opening day, to be attended by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of China (MIIT) and the country’s three major carriers, according to its website (in Chinese).
Context: MIIT in June granted commercial 5G licenses to the three major mobile carriers as well as state-owned China Broadcasting Network Corp.
The Federal Communications Commission will hold a vote on whether to ban US carriers from receiving federal subsidies when purchasing equipment from Chinese telecom equipment makers Huawei and ZTE, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.
Why it matters: If passed, the move would eliminate Huawei’s and ZTE’s sales to US carriers—primarily rural carriers that source cheaper equipment.
Details: FCC chairman Ajit Pai proposed the order on Monday which names Huawei and ZTE as national security threats, and creates a process by which to designate other companies which pose a threat. The vote will take place at the FCC’s Open Meeting on Nov. 19.
Huawei revenue for the first 3 quarters rises 24% despite US blacklisting
Context: Huawei was put on a US trade blacklist in May, effectively barring American companies from selling the telecom giant equipment and technology. A similar ban was imposed on ZTE in April 2018 and has since been lifted.
Updated: the article was updated to include comments from Huawei.
]]>China has set up its second semiconductor-focused investment fund, raising RMB 204 billion (around $28.9 billion) from the finance ministry, state-owned firms, and local governments, the National Business Daily reported on Sunday.
Why it matters: The state capital-backed “Big Funds” will propel China toward its goal of building a world-class semiconductor industry amid urgent calls from Beijing to increase technological self-reliance.
Details: Twenty-seven organizations participated in the second financing round of the China National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, with China’s Ministry of Finance the largest shareholder after a RMB 22.5 billion investment, according to corporate intelligence information platform Tianyancha (in Chinese), which showed the fund was registered on Tuesday.
Context: China’s State Council, the country’s cabinet, published (in Chinese) the “National Integrated Circuit Industry Development Guidelines” in June 2014, which initially proposed setting up a special national industry investment fund to boost the semiconductor industry.
China’s lawmakers filed on Monday a draft amendment to a law protecting minors, including for the first time a section on cyberspace measures, state-run Xinhua News Agency reported.
Why it matters: The law, which been unchanged for seven years, is the country’s dedicated law for the protection of minors under the age of 18. A revision of the law to include cyberspace protections will potentially provide a legal basis for the country’s efforts to crack down on misuse of personal data and cyberbullying.
Details: The draft revision of the Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Protection of Minors was submitted to the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislative body, for review on Monday.
Context: China is stepping up efforts to protect the country’s younger generations in cyberspace as more minors gain access to the internet.
Two US senators on Wednesday requested American intelligence officials investigate Chinese-owned video-sharing app TikTok for potential national security threats, Reuters reported on Friday.
Why it matters: The virally popular app, owned by Beijing-based tech firm Bytedance, is attracting growing scrutiny in overseas markets for content censorship and data protection procedures.
“Our data centers are located entirely outside of China, and none of our data is subject to Chinese law… TikTok does not remove content based on sensitivities related to China. We have never been asked by the Chinese government to remove any content and we would not do so if asked.”
—TikTok in a statement on Friday
Details: US Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Republican Senator Tom Cotton asked in a letter on Wednesday to Joseph Macguire, acting director of national intelligence, for an assessment of the security risks posed by TikTok.
US official presses for review of Bytedance’s Musical.ly acquisition
Context: TikTok said last week that it plans to hire two former US congressmen as part of an external team to review its content moderation policies, including child safety, hate speech, misinformation, and bullying.
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei said on Wednesday that the company has no plans to sell its foldable smartphone in overseas markets and that the device will launch in China on November 15.
Why it matters: The world’s second-largest smartphone vendor, hamstrung by a US export ban that blocks access to the most popular features of Google’s Android mobile operating system, is approaching overseas markets with caution as it ramps up marketing efforts in its home territory.
Huawei to launch new 5G-capable handset in Europe without Google
Details: Kevin Ho, vice president of Huawei’s consumer business unit, told reporters at the launch of the Mate X foldable phone on Wednesday that there is no timetable for the device to go on sale in overseas markets because its demand has exceeded supply in China.
“Our strategy is based on carriers’ 5G roll-out in different regions… A global launch plan [for the Mate X] is under review.”
—Huawei spokesman to TechNode on Thursday
Context: This is not the first time that Huawei has deferred its overseas markets from launch plans for new handsets.
Update: an earlier version of this story referred to Kevin Ho as He Gang, as he is also known.
]]>Providing online news and content for millions of users in China, flagship Bytedance app Jinri Toutiao (translated as “Today’s Headlines”) doesn’t require an editor-in-chief to lead its content strategy like other news platforms do, according to company founder and CEO Zhang Yiming.
While the news aggregator app with around 115 million daily active users does have an executive editor whose job is to make sure the content on the app complies with China’s internet content regulations, Zhang insists that the best way to manage content is “not to interfere.”
The gap created by the absence of human interference is filled by the company’s artificial intelligence and deep-learning algorithms that deliver a selection of personalized content to its users.
The app shows an endless feed of posts and videos recommended by its algorithms, all based on the user’s age, sex, location, and personal preference. As you read posts recommended by the platform, it learns what you like and don’t like by tracking your behavior: what you click to read, what you choose to dismiss, how long you spend on an article, which stories you comment on, and which stories you choose to share. The behavior recorded by the system then spits out recommendations to populate your feed.
//////////////////////////////////////
TechNode’s ByteDance newsletter, one of the first in-depth looks in English at the now-giant upstart startup, was published from March 13 to Oct. 23, 2019.
If the news feed seems infinite, it’s because there are nearly 1.5 million publishers on the Jinri Toutiao platform—as of March 2018—comprising not only news organizations, but also individuals and teams of bloggers pushing out content.
Though criticized by the authorities as being “addictive” and “encouraging vulgar content,” the mechanism contributed massively to the early success of Jinri Toutiao, and therefore Bytedance as well.
The company has replicated the recommendation system with other products such as short-video platform Douyin and its virally popular international version, TikTok. Its success speaks for itself.
According to a person who is familiar with Bytedance’s recommendation system, it was initially based on Google’s Wide & Deep Learning, open-source models that combine the strengths of the wide linear model and the deep neural network, two types of artificial neural networks that can perform tasks usually carried out by a human brain.
The Wide & Deep Learning system is used for recommendations on Google Play, the search engine’s popular Android mobile app store with more than 1 billion active users, and has led to “significant improvement” in app downloads, according to a paper by a group of Google researchers.
“The recommendation system is now Bytedance’s core technology that underpins everything from its news app to its short-video apps,” said the person familiar with the matter.
In January 2018, Bytedance held a meeting to disclose how the algorithms work. The move was in response to pressure from internet watchdogs and state media, which had criticized the Jinri Toutiao app for spreading pornography and allowing machines to make content decisions (in Chinese).
At the meeting, Bytedance’s algorithm architect Cao Huanhuan explained the principles of the recommendation system used by Jinri Toutiao and many of the company’s other apps.
The full text of his speech can be found here (in Chinese).
According to Cao, the system’s main inputs consist of three kinds of data: the content profile, the user profile, and the environment profile.
The content profile contains the categories and keywords of each article, as well as the respective relevance values associated with them.
As an example, Cao highlighted an article on the Jinri Toutiao app about the Russian tennis player Maria Sharapova’s 17th consecutive defeat by American player Serena Williams. The article was allocated to the Sports and Tennis channels; its keywords included “Xiaowei” [Williams’ nickname], “Sharapova,” “Wimbledon Championships,” and “semi-final.”
The categorizing was performed by natural language processing, a branch of artificial intelligence that deals with the interaction between computers and humans using natural languages, according to Cao.
The system also recorded the values of the relevance of the categories and keywords to the story. For example, the relevance value of the keyword “semi-final” is 0.7198 while that of “Sharapova” is 0.9282, meaning “Sharapova” is more relevant to the story than “semi-final.”
The profile also included when the article was published, which helps the system to decide when to stop recommending this particular story.
The user profile consists of a series of characteristics for each user, such as browsing history, search history, type of device, sex, age, location, and behavioral traits. While characteristics such as sex, age, and location set the tone for the kind of content that should be recommended to the user, other inputs tell the system the user’s preferences on specific subjects and themes.
The environment profile is dependent on when and in which scenario the app is used: at work, commuting, traveling, and so on. That is because “people have different preferences in different situations,” said Cao. Other environmental traits include the weather and the user’s internet connection—for instance, cellular networks or Wi-Fi.
The distribution process begins with the system giving a recommendation value to a newly published story based on its quality and potential readership. The bigger the value is, the greater the number of users will see the story on their feeds.
Once published, the story’s recommendation value changes as users interact with it. Positive actions such as likes, comments, and shares increase the story’s recommendation value, which brings more exposure. Negative actions such as dislikes and short reading times decrease the value. The recommendation value also decreases over time.
Recently, Bytedance has moved to commercialize its recommendation tool, packaging the algorithm for use across different product lines and platforms.
Named “ByteAir,” the platform can use big data and machine learning—as well as Bytedance’s experience in news, live-streaming, social, and e-commerce—to create customized recommendation services for Bytedance’s partners, according to its website.
The model is “recommendation as a service,” according to the person we spoke with, who believes that recommendation is a universal demand for online service providers
“I’m sure they’re gonna have tens of thousands of applications and services that will gladly pay them money to use their recommendation service,” the person said.
“And in doing that, Bytedance will be able to make its recommendation better, because I’m sure part of the contract would require these apps to share their user data with [Bytedance].”
]]>China Mobile and China Unicom both reported on Monday declining profits for the first three quarters of the year as the country’s race to roll out 5G commercial networks takes its toll.
Why it matters: Costs related to 5G network construction are pressuring profits for China’s telecommunications companies amid flattening revenues as a result of market saturation in the world’s largest mobile market.
Details: China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile operator by subscriber base, posted revenue of RMB 566.7 billion (around $80 billion) in the first nine months of the year, down 0.2% compared with the same period last year. Its revenues from telecommunication services in the same time period were RMB 513 billion, down 1% year on year.
Context: The three state-owned carriers are cautious about their 5G network-related expenditures amid a slump in revenue growth even though the Chinese government is calling for a quick rollout of the technology.
Telecommunications equipment maker Huawei and facial recognition software maker Megvii, both blacklisted by the United States, have been awarded China’s top tech prizes on Sunday at a major internet conference held in the town of Wuzhen located in eastern Zhejiang Province.
Why it matters: The prize, dubbed “World Internet Scientific and Technological Achievements” and released at the state-sponsored World Internet Conference, signals support and recognition of the winners from the central government.
Details: Huawei and Megvii were among 15 companies whose products and services were included on the list of winners.
There are around 35 million households with smart speakers in China, and the device’s popularity is increasing rapidly, according to a report released by market research firm Strategy Analytics on Thursday, with some 59% of respondents saying that they can’t imagine living without the gadget.
Why it matters: In the two years since its emergence in the Chinese market, smart speakers have evolved from niche gadgets into one of the most popular electronic devices in Chinese households, making the country the largest market for the product worldwide.
“The Chinese market for smart speakers is growing extremely rapidly and this research shows that Chinese consumers love the convenience and entertainment value which smart speakers offer. If what Chinese people say turns out to be true, smart speakers will be in the vast majority of households within the next few years.”
—David Watkins, director of smart speakers and screens at Strategy Analytics
Details: Around 63% of the individuals surveyed who do not currently use a smart speaker plan to buy one within the next year, said the report. Another 22% said they planned to purchase one later.
China’s tech giants battle for smart speaker supremacy as price war rages on
Context: In April, it was reported that Amazon, the world’s largest seller of smart speakers, hired thousands of workers to listen to voice commands from some of its Echo smart speaker users.
TikTok will hire two former US congressmen as part of an external team to review its content moderation policies, including child safety, hate speech, misinformation, and bullying, the company said in a statement on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The popular short video-sharing platform, owned by Beijing-based Bytedance, is stepping up efforts to adjust content policies amid scrutiny from US regulators and Western media about whether it censors content to appease the Chinese government.
Details: The company will hire an external group from the K&L Gates LLP law firm to work with its internal US management team to review and advise on the video-sharing app’s content policies, Vanessa Pappas, TikTok’s general manager for the US, said in the statement.
Context: US Senator Marco Rubio last week requested that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) review Bytedance’s 2017 acquisition of short video app Musical.ly, which was later rebranded as TikTok, citing concerns that Bytedance apps are increasingly used to censor content.
Apple was again in the hot seat on Monday when its practice of sending web-browsing data including IP addresses to Chinese internet firm Tencent began to circulate, just as the public backlash for removing a police-monitoring app from its Hong Kong App Store on Wednesday was dying down.
Why it matters: News that Apple has been sending data to Tencent as part of a security feature that warns users about malicious websites have sparked privacy fears. Both companies have a history of conceding to the demands of the Chinese government.
Details: In a new version of Apple’s iOS operating system, the company said that a security feature on iPhones and iPads may also log user IP addresses. This data could be obtained by Tencent, which makes the Safe Browsing System used in China.
“The more I keep reading about this #Safari and #China issues, the more I start to question @Apple and what else they give China about their users we don’t know yet.”
—Twitter user @Coulton74 on Tuesday
Context: This isn’t the first time Apple has faced criticism for handing data over to Chinese companies.
The US government will soon issue licenses allowing a select few American companies to supply goods to Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei, The New York Times cited people familiar with the matter as saying on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The move could cool tensions between the US and China as another round of high-level trade talks start in Washington today, though the Trump administration ruled earlier this week that more Chinese tech firms would join Huawei on the US trade blacklist.
Details: In a meeting last week, President Trump gave the green light to begin approving licenses for some American companies to bypass a ban placed on Huawei in May. The restrictions effectively barred US companies from doing business with the Chinese firm.
Context: Despite repeated denials, the Trump administration has been using the Huawei situation as a bargaining chip in its ongoing trade conflict with China.
A new EU report published on Wednesday warned that “hostile third countries” may force 5G suppliers to facilitate cyberattacks serving their own national interests, but refrained from singling out China and its telecommunications equipment giant Huawei.
Why it matters: The EU report, which aims to help ensure a high level of cybersecurity across 5G networks of its member states, said a “strong link” between the supplier and government of a given third country could leave the specific hardware supplier subject to interference.
Details: The advisory report is a result of a national cybersecurity risk assessment by all EU member states, aiming to help them identify the main threats and threat actors when rolling out their 5G networks.
Context: The US has been urging European nations to exclude Huawei from their 5G network rollouts, saying its equipment could be used by the Chinese government to spy on their communications.
Chinese video surveillance gear maker Hikvision said on Wednesday that US sanctions against the company won’t have a long-term impact on its businesses due to its limited reliance on US technology.
Why it matters: The latest US Commerce Department’s move to blacklist the Hangzhou-based company has put it in a similar position with Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei, and both of which are targeted because of their ties with the Chinese government.
Details: Hikvision has “relatively low” reliance on US semiconductors as it sources most of its chips from domestic suppliers such as HiSilicon, a Huawei semiconductors subsidiary, said company CEO Hu Yangzhong on a conference call with analysts on Wednesday afternoon.
Context: The US Commerce Department on Monday added the company, along with other Chinese government agencies and private firms, to a so-called “Entity List,” barring them from buying technology and equipment from American companies without approval from the US government.
“I can hardly believe that so many people abroad have seen my videos,” Chinese viral sensation Liu Shichao told TechNode.
Liu was shocked when told that some of his short videos had gone viral on Twitter, a social network blocked in the country he lives. “I’m very, very surprised because that video was made about two years ago, and I don’t even know who spread it abroad,” he said.
The 33-year-old Chinese farmer has never left China, nor has he ever accessed foreign social media platforms like Twitter or Instagram. But that didn’t stop his clips uploaded to Chinese social network Kuaishou from scaling the Great Firewall and racking up clicks in the West.
Liu’s videos join a growing trend in which Chinese viral content is reuploaded on Western social media accounts, bringing them global attention. And in most cases, the original creators are not even aware of it.
While one of his short videos originally posted on Kuaishou racked up nearly 12 million views on Twitter, Liu’s life remains relatively unchanged. When TechNode reached out to Liu last Thursday, he was busy harvesting corn in a small village in northern China’s Hebei province.
In the aforementioned video, Liu glugs down a half bottle of beer followed by a ghastly concoction containing the rest of the beer, a glass of burning baijiu liquor, a can of Pepsi, and even a raw egg. The whole process takes less than one minute.
He first became aware of the situation late last month when he woke to messages from many newly registered users on Kuaishou. It took a while for him to figure out why all these people were contacting him since the messages were mostly in English and he had to translate them.
“One message told me that I was a celebrity now in America,” he said. “So I chatted with the person [who sent the message] for a whole day, with the help of translation software.”
Liu is one of the thousands of Kuaishou bloggers who are willing to test their limits by performing dangerous or just plain bizarre acts, to please their followers.
The Beijing-based social network allows users to upload short videos varying in length from a few seconds to a couple of minutes each and has accumulated around 300 million monthly active users (MAU) as of July, dwarfed by Bytedance’s similar offering Douyin with over 400 million MAUs as of November.
Kuaishou is especially popular among rural communities and migrant workers in the country, leading some to refer to the app as a “mirror of life in rural China.”
Close to two-thirds of Kuaishou users live in China’s third-tier cities or below, which excludes most larger provincial capitals and major metropolises such as Beijing and Shanghai, according to a report by Chinese research firm TalkingData.
The app’s content, however, is often chastised by cyberspace watchdogs and state media for being “vulgar.”
In a yearlong campaign aimed at “cleaning up” the web, the Cyberspace Administration of China, the country’s top internet regulator, in March 2018 ordered Kuaishou to remove harmful and vulgar content. The app was later removed from the country’s Android app stores and was not allowed to provide updates for iPhone users via the App Store.
The app became available again after the company made a public apology and promised to remove vulgar, pornographic, or violent content.
Though the above-mentioned video was a hit on Twitter, it’s no longer available on Kuaishou, to which it was uploaded in January 2018.
The video racked up over 50,000 likes and 6,100 comments within one month of going live before it was taken down by Kuaishou. The platform marked the video as “inappropriate for publishing,” according to a screenshot of Liu’s Kuaishou user interface seen by TechNode.
Liu said that Kuaishou removed more than 100 of his clips and suspended his account for nearly four months during what he called “tough crackdown” in the first half of 2018.
He told TechNode that he rarely makes videos similar to that one because Kuaishou no longer “promotes this kind of content.”
“They might think that these videos encourage teenagers to consume alcohol,” he said.
He recently registered an account on Twitter and began to post similar videos that are no longer welcomed by Kuaishou. He soon amassed nearly 250,000 followers on Twitter and each of his videos usually earns him hundreds of retweets and thousands of views.
Kuaishou declined to comment.
It is widely acknowledged that Chinese internet culture usually doesn’t translate well in a global context. It is rare to see Chinese internet slang or memes spread to other countries.
This is mainly due to language barriers, as well as the fact that the country’s strict internet controls force people to express themselves in more obscure ways.
But when it comes to online video content, international boundaries are disappearing.
“Videos, animations, and games are more visual, so they are easier to absorb and understand,” Ross Settles, an adjunct professor of media innovation and entrepreneurship at the University of Hong Kong, told TechNode.
“The great thing about the short video is that it has to tell a very quick and simple story,” he added. “It’s very crisp and the message is very clean.”
The fact that most short-video content produced on China’s internet is light-hearted is also a contributor. Fun content is a universal need and a language that everybody can understand.
Chen Zhanwei, a 25-year-old vlogger based in the southwestern city of Chengdu, has also been garnering large viewer numbers on YouTube, another platform inaccessible within China.
These videos, which tell the stories of the four cats that he raises, were originally uploaded to Chinese video-streaming sites such as Bilibili and Weibo. But they have also gained a following beyond the Great Wall after Chen uploaded them to YouTube, despite them being in Chinese.
“It was unbelievable because my videos are all in Chinese, but there are millions of people watching them, and many of them are commenting in other languages besides Chinese,” said Chen, adding that his most popular upload on Youtube has attracted more than 43 million clicks.
Settles suggests that that Chinese internet culture used to thrive in platforms that were only used by Chinese or people connected with the country, such as Tencent’s social networking app WeChat. However, thanks to Chinese short video apps like TikTok, the international version of Douyin, Chinese internet culture is drawing eyes in the outside world.
“It’s not that Chinese internet culture is so different that no one would understand. It’s that it was just not visible for most international users,” he said.
]]>Transsion Holdings, the largest mobile phone vendor in Africa, priced its initial public offering (IPO) on Monday at RMB 35.15 (around $4.93) per share to raise RMB 2.8 billion on China’s Nasdaq-style tech board.
Share prices for the Chinese smartphone maker opened 50.7% higher at RMB 53, valuing the company at RMB 42.4 billion (around $5.95 billion).
Why it matters: The Shenzhen-based budget mobile phone seller has a strong presence in emerging markets such as Africa and India, but has been criticized for its weak research and development capabilities.
Details: The Huawei lawsuit has had limited impact on Transsion’s performance in the market. Its share price peaked at RMB 69 per share on Monday morning, and closed 64.4% higher than its IPO pricing at RMB 57.8 for a market capitalization of RMB 46.2 billion.
Context: Transsion Holdings was founded in 2006 by former employees of Ningbo Bird Company, which was once one of the biggest mobile phone makers in China.
Founder and CEO of embattled Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei said on Thursday that it has started making 5G base stations without components from the United States, which placed the company on a trade blacklist in May.
Why it matters: The announcement indicates that the damage to Huawei’s telecom gear business from US trade restrictions barring the company from buying American-made components and technology has been limited, though they have resulted in the loss of access to key technologies needed to support its consumer business.
Details: Huawei will start mass-producing 5G base stations free of US components next month, Ren Zhengfei said on a panel discussion at the company’s headquarters in Shenzhen on Thursday.
Chinese drone maker Ehang has secretly filed an application for an initial public offering with Nasdaq, seeking to raise as much as $200 million, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: The drone maker joins a number of Chinese startups seeking to raise funds on US stock markets, such as coffee chain Luckin Coffee, despite Beijing’s efforts to lure high-tech firms to list domestically.
Details: Ehang plans to offer 10% to 15% of its shares in the IPO, with the company’s valuation not yet set due to volatile market conditions, according to the report.
Context: Founded in 2014, the Guangzhou-based company specializes in drones used for commercial uses such as agriculture.
Several top Chinese chip makers are accelerating their timelines to list on China’s new Nasdaq-style high-tech board, with plans to list within one year in response to Beijing’s push for complete self-reliance in semiconductors, Nikkei Asian Review reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: China is accelerating public listings particularly for chip companies on the domestic STAR Market to speed the development of its high-priority semiconductor industry in the wake of US technology sanctions.
Details: Horizon Robotics, an autonomous driving-focused artificial intelligence chip unicorn, plans to list on the STAR Market as soon as 2020, said Nikkei, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: The STAR Market was first announced by Chinese President Xi Jinping in his keynote speech at the opening of the first China International Import Expo in Shanghai in November.
UK chip designer Arm confirmed on Wednesday that it will continue to supply Huawei and its semiconductor subsidiary HiSilicon. US trade restrictions had called the pair’s ties into question after Arm previously told staff to stop working with Huawei, the BBC reported citing internal documents.
Why it matters: Arm’s chip-designing architecture are used in HiSilicon’s chipsets found in many of Huawei’s smartphones and mobile devices, and the severed business ties had forced Hisilicon to find alternatives.
Details: Arm China, a joint venture set up by Arm and a Chinese investment consortium last year, said in a news conference in Shenzhen on Wednesday that the company, along with its UK parent, never suspended supplies to Huawei after the US trade ban took effect, Chinese media outlet Semiconductor Industry Observation reported on Wednesday.
“After the [the US trade ban on Huawei], Arm and Arm China started communication with Huawei and HiSilicon, actively looking for solutions…We can definitely say that we have never suspended supplies to Huawei.”
—Liang Quan, marketing director Arm China, told reporters on Wednesday
Context: Many Huawei’s suppliers, including Intel and Google, have cut ties with the company as a result of the US trade restrictions, which has already brought huge damage to Huawei’s global supply chain.
This story has been updated to correctly attribute the direct quote in the Details section to Diao Yanqiu, not Liang Quan as was originally written.
]]>Last month, Bytedance launched a new search engine as it seeks to expand beyond news and short video.
Toutiao Search is a search feature contained within the popular Bytedance news aggregator Jinri Toutiao; it can also be accessed from a web browser. Initially, it was just a simple search bar at the top of the Jinri Toutiao app and only crawled through articles published on the app. Now, its search results also include links from around the internet.
Its evolution is similar to that of WeChat’s search feature, which also evolved from a simple in-app search function into a general search engine that includes links outside of WeChat in its search results.
The Chinese search engine market remains largely dominated by Baidu, which held a 76.7% share in August, followed by Tencent-backed Sogou with 10.7%, according to web analytics company Statcounter. Google, though blocked in China, is ranked fourth with 3.2% share of the country’s search engine market.
WeChat’s search engine and Toutiao Search are not considered standalone search engines and thus are not included in the report, but many Chinese internet users turn to these in-app features when hunting for information.
A closer look at the four search engines (Toutiao Search, Baidu, Google, and WeChat search) shows that Toutiao Search has aims beyond WeChat’s “walled garden” system, which only retrieves results within Tencent’s ecosystem. Toutiao Search appears to be heading in the direction of a standalone search engine which returns results on everything published on the internet, in direct competition with Baidu and Google.
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TechNode’s ByteDance newsletter, one of the first in-depth looks in English at the now-giant upstart startup, was published from March 13 to Oct. 23, 2019.
Assessing a search engine’s usefulness can be a matter of opinion, so we decided to approach the comparison using inquiries about general knowledge and destination searches.Our test began with a search for “What is the capital of Canada?” (加拿大的首都在哪里?) A pretty easy query, we thought. Ideally, “Ottawa” should appear at the top of the search results.
The results show that Google and Baidu are good at providing direct answers in their search results—both returned the Chinese word for “Ottawa” (渥太华) as the top result.
Toutiao Search also returned “Ottawa” as the top result—in a format similar to Google’s Knowledge Panel, complete with an image at the top of the page—but the results were not as explicit as those from Google and Baidu. WeChat, however, returned a list of links to mini-programs and articles within the app, of which some excerpts contained the word “Ottawa.”
Next, we tested how the search engines performed regarding places of interest. In this test, we searched for “Italian restaurants in Beijing” (北京意大利餐厅). We wanted results that provided information that most users would find useful: a list of restaurants with addresses, photos, and reviews.
Google returned a list of top-ranking Italian restaurants identified by locations on Google Maps. However, the usefulness of these results is limited because few users in China can access Google and even fewer will add to the listings or leave reviews.
Baidu, Toutiao Search, and WeChat all linked to articles recommending the best Italian restaurants in Beijing, which means users are still a few clicks away from an answer. Baidu also included a list of restaurants based on information from Baidu Maps following a regular article link and a search ad.
Next we probed the issue of search neutrality, a principle which says that the primary directive dictating results rankings should be relevance.
In a search for the “Cybersecurity Law of China” (中国网络安全法), we decided that the most relevant links should be an article that briefly introduces the law from an online encyclopedia, and a link to the full text of the law published by a credible organization, such as a government agency.
Google yielded articles about the law on both Wikipedia and Baidu Baike (Baidu’s online encyclopedia), as well as a link to the full text published by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, an institute within the State Council of China.
Baidu offered links to the Baidu Baike page and an article about the law on a site for law professionals, followed by search suggestions surrounding the term.
WeChat’s top result was a link to a page about the law on the mini-program developed by Sogou Baike (Sogou’s Wikipedia equivalent), followed by articles published recently on WeChat.
Toutiao Search, however, only offered links to articles that had been recently published on the news aggregator app in the top-ranking results.
The online encyclopedias returned by the search engines offers a glimpse of each platform’s search neutrality practices.
Wikipedia is widely considered one of the most credible online encyclopedias. In most Google searches, a relevant Wikipedia entry is positioned in the Knowledge Panel at the top of the first page of results, even though Wikipedia has no ties to Google. Meanwhile, entries from Baidu Baike and Sogou Baike, often appear as the top-ranking result for Baidu and WeChat searches, respectively; those online encyclopedias are subsidiaries of the two businesses.
In keeping with this practice, Bytedance recently acquired the Chinese online encyclopedia Hudong Baike, a move widely seen as securing an in-house resource for Toutiao Search results.
Total search neutrality is not achievable in an advertising-adjacent business. Online advertising contributes the lion’s share of revenue for both Google and Baidu, and is also a major source of both Tencent’s and Bytedance’s earnings.
A search for “stock investment” (股票投资) brought up ads on Google, Baidu, and Toutiao Search. WeChat’s search results for the same term appears to be ad-free, at least for now.
Google’s search results featured one ad followed by a number of videos from YouTube, a Google subsidiary. Baidu showed two ads while Toutiao Search displayed three. All three search platforms displayed ads above regular search results.
Ads on Toutiao Search do not look like Google’s or Baidu’s ads, which are set off in a separate box and labeled as advertisements. Instead, Toutiao Search seems to be simply displaying ads based on the keywords searched, pulled from the Jinri Toutiao platform.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi unveiled the country’s cheapest 5G-compatible smartphone on Tuesday as the company seeks to revive its image as an affordable handset brand in the 5G era.
Why it matters: The world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker is looking to offset slowing hardware sales by taking advantage of momentum promised by the impending launch of ultra-fast 5G internet.
Details: The Mi 9 Pro, which debuted on Tuesday at an event in Xiaomi’s headquarters in Beijing, will start at RMB 3,699 (around $520), significantly cheaper than any other 5G smartphones launched in the Chinese market.
“This year is the initial phase for 5G smartphones, and the costs for them are higher, that’s why the Mi 9 Pro is more expensive than the Mi 9. Please understand!” (our translation)
—Lei Jun, Xiaomi founder and CEO, at the Xiaomi 9 Pro launch on Tuesday
Context: Xiaomi launched its first 5G smartphone, the Mi Mix 3 5G, in February at the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona, Spain. The EUR 599 (around $658) device went on sale in Spain and Italy in May but hasn’t arrived at its home market yet.
This story has been updated to include the Mi Mix Alpha announcement and to correct the name of the Mi 9 Pro.
]]>Apple said on Monday it will keep making new Mac Pro desktop computers in the United States after the company was granted certain tariff exemptions from the US government, reversing earlier plans to move production to China.
Why it matters: The California-based tech giant has been embroiled in a trade war between the US and China, with the American President Donald Trump pressing the company repeatedly to move more of its production from China to the US and imposing billions of dollars in tariffs on Chinese-made goods.
Details: The Mac Pro desktops will continue to be manufactured in its Austin, Texas facility, said Apple in a statement on Monday.
“…every Apple product is designed and engineered in the US, and made up of parts from 36 states, supporting 450,000 jobs with US suppliers, and we’re going to continue growing here.”
—Tim Cook, Apple CEO, in the statement
Context: Apple had tapped Taiwanese contractor Quanta Computer to manufacture the Mac Pro and was ramping up production at a factory near Shanghai, according to a Wall Street Journal report in June citing people familiar with the plans.
A Chinese state-backed semiconductor startup said it has started mass production of the country’s first locally designed dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) chip, China Securities Journal reported on Monday.
Why it matters: The move marks a major step for China’s push for complete self-reliance in semiconductors amid an ongoing trade war with the United States, but experts are skeptical about whether homegrown players can challenge memory chip giants such as Samsung and Micron in the $100 billion-per-year market.
Details: Changxin Memory Technology, a semiconductor startup founded in 2016 in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei, has started to mass produce its own DRAM chips, the company’s chairman and CEO Zhu Yiming said Friday at the World Manufacturing Convention in the city.
Context: Changxin is widely seen as the next potential target for Washington’s campaign to block Chinese firms’ access to crucial American technology, Nikkei Asian Review reported in June.
The Chinese startup that is behind KFC’s recent drone deliveries in Hangzhou aims to revolutionize the country’s food takeout market.
Ordering food online in China is easy and convenient—One click and your cuisine can arrive within 30 minutes. Now, Hangzhou-based startup Antwork wants to improve it further by using drones instead of delivery drivers.
The backstory: Antwork wants to build low-altitude airspace logistics networks in urban areas that are capable of replacing human labor and cutting costs in China’s multi-billion food delivery and courier markets.
Unique selling point: Antwork is the first Chinese company to pass the Specific Operations Risk Assessment (SORA), the Civil Aviation Administration of China’s multi-stage process of risk evaluation for certain unmanned aircraft operations. The certification means that Antwork can conduct urban parcel delivery using drones, co-founder and chief operating officer Zhao told TechNode.
“We are the first company to obtain approvals to conduct drone delivery in crowded metropolitan areas…It took us from January through July to complete all of the assessment processes from the CAAC, and they were very cautious and strict. This also proves that our technology is recognized by the authorities and is advanced.”
— Zhao Liang
The investors: Apart from Panda Capital and Unity Ventures, the company’s other backers include Gobi Partners, Sequoia Capital China, and Tisiwi. It has closed three funding rounds since 2016, while the amounts for the first two deals were not disclosed.
Present condition: Antwork has already started some commercial operations in Hangzhou, where it is working with fast-food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken to deliver food orders by drone, Zhao told TechNode.
The landscape: Other players in China’s drone logistics market include hardware maker Ehang and food delivery services Meituan and Ele.me.
Prospects: According to Zhao, Antwork aims to eventually become an urban air mobility (UAM) provider, meaning that it will be able to move not only goods but also people by air.
]]>“With the increase in labor costs, machines will finally replace human workers in many industries in the future. Drones have advantages over human beings in terms of speed and efficiency, so they can do better in the logistics sector, where the market is very profitable.”
— Xie Zhenliang, managing director of Unity Ventures, told TechNode.
Huawei launched a new 5G-compatible smartphone lineup in Munich, Germany on Thursday without Google apps or access to its services as the Chiese tech giant contends with a US trade blacklist barring it from purchasing American-made technology.
Why it matters: Experts believe that a lack of Google apps and services will slash the appeal of the Mate 30 series in the western markets such as Europe, Huawei’s biggest overseas smartphone market.
Details: The Mate 30 series will operate on an open-source version of Google’s Android operating system, but they won’t come with popular Google apps such as Gmail, YouTube, or the Google Play Store.
Context: Huawei is the world’s second-largest smartphone vendor following South Korea’s Samsung and the biggest smartphone seller in China.
Chinese vendors in August sold 291,000 5G phones or less than 1% of the country’s overall mobile phone shipments despite efforts to boost slowing smartphone sales by offering new, cutting-edge handsets.
Why it matters: The gloomy sales signal skepticism from Chinese consumers about pricey 5G handsets prior to widespread rollout of the next-generation networks.
Details: August smartphone shipments were down 5.3% year-on-year to 30.9 million units in China, according to a report by the China Academy for Information and Communications Technology.
Chinese buyers shrug off lack of 5G as orders for Apple’s iPhone 11 surge
Context: Smartphone vendors are scrambling to offer handsets compatible with next-generation wireless networks amid a saturated and slowing smartphone market.
Two United States senators on Monday asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and national security agencies to review whether two Chinese state-owned telecom operators should be barred from operating in the US, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The request shows that efforts to restrict Chinese telecom company operations in the US are expanding as the government highlights concerns about national security and Chinese espionage.
Details: Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer along with Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican, asked the FCC chairman Pai in a letter to the commission to review approvals that allow China Telecom and China Unicom to operate in the US.
Briefing: FCC votes unanimously to block China Mobile’s phone services bid
Context: China Telecom and Unicom have licenses that were granted by the FCC in the early 2000s, allowing them to operate in the US, but some regulators have said that they should be re-examined.
Advance orders for Apple’s new iPhone 11 series soared over the weekend after pre-orders kicked off on Friday, data from e-commerce sites Tmall and JD.com showed.
Why it matters: The absence of 5G compatibility did little to damp the appeal of Apple’s newest handset to Chinese consumers.
Details: Day one pre-sales for the iPhone 11 series—which include the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, and the iPhone 11 Pro Max—on Chinese e-commerce site Tmall surged 335% compared with those for the iPhone XR models launched a year ago, according to Chinese media outlet Yicai.
Context: Apple’s rivals in China such as Huawei, Xiaomi, and ZTE have already launched their 5G smartphones for the country’s early adopters.
Huawei aims to raise RMB 6 billion from the Chinese onshore bond market by issuing two tranches worth RMB 3 billion each, according to a prospectus (in Chinese) the company filed to Chinese regulators on Wednesday.
Why it matters: This is the first time Huawei has turned to the onshore Chinese capital markets as the Shenzhen-based technology giant fights a United States export ban that has blocked its access to critical American-made components and technology.
Details: Huawei seeks to raise a total of RMB 20 billion from Chinese bond investors, according to the prospectus, which doesn’t include issuance dates.
“The bond market in China is developing rapidly, and has become the second largest in the world… With this bond issuance, Huawei plans to tap into the Chinese bond market, diversify its financing channels, and improve its overall financing plan.”
—Huawei spokesman, to TechNode on Thursday
Context: The privately held company reported revenue of RMB 401.3 billion in the first half this year, up 23.2% compared with the same period last year.
A Huawei executive has confirmed that its next flagship smartphone, the Mate 30, will deliver without Google services or apps pre-installed, and that alternatives were in active development.
Why it matters: The absence of Google services and apps will have little effect on the new handset’s performance in Huawei’s home market as they are blocked in China, but experts have said that it may significantly lower its appeal in overseas markets.
Details: Wang Chenglu, Huawei’s president of consumer software, confirmed at the International Radio Show (IFA) consumer electronics expo in Berlin last week that the new Mate 30 handset would launch without Google’s apps or access to its services, and the company is developing alternatives so that user experience faces as little disruption as possible, according to Ausdroid, an Australia-based tech news outlet.
Context: Huawei released its in-house mobile operating system, HarmonyOS, last month, which is considered to be an Android alternative.
Corporate offices often reflect a company’s culture and values. In a tour of Bytedance’s headquarters in Beijing last week, we saw some interesting details that may provide a clearer picture of the world’s most valuable startup—one that is known for avoiding the spotlight.
Zhang Yiming, the founder and CEO of Bytedance, has said that young people should not live on the margins, so he based his company in the very center of Beijing.
Meanwhile, the headquarters of other tech giants such as Baidu, Xiaomi, and Didi Chuxing are located in the northern outskirts of Beijing.
Last week, TechNode visited Bytedance HQ, located along Beijing’s North Third Ring Road. The headquarters consist of a tall building and a lower building; the latter—where company executives’ offices are located—is considered the heart of Bytedance.
While its digs are not as fancy as Apple’s “spaceship” campus or Google’s luxurious “Googleplex” complex, it’s apparent that Bytedance is trying to emulate the style of its Silicon Valley counterparts.
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TechNode’s ByteDance newsletter, one of the first in-depth looks in English at the now-giant upstart startup, was published from March 13 to Oct. 23, 2019.
Originally an aircraft storage facility, the main building has since been transformed into a two-story building; the ground floor functions as a reception area and space for meeting rooms, while the second floor is a huge, open workspace. Alongside the building we visited was a much larger, multi-story office structure that houses Bytedance’s wealth of human resources.
Silicon Valley firms were among the first to embrace open workspaces, and Bytedance is pretty much the same: Hundreds of employees sit shoulder-to-shoulder at communal desks rather than cubicles.
Zhang is known as an advocate of the Silicon Valley work culture. One example is the company’s famously flat corporate structure, which distinguishes it from many other Chinese firms—both inside and outside tech. The structure enables its many product managers to report directly to Zhang, and positions such as chief marketing or chief technology officer are absent from the company.
The structure also allows the project managers a high degree of discretion. They are encouraged to try new projects without weighing the pros and cons ahead of launch. The apps are then judged on their market performance. High-performing apps receive more resources from the company while poor performers are quickly discarded.
The work schedule at Bytedance, however, may not be as flexible as those of Silicon Valley tech firms. According to the description of a Bytedance employee who posted on Zhihu, the Chinese Quora-like Q&A platform, Bytedance implements a so-called “big and small week” work schedule, meaning that employees are required to work six days one week and five days the next week. Sources at Bytedance have told us they regularly work long hours—up to 12 a day in some cases. But the system is less rigid than the infamous “996” work schedule that is “encouraged” at many other Chinese tech companies.
Apart from the work environment, Bytedance is also more ethnically diverse than its Chinese peers. A number of foreigners work at the Beijing headquarters, a reflection of the company’s overseas markets in Southeast Asia, India, Europe, and North America. It has established offices in more than 40 cities around the world, according to a timeline displayed in the lobby of the building.
Near the staff canteen in the basement, Bytedance even provides prayer rooms for employees, a rarity among Chinese companies. There is also a photo booth inside the building, which a company spokesperson told us was for the convenience of personnel who travel abroad frequently and often require photos for visa purposes.
]]>China Unicom confirmed on Monday that it will partner with rival China Telecom to jointly build a 5G network as the country’s carriers scale back individual investment budgets amid a slump in revenue growth.
Why it matters: While the Chinese government is calling for a quick rollout of the next-generation wireless network, the country’s big three network operators, which also includes Chinese Mobile, are seeking ways to cut costs. Telecom operators face increasing margin pressures from decelerating 4G user growth and government mandates to lower mobile phone tariffs.
Details: China Unicom and China Telecom will jointly build a 5G network across China in areas specified in the agreement, according to a statement (in Chinese) from China Unicom.
Context: China’s three state-owned carriers face a saturated market as their combined subscriber numbers now exceed the country’s total population at 1.6 billion in the first half.
Apple mistakenly transferred payouts totaling around seven times what was due to some of its Chinese app developers as a result of a recent issue experienced by its partner, Deutsche Bank, according to a screenshot of an email sent by the iPhone maker circulating on microblogging platform Weibo.
News of the error began appearing on social media Wednesday, with several Chinese developers posting that their July earnings from Apple’s App Store were paid out at significantly higher rates, multiplied by a factor of around seven times.
Why it matters: As of June, the number of Chinese developers for Apple’s App Store has topped 2.2 million and global sales exceeded RMB 200 billion since the product’s launch in 2010, according to the Xinhua News Agency, citing Isabel Ge Mahe, Apple’s vice president and managing director of Greater China.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request from TechNode on Thursday.
Details: Apple said in the email posted to Weibo that Deutsche Bank is reprocessing a payment of the developer’s July earnings, which may result in two sets of payments being paid, one of which was issued in error.
“I thought [the higher payment] was because sales of my app surged, so I logged into my developer’s console where I found the amount of US dollars I received was exactly the same as the amount of RMB I should receive. I talked to some of my developer friends and found that many of them have received seven times their payment amount, not just me.”
—Zou Zhenlu, app developer (our translation)
Context: The payments to developers are generated from app sales, in-app purchases, subscriptions, sponsorships, and advertising after taking a 30% commission.
]]>Gionee, the Chinese smartphone maker which declared bankruptcy in December, has launched two smartphones in a bid to repay debts numbering in the billions of RMB.
Why it matters: Founded in 2002, Shenzhen-based Gionee was once one of China’s largest mobile phone makers. The company accounted for 4.7% of China’s mobile phone market in 2012 and had expanded to India, Southeast Asia, and Africa before it went bankrupt.
Details: The two handsets, the Gionee M11 and M11s, have been granted their network access certificates from the Telecommunication Equipment Certification Center of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on August 29, its website (in Chinese) shows.
Context: In December, nearly 20 creditors filed a bankruptcy liquidation application to the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court against Gionee after months of talks with the smartphone maker failed to produce funds for repayments.
While almost all major handset makers present in China are busy with landmark product launches as the 5G era fast approaches, for one major vendor, the new technology’s advent represents a defining moment in its struggle to return as a major player in the industry.
The South Korean giant may sell more smartphones than anyone else globally, but in China, Samsung is little more than a bit player. The company made up less than 1% of the country’s total handset shipments in the second quarter with only 800,000 devices sold, market research firm Counterpoint found.
This is in sharp contrast to its performance in the country just a few years ago. In its glory days of 2013, Samsung led. It controlled nearly one-fifth of the rapidly expanding market and the companies devices became synonymous with high-end handsets among Chinese users.
The company’s China market share has now hovered around 1% for seven consecutive quarters.
Samsung’s decline coincided with the emergence of native smartphone players such as Huawei and Xiaomi, bringing fierce competition to the market. Consumers’ preferences in the country are also increasingly affected by political agendas. The company has been unable to maintain its position in the Chinese market, and experts maintain that there exists only a small possibility that it can return to its former glory.
“The mishandling of its Galaxy Note 7’s recall in China marked the beginning of Samsung’s demise in China,” said Will Wong, an analyst at market research firm IDC, referring to the numerous reports of devices catching fire in 2016.
First launched in late summer 2016, the 5.7-inch, stylus-toting high-end model was considered a strong competitor to Apple’s iPhone 7.
Within weeks of the device’s August launch, Samsung’s consumers around the world reported that phones were catching fire and some had even exploded. The incidents led to Samsung suspending sales on September 2 and commencing a global recall.
The recall involved 10 countries including the United States, South Korea, and Australia, but China, where the device went on sale on August 26, was not included. Samsung explained the decision stating at the time that Note 7 handsets sold in the country used different battery suppliers and did not pose any safety risks.
Samsung doubled down on this claim despite a claim (in Chinese) on September 18 that a Note 7 had “exploded” in a user’s hand. Samsung attributed the incident to “external heating.”
The statement didn’t include a recall for the country, and over the following weeks, there were more than 20 reports of Note 7 explosions in China in the coming weeks. Samsung finally announced a China recall on October 11.
In the minds of Chinese consumers, the eventual recall may have come too late. State broadcaster CCTV said in a documentary special (in Chinese) the next day that Samsung’s handling of the incident constituted “bullying” of Chinese consumers and a “violation” of their rights.
“It caused serious damage to its brand image in China, especially when it faced fierce challenges from other smartphone vendors,” Wong said.
The Note 7 recall incident also coincided with a wave of anti-South Korea sentiments felt across China in the second half of 2016 after the former agreed to deploy an American missile defense system despite claims from China that it could be used to spy on its territory.
In July 2016, South Korea and America announced plans to deploy the so-called Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system, or Thaad, to better protect South Korea and US troops in the region.
The plan faced stiff opposition from the Chinese government. Apart from diplomatic protests, Chinese state media also urged a boycott of South Korean products.
While the main target of the boycott was Lotte, a South Korean supermarket chain that provided land for the Thaad deployment, it also spread to a wide range of products and services associated with the country including group tourism trips, kimchi, Korean barbecue, and Samsung phones.
The yearlong dispute between South Korea and China ended in October 2017 when the two nations agreed to cast aside tensions over Thaad and move on with economic cooperation. But the impact of the dispute among consumers didn’t fade away so quickly.
Samsung’s smartphone market share in China fell from 5.5% to around 1% in 2017, and it has not been able to recover its position since then.
“When consumers are able to choose between domestic and foreign products, they often prefer domestic ones, and the tendency becomes more noticeable when their societies are perceived as under threat from the outside,” said Yu Jinmao, a professor at Jiangsu University.
“Samsung’s market performance in China was certainly affected by the dispute between China and South Korea, and this is in line with the downward demand trend for South Korean products such as cosmetics,” he said.
Ever since the end of 2017, Samsung has repeatedly stated that it aims to return as a major player in China. And recently, the company has laid a bet on 5G.
“We are back!“ was the message from Kwon Gyehyun, president of Samsung Electronics China, at the launch event for the A8s handset at the end of last year. However, Kwon’s enthusiasm has not translated into major growth in sales in the country and market share continued to stagnate in the first half.
The firm more recently has turned to 5G-ready devices. Last month, Samsung launched its first 5G-enabled smartphone, the Galaxy Note 10+ 5G, on the Chinese market.
“The Note10 + 5G is the beginning, our goal is to get more advantages in the Chinese 5G market,”said Kwon at the lastest product unveiling. “We have invested almost all of our resources in 5G, and we hope that will help us to regain our market position.”
The new handset, priced at RMB 7,999 (around $1,118), is RMB 1,800 more expensive than Huawei’s equivalent 5G model. “One of the advantages Samsung has is that Chinese consumers still regard it as a premium brand, and it has a long history of operating in China,” said Wong.
The efforts made to maintain Samsung’s high-end image appears a wise choice. The company has a share of around 6% in terms of phones priced above RMB 4,000, according to data from Sino-Market Research.
“These efforts may leave Samsung with only a fraction of China’s smartphone market, but there still exists a small possibility that it could return to the top five vendors in the country,” he said.
]]>An investor that Himalaya Media, a San Francisco-based podcast platform backed by Chinese audio service platform Ximalaya FM, said contributed to its $100 million venture capital funding has denied participation in the deal, according to an Axios report on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The deal, which was announced in February, was considered to be Shanghai-based Ximalaya FM’s first international push, though the two firms say that they are operated separately.
Details: General Atlantic said it never invested in the US podcasting startup, according to a company spokesperson cited by Axios.
Context: Overstating investments is an “open secret” among Chinese startups, Xu Xiaoping, the founder of ZhenFund, a venture capital firm in China, told Chinese tech news outlet Tencent Tech in 2015.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi announced on Tuesday a plan to repurchase up to HKD 12 billion (around $1.5 billion) worth of stock in an effort to halt a dramatic decline in share value, which have fallen nearly 50% from its July 2018 initial public offering price.
Why it matters: The growth prospects of the Beijing-based company have been dented by a slowing global smartphone market as its efforts to reinvent as an internet company rather than a hardware manufacturer has struggled to take hold.
Details: The board of directors believes that a share repurchase will broadcast the company’s confidence in its own business outlook and prospects, and will benefit the company as well as its shareholders, said Xiaomi in a statement (in Chinese) filed to the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong on Tuesday.
Context: Xiaomi chairman and CEO Lei Jun, as well as chief financial officer Chew Shou Zi, had pledged earlier this year that they wouldn’t sell their Xiaomi shares for another year to stabilize its stock price.
Huawei could delay sales of its upcoming Mate 30 flagship smartphone overseas due to its lack of Google services amid the US trade ban, the South China Morning Post reported citing people familiar with the matter as saying.
Why it matters: Prospects for Huawei’s smartphone business remain uncertain under the cloud of US sanctions on the world’s second-largest handset seller.
INSIGHTS: Supply chain body blow: Huawei’s reliance on US tech, charted
Details: The 5G-enabled handset will continue to run on the Android operating system, but it won’t have access to Google services along with apps such as Google Play and Google Maps, said the report. The planned delay is not final and any further action by the US government may affect Huawei’s decision on the release.
Huawei is pushing forward with the launch of a new flagship smartphone in Europe even though Google apps and services may not be on offer, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing company executives.
Why it matters: The new 5G-capable Mate 30 is Huawei’s first flagship handset launch since the US government placed it on a trade blacklist in May. The new smartphone will not feature HarmonyOS, Huawei’s self-developed mobile operating system, signaling that the world’s second-largest smartphone maker is not yet ready to break with Google.
Details: Huawei is set to unveil the Mate 30 line for phones on September 18 in Munich, Germany, according Reuters citing a source familiar with the matter, though it is unclear when the devices will go on sale.
“Our new phones will still be based on Android…We want to maintain one standard, one ecosystem, one technology.”
—Vincent Pang, senior vice president and board director at Huawei
Context: Huawei smartphone sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, though it retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped during the period ended June 30.
Huawei has invested in two domestic semiconductor firms focused on materials and chip design as the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker seeks to boost self-reliance amid US sanctions, National Business Daily reported on Tuesday.
Why it matters: Unlike Huawei’s previous strategy of investing in integrated circuit manufacturing, the deals indicate that Huawei is eyeing core semiconductor technology.
Details: Huawei’s wholly-owned investment firm Hubble Technologies has invested in Shandong province-based Tianyue Advanced Material Technology and Hangzhou’s Joulwatt Micro-Electronic.
Huawei declined to comment on the investments when contacted by TechNode on Wednesday.
Context: Huawei announced in July that it would invest RMB 120 billion (around $16.8 billion) in research and development (R & D) this year to bolster its technical self-reliance.
The US government has given Huawei a 90-day grace period. While the reprieve provides a bit of breathing room for Huawei, as we’ve pointed out a few times last week: This doesn’t change the fact that Huawei still relies heavily on US-sourced technology.
Every year, Huawei releases a list of “core suppliers.” Of the thousands of suppliers used by the company last year, 92 were classified as core.
In other words, more than one-third of Huawei’s core suppliers were from the US last year. Moreover, Huawei is sourcing are high-tech components such as microprocessors and communication modules from them that go into nearly all of their products, from smartphones to telecommunications equipment.
Bottom line: Thanks to what scholars call the “second great unbundling,” in which production is separated into various fragments across multiple countries, the global supply chain is now less vulnerable to problems related to any single market.
However, cutting off Huawei from US technology is not a matter of a single market. It is a body blow to their whole supply chain, including those companies that heavily rely on US technology for the components they make:
Business continuity system: In an interview with global media in December, Huawei’s rotating chairman Ken Hu unveiled a section of their business continuity management system. The initiative covers Huawei’s research and development, procurement, manufacturing, and logistics, according to Hu.
In July, the company released a “2018 sustainability report,” in which it expounded on several aspects of the system, such as sourcing components from more than one supplier, readying a safe inventory during mass production, and establishing strategic partnerships with core suppliers to ensure a stable supply.
“Over the past 10 years, with this system in place, we have successfully dealt with quite a number of emergencies and natural disasters such as the tsunami in Japan (2011), the flood in Thailand (2011), the earthquake in Nepal (2015), as well as the ransomware attacks (2017).”
—Ken Hu, rotating chairman at Huawei
Alternatives: The business continuity management system may have helped Huawei stockpile some inventory—some reports say it will support Huawei’s production for up to 12 months. However, Huawei can’t use the grace period to stockpile new components; the reprieve is only to support existing customers. After their reserves are exhausted, Huawei will have to find new sources.
The 33 US-based “core suppliers” of Huawei mainly provide three categories of products: Systems on a Chip (SoC), near-field communication (NFC) chips, and radio frequency (RF) modules.
System on a Chip: Intel and Qualcomm’s SoCs can be found in a wide range of Huawei’s consumer and enterprise devices such as smartphones, personal computers, and servers.
Intel and Qualcomm hold 17.4% and 10.5% of the global market, respectively, sharing the majority of the market with Taiwan’s TSMC and South Korea’s SK Hynix, along with two other US companies.
The smartphone SoC market is dominated by US companies, though Huawei’s chip design subsidiary HiSilicon also has a slice.
Huawei also included ARM, the designer of the Arm SoC architecture, in its core suppliers’ list. The UK-based company has since suspended business with Huawei in compliance with the US ban. However, most of the in-house chips developed by Huawei’s HiSilicon, including its Kirin chip, server chips, camera chips, and router chips, are Arm-based.
Losing access to future support and development of the architecture would “deeply affect its competitiveness.” Huawei could also choose RISC-V, an open-source Arm substitute, but the support ecosystem from tool vendors and semiconductor providers to design services around it is less comprehensive compared with those of Arm or Intel’s x86 architectures. Still, the RISC-V ecosystem is continuously expanding with a wide range of tools and design resources from numerous third parties.
Radio frequency modules: An RF module is an electronic device used to transmit and receive radio signals between two devices. The technology is used in Huawei’s smartphones as well as telecom equipment such as switches and antennas for cellular base stations.
Three US companies—Amphenol, Qorvo, and Broadcom—that supply the technology to Huawei are classified as core suppliers. Amphenol provides RF connectors for Huawei’s routers and antennas, while Qorvo and Broadcom provide RF front-end modules for its consumer devices.
Skyworks, another US company, also supplies some RF front-end modules for some of Huawei’s high-end handsets, including its Mate 20 X 5G, the company’s first 5G-enabled smartphone. The RF front-end market is currently dominated by Broadcom, Skyworks, and Qorvo with market shares of 29%, 28%, and 18% respectively.
NFC chips: NFC is a set of protocols that enables two electronic devices within 4cm of each other to establish communication. The technology is widely used in contactless payment systems in smartphones.
The US firm NXP Semiconductors provides essential NFC chips for Huawei phones, including the Honor 8 and Honor 8V. The company currently makes up nearly half of the global NFC chip market, followed by Samsung and Broadcom, according to data from the China Center for Information Industry Development.
No immunity: The data shows that US companies control significant portions of the component markets critical to Huawei’s products. Even so, Huawei may have other options.
Companies like South Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix, as well as Taiwan’s MediaTek and TSMC are all potential alternative sources. However, they too are not immune to US restrictions.
Last year, when the Chinese telecommunications company ZTE was banned from using American technology, the Taiwanese semiconductor maker MediaTek considered itself to be subject to the ban and decided to apply for an export license from the US government.
This time, in response to the US ban, a handful of non-US companies, including the UK’s ARM and semiconductor wafer maker IQE, as well as Japanese electronics giant Panasonic have already suspended business with Huawei.
On the other hand, we have also seen some Japanese carriers suspend shipments for Huawei phones after the ban took effect. But they all resumed sales as a result of the extended reprieve. This shows that many affected companies are still waiting for more certainty around the sanctions and are as yet unwilling to declare a breach with Huawei. When (or if) the reprieve—which may be extended repeatedly depending on US-China trade negotiations—finally ends, we expect to see more non-US companies cutting ties with Huawei. For their sake, Huawei had better be ready for that eventuality.
]]>China’s search giant Baidu has surpassed Google as the world’s second-largest smart speaker seller during the second quarter after its sales surged 3,700% annually to 4.5 million units, according to a new report from research firm Canalys.
Why it matters: In the two years since smart speakers first debuted in the domestic market, it has evolved from a niche gadget into one of the most popular electronic devices in Chinese households.
Details: The global smart speaker market grew 55.4% year on year in the second quarter to reach 26.1 million shipments, said the report.
“Local network operators’ interests on the device category soared recently. This bodes well for Baidu as it faces little competition in the smart display category, allowing the company to dominate in the operator channel.”
—Cynthia Chen, Canalys research analyst
Context: The growth of the Chinese smart speaker market has been a result of a price war between these Chinese vendors that slashed the average price for the gadget to below $20.
China Telecom said on Thursday it is partnering with other carriers in the construction of 5G infrastructure in order to reduce costs as the central government urges an accelerated timeline for next-generation wireless network rollout.
The announcement echoes a similar announcement made last week by China Unicom chairman Wang Xiaochu, who said the company would cooperate with other state-owned mobile operators, including China Telecom and China Mobile, to build 5G networks.
Why it matters: China’s telecom operators are cautious about their investments in 5G, which is forecasted to cost a total of RMB 1.23 trillion, according to securities firm China Securities International. The central government meanwhile is determined to become the world leader in 5G technologies and roll out 5G for commercial use within this year.
Details: China Telecom has reached a tentative agreement with China Unicom to jointly build a 5G network which the two companies will share, said company chairman Ke Ruiwen at the press conference for its first-half 2019 financial results held on Thursday.
Context: The three state-owned telecom operators are racing to roll out 5G services after receiving commercial 5G licenses in June.
Apple is testing advanced screens from leading Chinese display maker BOE for iPhones next year, as the United States tech giant attempts to cut costs and reduce reliance on South Korea’s Samsung, the Nikkei Asian Review reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: If Apple chooses BOE’s screens, the Chinese state-owned company could begin to challenge Samsung’s supremacy in the display panel sector.
Details: Apple is “aggressively testing” BOE’s flexible organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, displays, and will decide by the end of this year whether to take BOE on as a supplier of this single most expensive component, said sources quoted by Nikkei.
Context: An OLED display is the most expensive component on the iPhone. It accounts for nearly 30% of the total cost of the iPhone X released in 2017 and was sourced from Samsung.
NTT Docomo said Tuesday it will again accept orders for Huawei’s P30 Pro handsets after it delayed the launch of the phone following the United States export blacklisting of the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker in May, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
Why it matters: Docomo is the third major Japanese carrier, including SoftBank and KDDI, to have resumed sales of Huawei phones.
No matter how long the reprieve, Huawei still has no alternatives to US tech
Details: Docomo said it will resume taking orders for Huawei P30 Pro smartphone starting Wednesday. The device is scheduled to go on sale in Japan in September.
Xiaomi Tuesday reported its revenue grew 15% year-on-year in the second quarter as the Chinese smartphone maker is selling more higher-priced handsets.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is sharpening its focus on the fast-growing premium handset segment as the global smartphone market continues declining.
“We are at the eve of explosive growth that will be brought by 5G and we are now in the period of a series of brand adjustments…Xiaomi will invest more in the research and development of middle-to-high-end handsets before the 5G era comes.”
Chew Shou Zi, chief financial officer at Xiaomi, in a conference call with analysts on Tuesday
Details: The company’s revenue in the second quarter rose to RMB 51.95 billion from RMB 45.24 billion a year earlier.
Context: Xiaomi spun off its Redmi, a sub-brand for its budget phones, in January in a bid to focus on the premium handset market.
Huawei has been given another 90-day reprieve that allows the Chinese telecommunications equipment giant to purchase components from United States companies to supply existing customers, the US Department of Commerce announced on Monday.
The extension of the reprieve “is intended to afford consumers across America the necessary time to transition away from Huawei equipment, given the persistent national security and foreign policy threat,” said the department in a statement.
While renewed access to US suppliers has given Huawei more breathing room, a closer look at Huawei’s smartphone supply reveals glaring vulnerabilities. Despite its efforts to find alternative sources or build in-house replacements, the hardware giant still relies heavily on American sourcing.
On May 16, the Trump administration put the company on a trade blacklist barring it from buying parts and technology from American companies. The US government then issued a “temporary general license” for exports to Huawei to maintain its existing production, effective from May 20 through August 19.
Under the shadow of US sanctions, Huawei reported a 23.2% year-over-year increase in revenue for the first half of the year last month.
But the company was not cheered by the growth. Chairman Liang Hua warned that its consumer business, which contributed 55% of revenue in the first half, would face huge difficulties in the following months.
In January, the company announced its ambitions to overtake Korea’s Samsung to become the world’s biggest-selling smartphone vendor by the end of this year. The company surpassed Apple in smartphone sales last year after shipping over 200 million units.
However, in June, Huawei announced that it had given up on fulfilling this ambition because of the US sanctions.
That same month, Bloomberg reported that Huawei was preparing for a 40% to 60% decline in international smartphone shipments.
Analysts have attributed the loss of international market share to Google’s restriction on Huawei’s access to its Android operating system and apps. A recent teardown, however, of Huawei’s newest 5G-enabled handset shows that some US-made components are also critical for Huawei’s smartphone production.
Most of the parts found on the motherboard of Huawei’s Mate X 20 5G are made by the company’s in-house chipmaker HiSilicon and other Asian manufacturers. There are, however, a few key components that enable the phone’s 5G connectivity are made by US companies, according to iFixit, a computer repair company based in the US.
The teardown shows that the phone’s radio frequency (RF) front-end chips, the key communication module that connects a phone between the RF transceiver and the antenna, are made by two American companies.
These include a middle/high-band front-end module made by Qorvo, a North Carolina-based chipmaker, and a low-band front-end module made by the Massachusetts-based Skyworks.
It could prove hard for Huawei to find alternative sources to these components. According to Southwest Securities, a Chongqing-based securities firm, the market is currently dominated by Broadcom, another American semiconductor manufacturer, Skyworks, and Qorvo with market shares of 29%, 28%, and 18% respectively.
While these three American companies have a combined 75% share of the RF front-end chip market, the third-largest player, Japanese electronics company Murata with 22% of the market, is also likely to be bound by the US restrictions.
The Tokyo-based company, whose 5% of sales come from Huawei, said in May that it had been looking into the implications of US ban on Huawei, according to the Japan Times.
“American suppliers usually have more advantages in some key components for 5G phones, such as RF front-end chips,” said Will Wong, a Singapore-based analyst at research firm IDC.
“I believe Huawei can find alternatives to these RF front-end chips, but it will take time for it to find sources that can compare favorably with American supplies in terms of stock and quality,” he said.
Though US-made components only make up a fraction of the Huawei phone, they contribute to a large proportion of the phone’s costs. Another teardown by Tokyo-based research firm Fomalhaut Techno Solutions of Huawei’s P30 Pro, the company’s newest flagship model, shows that while US components account for less than 1% of the phone’s parts, those components add up to over 16% of the cost of all parts, according to Nikkei Asia Review.
Despite being granted the extended reprieve, the cloud of uncertainty still hangs over Huawei.
In addition to the Monday announcement, the Commerce Department also added another 46 Huawei affiliates to the entity list, hinting that the US government is not completely dropping the pressure on the company.
Before the first 90-day reprieve’s expiration, Huawei on August 9 unveiled its long-awaited in-house mobile operating system HarmonyOS, which many have speculated will be their Android replacement.
At the launch of the new OS, Huawei’s consumer business group chief Yu Chengdong demonstrated a wide range of devices on which the company plans to install the system, including personal computers, smartwatches, and virtual reality glasses.
But he didn’t mention any plan to install it on smartphones. Later, he told reporters that HarmonyOS is ready to run on phones and migrating from Android to HarmonyOS would only take a few days if the company had to.
Huawei didn’t want to harm its relationships with Google at that time since the results of the US restrictions were still uncertain, according to Wong.
That uncertainty also dampened consumer confidence in overseas smartphone markets, said Wong, adding that consumers don’t want to run the risk of losing access to popular Google services on their Android phones.
Huawei’s smartphone shipments in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, according to market research firm Canalys. By contrast, the company’s smartphone sales in Europe saw a 50% yearly surge in the first quarter.
The dramatic decline has indicated how smartphone consumers are sensitive to such uncertainty, given that Huawei’s smartphones were not affected by the US in most of the time in the second quarter.
“Huawei will find it difficult to operate in the overseas smartphone markets in the short term, no matter how the US ban ends up with,” said Wong.
]]>US President Donald Trump on Sunday said he did not want the United States to do business with Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei. The statement came after the Commerce Department was reportedly expected to extend a reprieve for the company, according to Reuters.
Why it matters: Trump’s remarks indicate that Huawei’s fate remains uncertain as the previous reprieve nears its expiry date.
“At this moment it looks much more like we’re not going to do business [with Huawei]. I don’t want to do business at all because it is a national security threat and I really believe that the media has covered it a little bit differently than that.”
—President Trump told reporters before boarding Air Force One in New Jersey on Sunday
Huawei’s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all
Details: Trump said some small parts of Huawei’s business could be exempted from a broader ban, but that it would be “very complicated.”
Context: The Huawei situation has become a bargaining chip in the ongoing trade conflicts between the US and China.
China will allow foreign firms to provide online game downloads and streaming services in the country by the end of the year as long as they comply with the country’s strict content regulations and data security requirements, local newspaper Beijing News reported on Thursday.
Why it matters: The move echoes China’s pledge to give foreign capital more access to the world’s second-largest economy amid the trade war with the US. The country has long complained of China’s lack of market access for overseas players.
Details: The plan is part of the government three-year project to expand the reform and opening-up of the service industry, which focuses on letting more foreign capital participate in the finance, education, and internet content sectors, said the Beijing News.
Context: Foreign firms and their affiliates are not currently allowed to publish online content such as text, maps, games, cartoons and audio, and video, without approval from the government, according to rules released in February 2016.
The effects of the US-China trade war on the global supply chain for consumer electronics are beginning to show, reported Bloomberg on Thursday. Many manufacturers are moving operations out of China amid the uncertainty.
Why it matters: The conflict between the world’s two largest economies is not only affecting manufacturers in China and US farmers, but is also disrupting the decades-old global electronics supply chain that produces iPhones, laptops, and 4K televisions.
Details: Some firms are uprooting production lines from China amid concerns that the tensions show no indication of cooling, Bloomberg reported.
Lenovo’s net profit more than doubled in the first fiscal quarter to beat analysts’ estimates, although the world’s largest PC maker warned that uncertainty lies ahead due to trade frictions between the US and China.
Why it matters: Lenovo’s business performance could suffer going forward due to President Trump’s threats of new tariffs on Chinese goods.
“There is a complexity of macro risks arising from ongoing trade negotiations, import tariff changes implemented by countries and challenges alongside geopolitical uncertainties.”
—Lenovo’s earnings statement for the first fiscal quarter for 2019-2020
Details: Net profit at Lenovo surged 111% to $162 million in the first fiscal quarter, beating analysts’ average estimate of $154 million, while revenue rose 5% to $12.5 billion.
What do you think will be the future core business of Bytedance? Contrary to current trends, it may not be Douyin-based advertising or gaming. In fact, the future of Bytedance could very well be something less popular with China’s younger generation—education.
This week, we provide an overview of Bytedance’s education business ventures. We’ll take a look at how the company has tried to replicate its TikTok success in the education sector—with less than stellar results thus far.
Bytedance may have made its name with short-video and news aggregator apps, but it seems unusually determined to break into the education sector.
Over the past two years, the TikTok owner has made several attempts to gain a foothold in online education through the launch of new apps, acquisitions, and investments. Underperforming apps are being abandoned even as new ones keep appearing, fresh off the production line.
Analysts contend that Bytedance is merely pushing ahead with its usual cash-burning strategy while leveraging its massive user base to expand into online education. However, edutech is more complicated than simply rolling out apps.
In December 2017, before the company had made any kind of foray into education, Bytedance held an educational industry conference to talk about the potential integration of the sector with technology. The event marked the first hint dropped by the Beijing-based unicorn about its pedagogical ambitions.
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TechNode’s ByteDance newsletter, one of the first in-depth looks in English at the now-giant upstart startup, was published from March 13 to Oct. 23, 2019.
Since then, the company has actively moved into the online learning sphere.
Of all of its online education offerings, Bytedance has invested most money into Gogokid. China Entrepreneur Magazine reported in January that Bytedance has plowed over RMB 400 million (around $56.7 million) into the platform since it was founded last year.
But that didn’t prevent the platform from suffering setbacks. In April, Bytedance reportedly laid off over half of Gogokid’s employees, including reducing its sales team by around 70% to 200 employees.
At the same time, Chinese media reported that AiKID had suspended its operations four months prior to the Gogokid layoffs.
Technology and a massive user base (total monthly active users just reached 1.5 billion) are Bytedance’s core strengths, which have led to the company’s success in mobile apps; however, that success has yet to be replicated in the education sector, said Pan Xin, vice president at the online business division of New Oriental, the first Chinese learning company to list in New York.
Nevertheless, the education mogul suggested that Zhang Yiming, the founder and CEO of Bytedance, has a “passion” for the education business, adding that Bytedance would eventually disrupt the education market following a period of “trials and errors.”
]]>US sanctions on Huawei are beginning to impact the Chinese firm’s business in key markets as handset sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, according to a report from market research firm Canalys released on Monday.
Why it matters: While sales at home surged on patriotic support for the Shenzhen-based firm, demand among European consumers waned after products were cut off from future updates for Google’s Android operating system amid US sanctions.
Details: Despite the drop, Huawei retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped in the quarter, trailing South Korea’s Samsung with 18.3 million units.
“Samsung has been quick to capitalize on Huawei’s US Entity List problems, working behind the scenes to position itself as a stable alternative in conversations with important retailers and operators,”
— Ben Stanton, Canalys senior analyst
Context: Huawei unveiled an Android alternative called HarmonyOS last week, and claims that switching handsets to the new operating system would take only a few days if necessary.
Huawei’s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all
Huawei on Friday unveiled its long-awaited self-developed operating system HarmonyOS on its smart television product, but it may not be an Android alternative as previously rumored.
Why it matters: HarmonyOS, also known as Hongmeng OS, was deemed to be Huawei’s alternative to Google’s Android after the Chinese firm was cut off from US technology. The debut of the operating system was on Huawei’s TV set, but it is not yet available on smartphones.
“HarmonyOS is completely different from Android and iOS. It is a microkernel-based, distributed OS that delivers a smooth experience across all scenarios.”
— Yu Chengdong, at the Huawei Developer Conference on Friday
Details: Huawei said HarmonyOS will be open source and the firm will establish an open-source foundation and community to support developers.
HarmonyOS is ready to run on phones, but “for the consideration of partnerships and the ecosystem,” Huawei won’t be using it on handsets just yet, said Yu, adding that migrating from Android to HarmonyOS would only take a few days.
The current version of HarmonyOS is based on open-sourced frameworks and some self-developed modules, but future versions will be entirely developed in-house, said Yu.
Context: The mysterious operating system has been at the center of rumors regarding Huawei’s so-called ‘plan B’ against US sanctions. The company’s executives have given inconsistent statements about the OS in recent months.
The Trump administration is delaying a decision on handing out licenses for US companies to resume shipping to China’s Huawei as the trade conflict continues, Bloomberg reported on Friday.
Why it matters: The move indicates there is no let-up from the US in its trade blacklisting of Huawei as it approaches the August 19 deadline of a 90-day-reprieve.
Details: Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said last week he had received 50 requests and that a decision on them was pending, according to Bloomberg.
Net revenue at state-backed carrier China Mobile dropped 15% annually in the first half of the year, according to an earnings statement filed with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Why it matters: The world’s largest telecom operator in terms of subscriber numbers attributed the decline to intensifying competition in an almost-saturated “traditional telecommunications market,” hinting that the company is banking on 5G to bring an upturn in business fortunes.
Details: Net profit for the six months ended June 30 was RMB 56 billion ($8 billion), compared with RMB 65.6 billion in the same period last year.
The Trump administration released details of a rule on Wednesday that will officially bar US government agencies from buying telecommunications equipment from Huawei, despite the Chinese firm’s efforts to fight the move in court.
Why it matters: The rule comes after the latest round of trade talks between the US and China ended without a deal, making Huawei, again, a bargaining chip in a stand-off between the world’s two largest economies.
“The law provides Huawei with no opportunity to rebut the accusations, to present evidence in its defense, or to avail itself of other procedures that impartial adjudicators provide to ensure a fair search for the truth.”
—Song Liuping, the chief legal officer at Huawei, commenting on the NDAA
Details: The General Services Administration, the government agency responsible for contracting, issued the rule that bans Huawei and four other Chinese firms from supplying the federal government.
Context: Huawei has questioned in court whether the NDAA is in accordance with the constitution. The company said on Wednesday that the rule was “not unexpected,” and it “continues to challenge the constitutionality of the ban in a federal court.”
Transsion, the Chinese handset maker dominating sales in the African market, has restarted efforts to go public on China’s Nasdaq-style stock market after the process was suspended on Tuesday. The company is coming under mounting scrutiny from securities regulators.
Why it matters: The setbacks provide a broad hint that the registration-based listing system for the STAR Market maintains a high listing threshold despite efforts to convince high-tech companies to list domestically.
Details: The SSE website showed Transsion’s IPO application as “suspended” on Tuesday, meaning the financial statements filed were no longer valid.
Context: The Shenzhen-based company enjoyed a combined 48.7% share of Africa’s mobile phone market last year thanks to its Itel, Tecno, and Infinix brands, according to research firm IDC. It also led the African smartphone market with a 34.3% share, followed by South Korea’s Samsung with 22.6% and Huawei with 9.9%.
Chinese smartphone maker ZTE sold the country’s first 5G-enabled smartphone on Monday ahead of a national rollout of 5G wireless networks this year, media outlet Jiemian reported.
Why it matters: The battle for China’s 5G smartphone market has intensified as smartphone makers scramble to offer cutting-edge devices.
Details: The first 5G smartphone, ZTE’s Axon 10 Pro, was sold at a retail store of e-commerce firm Suning.com in Beijing on Monday morning, said the report.
Context: China is determined to build the world’s biggest 5G networks by making sure its state-owned carriers have access to bandwidth for 5G networks for nominal fees as well as inexpensive equipment.
TikTok owner ByteDance has introduced an in-app search engine for its popular Jinri Toutiao newsfeed app, a move that challenges Baidu’s monopoly in China’s search market.
Why it matters: The two companies are fast forming a rivalry in online services. Baidu moved into Toutiao’s market when it changed its newsfeed offering and Bytedance has hit back by adding a search engine.
Details: The in-app search engine developed offers search results from the company’s popular apps such as Jinri Toutiao, and short video app Douyin and Xigua, as well as general content from around the internet, Chinese tech news outlet 36Kr reported on Thursday.
Context: Baidu has been trying to keep Bytedance’s search ambitions in check with a series of lawsuits, and Bytedance has responded with more lawsuits.
Apple shares rose 4.4% intraday on Wednesday after the company’s financial results for the third fiscal quarter beat Wall Street estimates thanks to a “marked improvement in greater China,” according to CEO Tim Cook.
Why it matters: China has been a problem market for the US firm as iPhone demand has waned amid strong competition from domestic challengers such as Huawei and Xiaomi. However, Apple’s measures to boost sales, including price cuts, have borne fruit.
“I’d like to provide some color on our performance in greater China, where we saw significant improvement compared to the first half of fiscal 2019 and return to growth in constant currency.”
Tim Cook at Apple’s Q3 2019 earnings call on Tuesday.
Details: Apple’s revenue across greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, fell 4% to $9.2 billion in the third fiscal quarter ended June 29, after declining 22% in the second.
Context: Apple’s smartphone shipments in China declined 14% after hitting 5.7 million units in the second quarter, according to Canalys.
Huawei put on a brave face for the cameras on Tuesday at a carefully planned event to announce the troubled telecom player’s unaudited first-half results.
While the world’s attention has been squarely focused on the intense US political pressure on the Shenzhen-based firm, Huawei chose to concentrate on its growing market share and booming domestic demand for handsets at a press conference on Tuesday.
The company said it has received more than 2,600 journalists so far this year at its campuses in Shenzhen and Dongguan as part of efforts to maintain an air of openness, and many were in attendance yesterday to hear from Chairman Liang Hua.
From the outset, business results for the first six months appear healthy enough—revenue rose by 23.2% to RMB 401.3 billion ($58.3 billion) and it shipped 118 million handsets. However, the company did not reveal specific figures for the second quarter, which is when the US upped the ante. The 39% surge in revenue posted for the first quarter alone implies that there was a significant drop-off in the second quarter.
Liang admitted that US sanctions had caused some disturbances to Huawei’s business, but called the impact “controllable.” Growth continued even after the US put the firm on a trade blacklist on May 16, thanks to what the company has called “market inertia.”
“There isn’t one day that we stopped production, nor did we stop shipping to our customers after May 16,” he said.
Huawei also preached that it would maintain a strong growth path with sizable expenditure on research and development even if the US ban continues. The company plans to invest RMB 120 billion in R&D this year.
But experts maintain that the company’s future performance will be dependent on the outcome of US-China trade talks, and not the company’s drive for self-reliance.
Hard times
The first half of 2019 has been turbulent for Huawei. The year began with President Trump threatening to restrict US carriers’ purchases of equipment from foreign companies that pose national security risks, such as Huawei and its domestic rival ZTE. The threat later became a reality.
The Trump administration has also launched a campaign to block Huawei from competing in the global rollout of 5G networks by persuading its allies to freeze Huawei out of their future network plans.
The core issue is concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and fears that its telecom equipment could be used to spy on other countries, which the company has repeatedly denied.
Though the campaign met wide resistance in Europe, some of America’s closest friends, including Australia and Japan, have followed the US in banning Huawei gear. Others such as Germany, Italy, and France continue to accepted Huawei hardware, arguing there is no concrete evidence that it poses a real risk.
The underlying issue of the whole Huawei dispute may be the different ways in which the Chinese and US governments view privacy, US-based wireless analyst Jeff Kagan told TechNode.
“China uses technology to track citizens for things like safety and social order. The US considers this a violation of privacy. So, this may simply be a difference in the way these two countries see the issue of privacy,” said Kagan.
“I expect the US ban on Huawei to continue at least until trade issues between China and the USA are resolved, and privacy threats can be eliminated,” he said.
Risks ahead
Though the US sanctions haven’t stopped Huawei from growing in the first six months, the company acknowledges that huge difficulties lie ahead with consumer business to be most affected. The division contributed 55% of revenue in the first half.
Google has cut Huawei’s access to future updates of the Android operating system following the US trade blacklisting, contributing to falling international sales.
Liang admitted that it is up to the US if upcoming Huawei phones will have access Android. “If the US government allows us to use Android, we will use Android. But if the US doesn’t allow us, then we will turn to alternatives,” he said.
He maintained that Huawei is yet to see any impact of the US blacklisting on its 5G business, adding that the company has so far signed 50 commercial 5G contracts worldwide, including 11 signed after May 16.
“For a company with over $100 billion yearly revenue, the US sanctions can not be deadly,” Guo Fulin, president of international media affairs at Huawei, told TechNode on the sidelines of Tuesday’s event.
Huawei has been working on a so-called “business continuance” system to address potential extreme scenarios for over 10 years, he said.
Under the guidelines, Huawei stockpiled 12 months-worth of components ahead of the blacklisting to prepare for trade friction uncertainties, Nikkei Asian Review reported in May.
Huawei will have to find alternatives to US suppliers after the stocks run out, said Arthur Dong, a professor at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business.
“They (Huawei) only have two alternatives. They either can start producing some of these technologies on their own, which is going to be not easy and will take a long time. Or they’re going to have to find alternative sources to us suppliers,” said Dong.
“The best scenario is that the Trump administration agrees to a sort of [solution] that allows Huawei to continue to purchase critical parts from American companies. If the negotiations go poorly, or if they go slow, we can expect Huawei sales not to be as good, and it all depends on how much inventory parts they have,” he added.
]]>China’s authorities brought out an online privacy compliance assessment tool on Tuesday, the country’s latest move to strengthen the protection of personal information.
Why it matters: China has stepped up its efforts to combat the misuse of personal info since the turn of the year as the internet sector remains hungry for users’ data.
Details: The tool offers free online services including corporate privacy policy assessment for mobile apps and self-assessment for personal information protection compliance, state-run Xinhua reported.
Context: The CAC launched a year-long crackdown in January to combat non-compliant and illegal data collection and processing, such as requiring authorization for use and unauthorized access to private data.
To the world, it’s the company behind Tiktok. But in China, the company is often called by the name of Bytedance’s biggest app: Toutiao—short for Jinri Toutiao, the flagship newsfeed app.
Jinri Toutiao, which means “Today’s Headlines,” uses artificial intelligence to track readers’ habits and preferences, and push them stories from more than 1.1 million publishers. The AI-powered recommendation system is by no means perfect; its model prioritizes sensationalism and rapid-fire publication, leading to clickbait articles and plagiarism.
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TechNode’s ByteDance newsletter, one of the first in-depth looks in English at the now-giant upstart startup, was published from March 13 to Oct. 23, 2019.
But the approach has proven successful: The app has become the most popular newsfeed app in China, with more than 258 million monthly active users (MAU) as of June.
Bytedance is trying to replicate its success in overseas markets by launching Jinri Toutiao-like apps around the world; these include TopBuzz, an overseas version of Jinri Toutiao; BuzzVideo, a recommendation-based short- video platform; newsfeed app News Republic; and India-focused news app Helo.
On top of this global expansion, Bytedance is vying for a slice of the social media pie in China. In January, the company launched the instant messaging app Duoshan, a direct challenge to WeChat. Then the company took aim at the enterprise market in March with the launch of productivity tool, Lark.
This app factory has helped Bytedance accumulate 1.5 billion MAU worldwide as of July. So who exactly are leading these platforms? We decided to take a look.
These apps are run by founding members of the company, founders of apps acquired by the company, as well as veterans from Chinese tech giants such as Tencent and Baidu.
In June, Bytedance reshuffled the leadership by promoting the founder of TikTok’s predecessor, Musical.ly, and an algorithm expert to step up marketing and monetization in its existing overseas markets.
Up until the June reorganization, the newsfeed app had been managed by Chen Lin, the CEO of Jinri Toutiao company. Bytedance’s recommendation algorithm expert Zhu Wenjia now runs the app, reporting to Chen.
Chen stayed on as CEO of Jinri Toutiao, but he is no longer directly in charge of the app, according to Chinese media outlet 36Kr.
Douyin, the Chinese version of popular short-video app TikTok, is now led by Zhu Jun, senior vice-president of TikTok. Zhu was the co-founder of lip-sync app Musical.ly. He joined Bytedance after the company acquired Musical.ly in 2017 and rebranded it as TikTok.
Huoshan is Bytedance’s less-popular short-video app, which has 106 million MAU. It’s unclear who is currently leading the app after Chinese authorities detained its head Huang Zifeng in May 2018; the company later said he was under investigation for accepting bribes.
Lark, a Slack-like productivity tool, is Bytedance’s first move into the enterprise service market. The app, which officially launched in April, belongs to Bytedance’s productivity engineering division, which is led by company vice president Xie Xin.
Xu Zhe, a senior product manager, is actually in charge of Lark, according to Chinese media outlet Geekpark. Xu has teamed up with Liang Rubo, the CTO of Jinri Toutiao, and Wu Weijie, the director of monetization, to oversee Lark’s operations. All three of them report to Xie.
Duoshan is Bytedance’s WeChat-challenger instant messaging app, which was launched in January. The app is reportedly developed and designed by a young team, all of whose members were born after 1990. Xu Luran, the 25-year-old product manager, graduated from Sichuan University only four years ago.
Before the June leadership shuffle, the person in charge of TikTok was Ren Lifeng, the founding member of the Douyin team and a former Baidu employee. The app is also led by Zhu Jun, to whom Ren now reports, according to the 36Kr report.
Vigo is an overseas version of short-video platform Huoshan. Han Shangyou, a former product manager at Tencent, is leading Vigo’s overseas push.
Kang Zeyu is leading the international push of TopBuzz, BuzzVideo, News Republic, and Helo. Before joining Bytedance in March 2017, Kang worked for Baidu as a senior development engineer. Less than a week after his departure from Baidu, Kang joined a company affiliated with Jinri Toutiao, but he continued to claim compensation from Baidu for nine months without disclosing his new position, according to a court file published in May.
Baidu sued Kang in May 2018 for violating nondisclosure and noncompete agreements.The dispute was settled in June 2018 when the Beijing Labor Arbitration Commission ordered Kang to pay Baidu RMB 830,000.
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Highlights from recent headlines
By taking the query as an opportunity to clarify some of the Indian government’s most pressing concerns, Bytedance could dispel some of the suspicion and possible hostility that officials have toward the platform.
Although Bytedance has already secured a large following in India with TikTok and Helo, the company is still lacking an app ecosystem similar to what it has established in China. The investments in (and possible future acquisitions of) content, e-commerce, and education technology startups in India could help Bytedance keep users in its ecosystem and speed up monetization in the market.
As part of Bytedance’s $1 billion investment in the country, the data center could allay concerns about data privacy in TikTok and potentially lower the possibility of a costly ban like the one in April.
Once incorporated into Douyin and TikTok, Jukedeck’s technologies could give users more music options during content creation. The acquisition could also reduce Bytedance’s reliance on copyrighted music from major music labels, which have been demanding higher royalties from the company.
Although the company said that the smartphone is a continuation of plans made by Smartisan, the phone maker it acquired, the product is reportedly still in development, and could include Bytedance-specific features. The smartphone should also help Bytedance push into the hardware landscape.
Bytedance’s short-video apps and content aggregator do not depend on gaming content, but being stripped of the right to use three of Tencent’s most popular games will hurt the platforms. The list of games that Bytedance apps aren’t allowed to use is also likely to expand as Tencent seeks to protect live-streaming platforms it has invested in, such as Nasdaq-listed Douyu and NYSE-listed Huya.
So far, the virtual currency can only be gifted to live-streamers, who can then exchange them for real money. Bytedance could potentially see even stronger growth in revenue from this feature if it gives the currency more usage.
By improving user experience by making it easier to find content and connect to other apps such as Facebook, these features could shape TikTok into a more user-friendly app.
]]>Huawei’s first-half revenue grew 23.2% year on year to RMB 401.3 billion ($58.3 billion), it said on Tuesday, sending out a powerful signal that the telecom giant continues to grow rapidly despite US sanctions and related risks ahead.
Why it matters: Huawei posted a strong showing for the first six months though the full impact of US technology restrictions is yet to emerge.
“There isn’t one day that we stopped production, nor did we stop shipping to our customers after May 16.”
Liang Hua, chairman of Huawei, at the conference
Details: Despite the risk of losing access to Android, Huawei shipped 118 million smartphones worldwide in the first half, driven by an 18.1% increase in domestic handset sales.
Context: Huawei was added to the US Entity List earlier this year barring them from buying parts and components from US companies without the government’s prior approval.
Qualcomm and Tencent are cooperating on projects to optimize user experience for the Chinese company’s video games on devices powered by the US firm’s chips, as well as on creating a 5G version of a Tencent-backed gaming phone, they said on Monday.
Why it matters: Tencent, one of the world’s largest gaming companies, is seeking new areas for growth as gaming revenues flag amid increased scrutiny by Chinese authorities.
Details: Under the agreement, future Tencent games will be optimized for Android phones that run Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Elite gaming chips, the companies said.
China’s semiconductor-focused fund, the China National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, has raised RMB 200 billion (around $29 billion) in its second financing round, the China Securities Journal reported on Friday, as the country aggressively promotes self-reliance in high-tech sectors amid the US-China trade war.
Why it matters: China’s efforts in growing its semiconductor manufacturing sector to increase technological self-reliance, of which the fund is a major feature, have grown in significance and urgency following the US ban on Chinese telecom equipment giant Huawei.
Details: The second fundraising round follows the same investment strategy as the first round, but it focuses more on semiconductor end-uses, the report said.
Context: China’s State Council published the “National Integrated Circuit Industry Development Guidelines” in June 2014, which initially proposed to set up a special national industry investment fund to boost the semiconductor industry.
Alibaba’s semiconductor affiliate Pingtouge released on Thursday a new RISC-V-based processor, a move that accelerates Chinese tech industry’s self-reliance amid the ongoing US-China trade war.
Why it matters: RISC-V, an open-source hardware instruction set architecture (ISA), is not covered by the US export restrictions, meaning Chinese firms like Huawei are able to use it without violating any export restrictions. The ISA is considered as a rival to commercial vendors of computer designs, such as ARM and MIPS.
“Alibaba does not need to license any core from ARM, MIPS, or anyone else. They design their own core based on the RISC-V ISA and added extensions.”
—Stewart Randall
Details: Pingtouge says that the processor, dubbed Xuantie 910, is currently the most high-performance RISC-V processor in the industry.
Context: The US government in May put Huawei on a trade blacklist, barring American companies from selling the Chinese telecom equipment giant any components containing technology it deems a national security threat if misappropriated.
Vendors in China have shipped 190 million smartphones in the first half of the year, a decline of 6% over the same period last year, according to a report released on Thursday by market research firm CINNO Research.
Why it matters: China, the largest smartphone market in the world, has seen smartphone shipments decline for six consecutive quarters due to high rates of market penetration, and a slowing economy amid the US-China trade war.
Details: Huawei continues to lead the smartphone market with sales up 18.1% in the first half of the year, securing 34.3% of market share, while smartphone shipments for its smaller rival Xiaomi fell 20% year on year during the same period.
If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.
Local resident Stacy Man believes it is now possible to go a week in her native Hong Kong without using her wallet or cash.
That would have been hard to imagine in the Asian financial hub just a few years ago. A mix of cash, credit cards, and payment smart card Octopus has dominated the city for years. While they remain popular, the situation appears to be changing as mobile payments are increasingly accepted at stores and restaurants, as well as on public transport.
So far the changes in the special administrative region have not been as radical as those on the Chinese mainland, where cash is fast becoming a thing of the past, especially in urban hubs.
Man, a 19-year-old university student, clarified that her choices would be relatively limited if she left her cash and credit cards at home for this imaginary survival challenge.
“If you make every purchase in supermarkets or convenience stores, I think that will be okay,” she said. “But if you want to buy something from the wet market or on the streets, then it may not be a good choice [to use mobile payments].”
Despite the limitations, Hong Kong residents are growing increasingly familiar with this new way to pay. Some 84% of Hongkongers have used mobile payments before, according to a survey from the Hong Kong Internet Registration Corporation Limited last August.
The competitive landscape not only features not only China’s usual suspects Alibaba and Tencent but also global players such as Google, Apple, and HSBC.
Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay, which enjoy a combined 93.2% share in the Chinese mobile payment market, both chose Hong Kong as their first port of call for their global expansion.
WeChat Pay has been available in Hong Kong since February 2016 while Alipay entered the market with its AlipayHK localized app in May the year after. Both apps allow Hongkongers to complete transactions by scanning merchant QR codes. AlipayHK claimed in March to have more than 2 million users, and 50,000 retailers have signed up.
However in Hong Kong, it appears that Alipay and WeChat Pay will be unable to enjoy their duopolistic dominance that they have grown accustomed to in the mainland, at least for now.
This is in part due to Google, Apple, and Samsung, which entered the market earlier. The roaring success of Octopus has also contributed. There have been over 35 million cards issued in the market, home to only seven million residents.
HSBC, the biggest bank in Hong Kong, launched peer-to-peer payments app PayMe in February 2017. Only available for those with Hong Kong phone numbers and bank accounts, it has racked up more than 1.5 million users in the space of two years, according to company data.
The commercial lender announced in February that testing had started on a business version of PayMe. Also reliant on single-use QR codes, the service is available at 15 retailers as part of the trial.
The battle for Hong Kong’s mobile payment market began when authorities granted the first batch of operating licenses in 2016 to five players including AlipayHK and WeChat Pay.
Their issuance helped to reduce uncertainty regarding investments in mobile payment and helped drive the adoption of the technology in the city, Hong Kong-based Deloitte China partner Paul Sin told TechNode.
Sin contends that the entry of HSBC’s PayMe is one of the key driving factors of the technology’s growing adoption.
[infogram id=”infographic-1h7v4pqrqxlz6k0?live”]
He also believes that increasing interactions between Hong Kong and China have spurred on growth, adding that mainland service providers like Alipay and WeChat Pay, are de facto payment channels linking the two regions.
Liu Dawei, an e-commerce professor at Hangzhou Dianzi University, told TechNode that the influx of mainland Chinese visitors to Hong Kong is also boosting the use of the payments in the city.
“If Hong Kong retailers don’t provide payment methods such as Alipay and WeChat Pay, then mainland [China] visitors would find it very inconvenient. From the retailers’ points of view, the costs of providing such mobile payment methods are very low, so they are willing to adopt them,” said Liu.
[infogram id=”participation-in-mobile-payment-1h7v4pqrqxpk6k0?live”]
From a user’s perspective, the reason for them to use mobile payment methods is simple: It’s more convenient.
At the RISE tech conference in Hong Kong from July 9 to July 11, TechNode asked nine locals about their experience of using the platforms, and most of them regarded convenience as a primary reason for them to use the new technology.
Adrian Ng, a 29-year-old human resources consultant, said he uses Google Pay, AlipayHK, and PayMe. “It’s very convenient, and it’s very easy. So payments get done in a second,” he said.
“It’s nice not to have to bring around so many cards all the time. And it’s an easy way to track [expenses],” said 25-year-old Lan Lai who use Apple Pay and HSBC’s PayMe.
Chinese firms have attempted to replicate promotional activities that proved popular in the mainland in Hong Kong, but they haven’t enjoyed the same level of success.
Tencent rolled out WeChat-based Hongbao, red packets filled with money that are traditionally given out on special occasions, in Hong Kong as a digital way of gifting money, but interest was lackluster.
Offering discounts at fast-food restaurants and convenience stores has proved successful in the market, however. Both WeChat Pay HK and AlipayHK provide discounts and coupons occasionally when users make payments through their mobile wallets.
In the interview with TechNode at RISE, Quincy Lin, a 23-year-old entrepreneur, said he was skeptical about the sustainability of this promotional method. “I wonder if they don’t have these coupons anymore, will people still use it [mobile payment apps],” he said.
An AlipayHK spokesperson told TechNode that providing offers and discounts together with merchant partners is one of the company’s ways of encouraging people to use the mobile wallet, but it also planned to support more merchants in a bid to attract more users.
Over half of respondents to the HKIRC survey said they were concerned about cybersecurity and privacy issues related to mobile payments. This indicates that Chinese firms may face a harder struggle than expected to gain a firm foothold in the market.
“I really hope Hong Kong can catch up with mainland China, where most people don’t really use cash anymore. But I do have concerns about the security problem,” said 23-year-old Hong Kong resident Aka Chung in an interview with TechNode.
AlipayHK and WeChat Pay HK come under greater scrutiny because of their link to their mainland equivalents. Both of them require real-name verification before transactions can happen.
To address the concerns, Jennifer Tan, chief executive of AlipayHK, said in July 2018 that AlipayHK would only require limited personal data from Hong Kong users like their mobile numbers. Data is also not shared with the mainland unit, she added.
Professor Liu maintains that while mainland users previously had similar concerns, they have now come to accept mobile payments as a regular transaction method after decades of development in the country’s e-commerce sector.
“Hongkongers’ consumption behavior is still more western-style,” said Liu. “But if they start by making small-scale payments, I’m sure they will gradually accept it.”
]]>Huawei’s revenue grew roughly 30% in the first half of 2019 after securing critical supplies ahead of the United States trade blacklisting, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: Huawei’s revenue has not seen the full impact of US restrictions on technology exports to the Chinese telecom giant since the ban only took effect in mid-May. But Huawei may feel the pain if nothing changes after the 90-day suspension of the ban ends on August 19.
Details: In May, the US put Huawei and 70 of its affiliates on an “entity list” which forbids American companies from doing business with it without approval. The company said it has long been prepared for the “extreme scenario” that it could be banned from purchasing US chips and technology.
Context: Huawei is laying off more than 600 employees in its research arm Futurewei as it continues to struggle with the US restrictions.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi was the youngest company on the Fortune Global 500 list in 2019, placing 468th in the world with 2018 revenue of $26.4 billion, but is facing slowing smartphone sales and sinking share prices since its 2018 initial public offering (IPO).
Why it matters: It took Xiaomi nine years to grow from a startup to one of the world’s largest corporations by revenue, but since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong, its shares have fallen more than 45.8% and market cap has shrunk by HK$162 billion (around $20.7 billion). Its reputation has faltered from one of China’s rising technology stars that aimed for a $100 billion IPO to a hardware manufacturer facing slowing demand for its main product as it struggles to pivot to other businesses.
Details: Xiaomi joined a number of other Chinese tech companies on the Fortune list, on which Shenzhen-based telecom equipment giant Huawei was ranked 61st, e-commerce giant Alibaba ranked 182nd, and social media and gaming giant Tencent 237th in the world by revenue.
Context: Though the smartphone segment comprises the lion’s share of its revenue, Xiaomi has been expanding into other businesses to shore up growth and broaden its profile as an internet company, not just smartphone maker, for a higher valuation.
China’s STAR Market technology board opened trading on the Shanghai Stock Exchange Monday morning, with its first batch of 25 companies offering shares in the long-awaited debut.
Why it matters: Previously known as the science and technology innovation board, STAR Market represents one of China’s most significant capital market reforms. The bourse is a strategic asset in Beijing’s push for technological self-reliance amid the US-China trade war, which has caused several Chinese tech companies to delay or cancel their US initial public offerings (IPO).
“Establishment of the STAR Market and the pilot registration-based initial public offering system will support China’s innovation-driven economic development and capital market reform.”
—Li Chao, deputy head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, at the opening ceremony
Details: The STAR Market opened with shares surging for the majority of the 25 companies, which range from semiconductor makers to private spaceflight companies.
Context: The new tech board was first announced by Chinese President Xi Jinping in his keynote speech at the opening of the first China International Import Expo in Shanghai last November. The board is an experiment with a registration-based IPO system.
Apple said on Thursday it will not charge the 30% App Store commission for several Chinese medical consultation apps after an outcry from developers.
Why it matters: The 30% so-called “Apple tax,” or commission from every transaction made through its App Store, has long been loathed by developers and its far-reaching implementation fails to address innovations in business models.
“We do not charge a commission for apps that exchange physical goods and services. Following a thorough review of DingXiang Doctor and several similar apps we have verified they are delivering medical consultations and they have not been charged and should not be charged… this was a new situation and we wanted to be sure we applied our guidelines correctly and consistently, and we’re sorry it took us longer than usual to make sure we got it right.”
—Apple in a statement emailed to TechNode
Details: Several apps that offer online medical consultation services had railed against Apple for restricting them to the company’s in-app purchase (IAP) system and applying the 30% commission to its consultation fees, according to a report (in Chinese) by China Youth Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Youth League of China.
Context: Apple’s App Store commission has faced criticism by developers both in China and overseas.
China’s biggest live-streaming platform Douyu announced on Wednesday it raised $775 million after pricing its US initial public offering (IPO) at the low end of the indicated range.
Why it’s important: The deal is so far the largest Chinese IPO in the US in 2019, eclipsing that of Luckin Coffee which raised $645 million, according to Reuters, citing market data.
When asked about the impact of short video platforms, CEO Chen Shaojie told Tencent News that they are a complement to what live-streaming platforms offer:
“Short videos are more similar to compilations of highlights whereas livestreams are like entire matches for users to immerse in. Users watch both full matches and compilations because they are different experiences, so they don’t compete directly.”
—Chen Shaojie, Douyu CEO, to Tencent News
Despite growth in Douyu’s advertising business, Chen said that the platform’s revenue will still come mainly from user subscriptions and tips.
Details: The Wuhan-based company sold American depositary shares (ADS) at $11.5 each, compared with a previously stated target of $11.5 to $14.0, said the company on Wednesday.
Updated to include comments from Douyu’s CEO. With contributions from Tony Xu.
]]>Huawei is among the first batch of smartphone makers to receive official safety accreditation for upcoming 5G-capable handsets, along with OnePlus, ZTE, and Vivo, reported National Business Daily.
Why it matters: Securing the permits means the companies are a step closer to launching their respective next-generation smartphones, a widely anticipated catalyst as sales decline in markets across the globe.
Details: Seven 5G handsets have received China Compulsory Certifications, a safety accreditation for products sold on the domestic market, from the China Quality Certification Center.
Context: The race to deliver smartphones compatible with 5G networks has begun as companies eye fresh opportunities in a saturated market.
Huawei announced on Monday that it would unveil a smart television product in August, according to Chinese media outlet Yicai, a move that broadens the Chinese telecom giant’s business into the TV-related sector.
Why it matters: Huawei is expanding its consumer business into other hardware segments as governments in countries around the globe scrutinize its telecom equipment over cybersecurity concerns and smartphone sales decline after it lost access to Android following a US trade ban in May.
“TV has its irreplaceable advantages. TVs and smartphones will work as two centers in people’s daily lives.”
—Zhao Ming, president of the Honor smartphone line, as quoted by China Daily
Details: The new TV product, which Huawei calls a smart screen, will be sold under the company’s Honor smartphone brand.
Context: Huawei’s consumer business relies heavily on American technology and components, but the company was recently granted some reprieve from US sanctions.
Huawei is planning to lay off employees at its American research and development (R & D) subsidiary Futurewei Technologies, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: Chinese telecommunications equipment giant has been struggling with its American blacklisting, although the Trump administration may grant a reprieve within a month, according to a Reuters report.
Details: Futurewei employs about 850 people in research labs across the US, including in Texas, California, and Washington states, said the report.
Context: Futurewei is Huawei’s US-based research and development arm. The firm has filed more than 2,100 patents in areas such as telecommunications, the fifth-generation wireless network, and video and camera technologies.
Huawei still prefers Google’s Android mobile operating system (OS) for its smartphones over its own self-developed Hongmeng OS, according to company chairman Liang Hua, following an announcement on Tuesday that the US government would significantly narrow the scope of its ban on the Chinese telecom giant.
Why it’s important: It had long been suspected that Huawei was developing its own mobile operating system, named Hongmeng, as an alternative to Android by the time Google pulled Huawei’s license to some services in order to comply with a US trade ban on Huawei in mid-May.
Details: Liang said on Friday at a press conference in Shenzhen that the Hongmeng OS was developed for the internet of things (IoT) devices instead of smartphones, and the company hasn’t decided to abandon Android.
A Didi executive said on Wednesday at that the company has launched virtual banking services to its drivers and passengers in Brazil as the company expands in Latin America.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based ride-hailing giant is expanding its business to international markets such as Southeast Asia, Japan, and Latin America, the major fronts in its competition with Uber.
“In some of the countries or regions, our peers are already there. But there are still many user pain points waiting for us to solve. So we go there and address the local people’s pain points.“
— Zheng Bu, Didi’s chief security officer
Details: Didi said that many people in Brazil don’t have a bank account so drivers and passengers cannot make online transactions with the ride-hailing platform. Zheng said the company offers virtual banking services to drivers by providing them with a MasterCard debit card, called the 99 Card.
Context: In Brazil, the most populous country in Latin America, around one-third of adults were unbanked as of end-2017, according to a World Bank report.
Global technology firms are increasingly replicating successful concepts from Chinese peers like super apps and short video platforms, according to a new report from the South China Morning Post, Abacus, and Proof of Capital.
Why it matters: China’s tech sector has long held a copycat reputation, especially when it comes to Silicon Valley products, but it now appears that the situation is reversing. Companies including Facebook and Amazon are also learning from original ideas that have been proved successful in China, a country with 829 million internet users, according to the China Internet Report 2019 released at the RISE Conference in Hong Kong on Wednesday.
“At the South China Morning Post, when we write stories [about Chinese tech companies], sometimes we still use terms like China’s Uber, China’s Twitter, China’s Facebook, China’s Google. And that really reflects a trend, about 10 to 15 years ago, when Chinese companies copied from the US. But we are seeing the reverse happening.”
—Chua Kong Ho, a technology editor at the South China Morning Post, speaking at RISE on Wednesday.
Details: Global tech companies are now replicating successful concepts from their Chinese counterparts, from the super app to the short video.
Context: Innovations in terms of features have helped Chinese tech firms to thrive in recent decades, but the country’s tech industry still heavily relies on overseas technology, said the report.
While Amazon dominates the US smart speaker market with its Alexa-powered devices, competition in China remains fierce as some of the country’s biggest names in technology engage in an ongoing price war to vie for market share.
China supplanted the US as the largest market for smart speakers globally earlier this year. Sales hit 10.6 million units in the first quarter, a recent report from research firm Canalys shows. The country accounted for just over half of all sales of the devices globally in the first three months.
In the two years since their emergence in the Chinese market, smart speakers have evolved from niche gadgets into some of the most popular electronic devices among Chinese households. Their meteoric rise has been the result of a price war between some of the country’s biggest tech players that slashed average prices to under $20. While experts contend that the low pricing strategy may help educate consumers, there are concerns that the low-end devices could fail to meet users’ expectations.
Amazon introduced a new means of human-computer interaction in 2014 when the company launched its first Echo smart speaker, running Alexa. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak lauded Echo as the “next big platform” in computing in an interview with CNBC in 2016.
After that, US tech giants piled in, with Facebook, Microsoft, Google, and Apple all announcing smart speaker products in the following years.
Major Chinese players like Alibaba, Baidu, and Xiaomi, joined the party in mid-2017. Sales skyrocketed from a mere 60,000 units in 2016 to 9 million last year, making the country the largest market worldwide, according to a report by German market research firm GFK.
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba launched its first smart speaker Tmall Genie in July 2017, allowing users to order items from its Tmall premium shopping site from the comfort of their sofas.
Tmall Genie, which uses the Hangzhou-based firm’s intelligent personal assistant service AliGenie, initially went on sale for RMB 499 ($72.5). The price was low compared with the first generation Amazon Echo, which sold for around $180 but the market reaction was lackluster. Sales of AliGenie only numbered in the several tens of thousands, Chinese online media outlet Qdaily reported in November 2017. However, fortunes changed when Alibaba slashed prices for the annual Singles’ Day shopping festival on November 11 that year.
The company sold the speakers for RMB 99 via coupons and discounts, an 80% reduction of the original price. By the end of the 24-hour shopping festival, Tmall Genie had become the first smart speaker on the Chinese market to hit 1 million unit sales. This compares with total smart speaker sales in the country of 1.65 million units for the whole of 2017.
By March 2018, Alibaba had accumulated 2 million sales, a feat that had taken Amazon over one year to achieve with its Echo.
In the same month of Tmall Genie’s initial launch, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi joined the battle releasing the Mi AI Speaker. The product is capable of controlling other smart products around the home via voice assistant Xiao Ai.
The RMB 299 smart speaker hit the market in September 2017. Xiaomi said all stock sold out from the Beijing-based company’s online store 23 seconds after release, though it didn’t reveal how many were actually snapped up.
In March 2018, Xiaomi launched the Mi AI Speaker Mini, a low-end version of its original product, priced at RMB 169. For its annual Mi Fan Festival on April 3, Xiaomi cut the price to RMB 99, achieving parity with Alibaba’s Tmall Genie.
The low pricing strategy drove up sales significantly. Xiaomi said that more than 1 million users registered to buy the product during the festival.
The company sold 600,000 smart speakers in the first three months of 2018, reported Canalys. This number more than tripled to 2 million in the second quarter, installing the firm as China’s second-largest smart speaker vendor after Alibaba.
November 2017 marked the entry of a major new player when Baidu launched its Raven H product. The name derived from Raven Tech, the AI assistant startup that the search engine giant acquired in 2016.
Priced at RMB 1,699, Raven H was almost 10 times more expensive than other products available in the country and it failed to gain a foothold in the market. A report from The Information in June 2018 states that Baidu only manufactured 10,000 Raven H smart speakers, which is in sharp contrast to the several million units sold by both Xiaomi and Alibaba.
The failure led to Baidu pursuing the same strategy as Alibaba and Xiaomi. The firm unveiled its Little Fish smart speaker brand in March 2018, powered by its conversational AI assistant DuerOS. The device was priced at RMB 599 but was sold at a promotional price of RMB 299. In June 2018, the company launched a cheaper version of the device, which brought the price down to RMB 89.
The strategy paid off and Baidu became China’s third largest smart speaker maker after Alibaba and Xiaomi, with shipments of 1 million devices in the third quarter, Canalys data shows.
Behind the price war, there is a booming market for smart speakers. Canalys expects in April total units sold to hit 59.9 million at the end of this year, growth of 166% compared with the year-ago figure.
“The benefit of the price war is that it brings high market penetration in a short time, and it will be an effective measure for educating consumers,” Liu Hao, a researcher at the China Consumer Electronics Association, told TechNode.
“But the low pricing strategy won’t help the industry move forward; instead it will disappoint consumers’ expectations by selling them cheap stuff,” he said.
David Watkins, director at Strategy Analytics, told TechNode that Google and Amazon sold their devices at a very low cost to accelerate user number growth and now Chinese players are looking to replicate this success with even more aggressive promotions and deals.
“Given the sudden growth in sales in China over the last few quarters I would say that they are proving successful,” said Watkins.
Canalys predicts that smart speaker penetration will reach 13% this year though this is dependent on the ability of companies to win over new users, according to Watkins.
At the end of last year, Amazon and Google cut the prices of their smallest smart speaker products, the Echo Dot, and the Home Mini, to as little as $29 from $50 for the shopping season, reported Reuters.
The report indicated that the respective component costs of the two devices were around $31 and $26, respectively, and the figures didn’t include overheads, shipping, and other expenses, meaning they were likely sold at a loss.
Although Xiaomi aims to lower the threshold for smart speakers by providing products at low cost, the company does not aim to pursue loss leader pricing–sell at a loss to attract consumers, Tang Mu, the general manager of Xiaomi’s smart hardware division, told TechNode.
“Loss leader pricing is not a reasonable business model, because it means high expectations for future market volume, and the smart speaker market has not yet reached that stage,” Tang added.
Chen Xiaoliang, founder and CEO of SoundAI, a voice recognition technology provider for Xiaomi and Baidu’s smart speakers, told TechNode that the low-pricing strategy was a better way of marketing than advertising because smart speakers are still a new concept in China.
However, the country’s smart speaker makers are not as ambitious as their US counterparts because they have different purposes, he added.
“Chinese companies are selling smart speakers as a potentially profitable product, but they don’t envisage a scenario in which smart speakers represent the main focal point of people’s interaction with machines,” said Chen.
Voice interaction is the most natural way of asking and searching for answers, he said. “Amazon is ambitious because it is determined to dethrone Google as the top search engine, which would save it billions of dollars in search engine advertising.”
Watkins of Strategy Analytics still contends that Baidu and Alibaba share similar ambitions to Amazon and Google. “They see AI assistants as the next computing platform, and if they want to remain relevant then they must build a strong presence in that space.”
Companies in both China and the US alike have to evolve their products based on changes in consumers’ behavior as they moving away from desktop and touchscreen interfaces toward more direct voice-activated platforms, he said.
]]>Huawei CVs show close links with military, study says – Financial Times
What happened: A study of more than 25,000 leaked resumes, or CVs, belonging to Huawei employees says it has found deeper links between the telecommunications equipment giant and the Chinese military and intelligence agencies. The research was conducted by Christopher Balding, a professor at Fulbright University Vietnam, who co-authored a research paper questioning Huawei’s claims of employee ownership. Balding searched through a database of leaked Chinese resumes and found some Huawei employees had also been simultaneously employed by institutions affiliated with the Chinese military. Huawei said it cannot verify “any of these so-called ‘Huawei Employee CVs’” and that it conducts background checks for job candidates with military or government backgrounds.
Why it’s important: The study’s findings could not be verified because Balding did not share the database and describes in concrete terms only three profiles. The study’s credibility and accuracy has been questioned by many on social media site Twitter, where Balding posted a link of a report of the study from The Telegraph. Balding responded to some criticisms in a blog post, saying that the paper was not an academic paper and the data had already been provided to governments of some unnamed countries and will be provided to other countries looking to conduct their own analysis.
]]>Samsung estimates operating profit more than halved in 2nd quarter – Financial Times
What happened: Samsung Electronics expects its second-quarter operating profit to fall 56% year-on-year to KRW 6.5 trillion (around $5.55 billion), according to earnings guidance released by the company on Friday. The South Korean electronics giant said its revenue would likely fall 4% quarter-on-quarter to KRW 56 trillion. It will release a finalized earnings report later this month. The lowered earnings guidance came as global chip prices fell due to a supply glut and US sanctions on China’s Huawei, a major Samsung client, analysts said.
Why it’s important: Samsung is the world’s biggest maker of semiconductors and smartphones, as well as a major producer of display screens. The US campaign against Huawei has hurt chip demand, but Samsung is expected to see benefit in smartphone and telecom equipment sales. Analysts estimate Samsung could sell 37 million more smartphones annually if the Huawei woes continue. Samsung is also expected to increase its share of the global 5G network equipment market as global telecom operators boycott Huawei.
]]>Vodafone stays with Huawei for 5G launch – China Daily
What happened: UK mobile operator Vodafone switched on its 5G network in several cities across the country on Wednesday, using Huawei equipment in non-core parts of its network infrastructure for the rollout. Both Vodafone and its UK rival EE have launched their 5G networks which use Huawei gear on peripheral parts. Vodafone is launching the 5G service with Xiaomi Mi Mix 3 and Samsung S10 5G handsets and a 5G router, but the carrier has pulled 5G handsets made by Huawei from its launch line-up because of uncertainty about support by Google’s Android.
Why it’s important: UK Prime Minister Theresa May allowed Huawei limited access to the country’s 5G network rollouts, saying that Huawei will be considered as a supplier for some “non-core” parts of the 5G mobile infrastructure like antennas. But uncertainty remains as the UK government is considering a full ban on Huawei that would require removal of the company’s equipment from existing base stations. Vodafone chief technical officer Scott Petty told ZDNet on Wednesday that it would cost up to $88 million to replace Huawei gear from the carrier’s existing network.
]]>If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here instead.
By 2025, around 15% of the world’s population will be able to connect to next generation 5G networks promising ultra-fast data speeds, said an industry insider.
“By about 2025, we think that most markets around the world will have launched 5G,” said Julian Gorman, head of Asia Pacific at GSMA, a UK-based organization that represents mobile operators worldwide.
By that year, half of users will come from Asia-Pacific, Gorman told TechNode at the Mobile World Conference (MWC) in Shanghai on June 27.
As of June, South Korea, the US, Australia, and the UK have launched commercial 5G networks. China has granted commercial licenses to the country’s big three telecom operators last month, and the country is expected to launch the technology nationwide on October 1.
Gorman said initially a lot of 5G subscribers would come from China because the ecosystem in the country is starting to take off.
A recent report by research firm Canalys said 5G-enabled handsets would reach nearly 800 million units by 2023, and Greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, will account for more than one-third of those shipments.
However, Gorman envisages some uncertainties around the telecoms supply chain and some operators are trying to ascertain whether they will have access to all the vendors that they usually use.
The risk is more evident when it comes to 5G-related equipment. The US government has been campaigning hard to urge allies to exclude Huawei equipment from their network roll-outs. Some countries including the US, Australia, and Japan, have banned Huawei equipment from their forthcoming 5G networks.
Gorman thinks a transparent framework formulated by stakeholders and countries will help 5G equipment vendors move forward with certainty, and a competitive supply chain is also welcomed.
“We need to move forward in a transparent way so that vendors can innovate and compete and make technology available—especially the 5G technology—for mobile operators together to launch this important technology, which is going to add so much to the economic value of the world,” he added.
]]>Lingering confusion about whether American companies are allowed to do business with Huawei follow contradicting comments over the weekend from US President Donald Trump and the trade department.
The US Commerce Department said on Wednesday that requests from American companies seeking to export products to Huawei were being reviewed “under the highest national security scrutiny” since the company is still blacklisted, Reuters reported on Thursday.
The US government agency said it was applying the “presumption of denial” standards with Entity Listed companies, which has included Huawei and its affiliates since mid-May, meaning applications are unlikely to be approved, according to the report.
Trump said Saturday on the sidelines of a G20 meeting in Japan that American firms could ship goods to Huawei. The comment followed a consensus between the Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping about a ceasefire on trade.
US tech companies have been lobbying the administration to narrow the scope of the ban. Chipmakers say the ban is crimping profits and a number have resumed some sales to Huawei despite the trade blacklist.
Following Trump’s declaration on Saturday, National Economic Council chairman Larry Kudlow clarified on Sunday that sales to Huawei would be limited to products widely available around the world, and that national security remained paramount.
At the G20 meeting, Trump also said that meetings on Huawei would be held shortly. But four days after the announcement, industry and government officials alike remain uncertain about what the new policy will be, said the Reuters report.
Huawei, however, is not so elated by Trump’s decision. Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei told the Financial Times on Tuesday the move would not “much impact” its business as it adjusts to a new era of American hostility.
“President Trump’s statements are good for American companies. Huawei is also willing to continue to buy products from American companies,” Ren said.
But the Huawei executive also said last month he expected the US trade blacklist would reduce the company’s production output by $30 billion over the next two years and he was surprised at the determination with which Washington has attacked his company.
]]>A man poured a bottle of water over Baidu’s chief executive Robin Li at the opening of the company’s annual developers’ conference on Wednesday.
During his speech at the Baidu Create AI Developer Conference in Beijing, an attendee rushed up to the stage and poured a bottle of water over the CEO’s head.
After a few moments of shocked silence, Li asked the interloper in English, “What’s your problem?”
The man, whose motive was unclear, was quickly tackled by security.
Li then continued his speech about smart transportation, noting that the road to artificial intelligence (AI) will contain unexpected happenings. “But it will not impact Baidu’s determination,” he added.
A Baidu spokesman told TechNode Wednesday that the man was taken away by the police, and that his identity was unknown.
Chinese netizens have tracked down the account allegedly used by the man on microblogging platform Weibo. A Weibo account using the handle @Zhinanshangshu posted a picture of a bottle of water at the front of the stage where Li was giving his keynote speech at 9:40 a.m. Wednesday with the message “I’m about to go [to the stage].” All posts by this account had been deleted by mid-afternoon Wednesday, TechNode observed.
The account holder’s identity could not be independently verified by TechNode.
Baidu, China’s biggest search engine site, was widely criticized last month for promoting its own results and low-quality articles on Baijiahao, the company’s news aggregation platform which publishes content from other sites, over news from other channels.
The company has struggled to regain user trust after a series of scandals over the past few years. In 2016, a 21-year-old college student died after being treated for his cancer using questionable methods at a hospital which he chose for its top ranking in Baidu’s search results.
This story has been updated to include the video, comment from Baidu, and Weibo account information.
]]>1.9 billion 5G smartphones will ship in the next five years, overtaking 4G in 2023 – Canalys
What happened: A report by research firm Canalys said 5G-enabled handsets will reach nearly 800 million units in 2023, accounting for 51.4% of all smartphone shipments. Greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, will account for 34.0% of 5G smartphone shipments in 2023, followed by North America at 18.8%. Additionally, 17.5% of smartphones shipped in China will be 5G-capable by 2020, and this percentage will rise sharply to 62.7% in 2023. Canalys said government initiatives to accelerate 5G development are a powerful driver for faster roll-out in markets such as China and the US.
Why it’s important: Following South Korea, the US, Australia, and the UK, China is expected to begin commercial use of 5G nationwide on October 1. Earlier this month, China’s three major state-owned carriers China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom were granted commercial 5G licenses by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. Top smartphone makers including Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi, and Oneplus have already announced that their 5G handsets will be ready for consumers in 2019, and Apple’s 5G-enabled iPhone is expected to launch in 2020.
]]>Security researchers published a report Monday saying lax security protocols for a publicly accessible database created by a Chinese smart home device maker could allow hackers to take control of the more than 1 million homes which use the company’s products.
The database, which is owned by Shenzhen-based smart home product maker Orvibo, includes an excess of 2 billion logs including user names, email addresses, and passwords to precise geolocations, according to a report by the cybersecurity research firm vpnMentor.
The vpnMentor report said much of the data leaked could be pieced together to disrupt and gain access to users’ homes and possibly lead to further hacks.
Orvibo’s products include SmartMate, a platform that manages smart appliances, a lighting control system for smartphones, and a home security system that controls smart locks and security cameras, according to its website.
“A malicious actor could easily access the video feed from one of Orvibo’s smart cameras by entering into another user’s account with the credentials found in the database,” said the report. It would be easy to unlock a door from the same account, it said.
An email query to Orvibo on Tuesday went unanswered. A woman who answered the phone at Orvibo’s Shenzhen office said nobody was immediately available to respond to media queries.
Orvibo says it has around 1 million users, including individuals, hotels, and other businesses who use the company’s smart home devices. The data breach affects users from China, Japan, Thailand, the US, the UK, Mexico, France, Australia, and Brazil, according to the report.
The report said hackers would be able to easily take the whole network of a business offline with a fully connected set of Orvibo’s smart home items. “When an entire building or dwelling relies on connected technology for security, an outage can stop the whole operation,” the vpnMentor report said.
The report, which was published on Monday, said that security for the database had still not been rectified at time of publishing despite efforts from vpnMentor to alert Orvibo through various channels including email and Twitter.
A vpnMentor spokeswoman told TechNode on Tuesday afternoon that the server which hosts the database had been closed and is no longer accessible.
]]>White House official: New sales to China’s Huawei to cover only widely available goods – Reuters
What happened: US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that American companies would be permitted to resume sales to Chinese telecommunications company Huawei, which National Economic Council chairman Larry Kudlow clarified on Sunday, saying that the sales would only apply to products widely available around the world. National security remained paramount, he added. The partial lifting of restrictions on Huawei was a key element of the agreement reached over the weekend between China and the US to reopen stalled trade negotiations.
Why it’s important: Beijing views lifting the Huawei ban as a precondition for reaching a trade deal with Washington, The Wall Street Journal reported last week. White House officials have said the administration was keeping Huawei separate from trade talks, but Trump is clearly making Huawei a part of any trade settlement. Last month, Trump indicated that the US could lift restrictions against Huawei if the US sees some forward movement on the trade talks.
]]>Chinese telecommunications equipment maker ZTE has secured 25 commercial 5G contracts and plans in the second half of the year to launch its third-generation 5G chip which could significantly reduce carrier costs.
The Shenzhen-based company and fourth-largest telecom equipment maker in the world said on Wednesday that it has worked with more than 60 telecom operators around the world, including China’s three major state-owned carriers—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—as well as France’s Orange, Spain’s Telefonica, Wind Tre of Italy, and Indonesia’s Telkomsel.
Its domestic rival Huawei, the world’s largest telecom gear maker, said Wednesday it had signed 50 5G contracts worldwide.
ZTE was brought to the brink of collapse in April 2018 after a US government ban from buying American technology and components. The Hong Kong-listed company said in its first-quarter earnings report in April that it had to pay a $1 billion fine to evade the sanctions.
The company said in the report that it would continue focusing on its carrier business and was prepared for 5G commercialization.
Bai Yanmin, vice president of ZTE Corporation and general manager of 5G products, told reporters at a press conference in Shanghai on Wednesday that the company’s third-generation 5G chip supports 4G and 5G dual-mode networks.
The chip also simultaneously supports both standalone, a network mode that is built independently without architecture from current systems and therefore allows for 5G enhancements, and non-standalone architectures, he said.
The new solution could reduce 5G network deployment costs for carriers by 40%, according to the company.
ZTE said it has filed more than 3,500 5G-related patent applications to date.
“Currently ZTE invests more than 10% of its revenue in research and development, of which 5G is the key field,” said Bai, adding that the company expected to invest more in that area over the next six months.
In its April earnings report, ZTE forecasted net profit in the first half of up to RMB 1.8 billion (around $260 million), rebounding from the RMB 7.8 billion loss during the same six-month period in 2018.
]]>Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei said on Wednesday that is has secured 50 commercial 5G contracts worldwide and the company’s 5G equipment supply was “not affected“ by a trade ban by the United States government.
To an audience at the Mobile World Congress in Shanghai, Huawei deputy chairman and rotating CEO Ken Hu said the company had signed 50 contracts for next-generation 5G wireless networks with telecom operators from 30 countries, half of which are European carriers.
The Shenzhen-based company is the world’s largest telecom equipment maker, but its ambitions to sell 5G gear to global carriers have been crimped by a US government ban on fears of national security risk. Huawei has repeatedly denied the allegations.
The US Department of Commerce on May 15 placed Huawei on a trade blacklist that bars companies from selling American technology and components to Huawei without approval.
Hu told reporters at a press conference after the presentation that Huawei has already found alternatives, including the company’s self-developed solutions or those from non-American suppliers, for components affected by the US ban.
“In terms of where Huawei stands right now, our overall supply is not affected,” he said.
Huawei also said it has shipped more than 150,000 5G base stations to date and expects to ship 500,000 by the end of the year.
While the company’s 5G business has proved resilient, its consumer business has undoubtedly been affected by the US crackdown. Google on May 19 pulled Huawei’s license for Android, a mobile operating system used by all of Huawei’s smartphones.
Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei said last week that its overseas smartphone sales had dropped 40% without specifying a time frame. A company spokesman said he was referring to a decline over the past month, according to Bloomberg.
Hu said all Huawei smartphones in stock up to now had the Android OS installed and were not subject to Google’s restriction.
The company is also reportedly preparing an alternate operating system to Android, known as the Hongmeng OS. Hu said he could not provide further information about the developing OS and there was no timetable for launch.
Huawei’s consumer business head Richard Yu, however, said last month in an interview with CNBC that the new system would be ready for use in China by fall this year, and international markets early next year.
Hu said the company “hopes to continue using Android and Google’s services in the future.”
]]>U.S. Tech Companies Sidestep a Trump Ban, to Keep Selling to Huawei – The New York Times
What happened: A number of the biggest American chip makers including Micron and Intel have sold millions of dollars of products to Huawei despite its placement on a trade blacklist. These American suppliers began selling components produced overseas to Huawei about three weeks ago, permissible for American goods which are not made in the US and do not contain technology that can pose national security risks. People with knowledge of the sales said the blacklist on Huawei caused confusion and many executives of American suppliers who lacked deep experience with US trade controls initially suspended shipments to Huawei.
Why it’s important: Sales to Huawei comprise significant portions of revenue for many American chip makers; Huawei said it spends around $11 billion in technology from US companies each year. Micron’s shares rose as much as 10% on Tuesday after the company said it had resumed some microchip shipments to Huawei. Meanwhile, the trade blacklist effect on Huawei may be lesser than expected as chip makers grow increasingly savvy about US trade policy.
]]>Exclusive: Huawei’s U.S. research arm builds separate identity – Reuters
What happened: Huawei’s US-based research branch Futurewei Technologies Inc has been working on separating its operations from its Chinese corporate parent since the US government put Huawei on a trade blacklist. Futurewei has banned Huawei employees from its office and moved Futurewei employees to a separate IT system, as well as forbidden them from using the Huawei name or logo in communications. Futurewei has filed more than 2,100 patents in areas such as telecommunications, the fifth-generation wireless network, and video and camera technologies.
Why it’s important: When the US Department of Commerce in May put Huawei and 71 of its affiliates on its “entity list” to bar them from obtaining US technology without approval, Futurewei was not included. However, its ongoing partnerships with US universities may still be at risk. The University of California, Berkeley allows staff and students to work only with Futurewei employees who are US citizens or permanent residents and who agree in writing not to share certain sensitive information with Huawei. Stanford also paused new funding agreements from Futurewei but has continued working with the company under “existing arrangements,” the university’s Dean of Research Kathryn Moler told Reuters.
]]>U.S. Considers Requiring 5G Equipment for Domestic Use Be Made Outside China – The Wall Street Journal
What happened: The Trump administration is seeking to require all equipment for next-generation 5G networks used in the US be designed and manufactured outside of China. The move would expand its ban on Chinese telecoms giant Huawei to all Chinese companies, as well as foreign companies that manufacture products in China. Officials are asking telecom equipment makers whether they can develop US-bound hardware including cellular base stations, routers, and switches as well as software outside of China. US officials said they are acting urgently because telecom operators are starting to build their 5G networks to power a “fourth industrial revolution,” which “will be built on the telecommunications networks being constructed today. It is critical that those networks be trusted,” a Trump administration official said.
Why it’s important: Without using telecoms equipment from Huawei and another Chinese firm ZTE, US carriers would have to choose from Sweden’s Ericsson and Finland’s Nokia to build their 5G networks. But the two European companies both rely on manufacturing products in China. Analysts cited by the WSJ said China represented 45% of Ericsson’s manufacturing-facility area and 10% of Nokia’s in 2018. Also, there is no major US manufacturer of cellular equipment.
]]>Apple weighs 15%-30% capacity shift out of China amid trade war – Nikkei Asian Review
What happened: Apple has asked its major suppliers to evaluate the cost implications of moving 15% to 30% of their production capacity from China to Southeast Asia as it prepares to restructure its supply chain. People cited by Nikkei said that the decision was made by Apple as a result of the ongoing trade tensions between the US and China, but things won’t change even if the disputes were settled. Apple has decided the risks of relying heavily on manufacturing in China are too great and even rising.
Why it’s important: It’s claimed that 90% of Apple’s products, including popular iPhones, iPads, and MacBooks, are assembled in China. Apple supplier Wistron has already been assembling cheaper iPhones in India since 2017 and key iPhone assemblers Foxconn said last week that 25% of the company’s production capacity is outside China. Analysts said moving iPhone production entirely outside of China is not impossible but would be difficult considering the cost and the difficulty of finding new component suppliers in a new country.
]]>Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has fired an employee who used a 3D artist’s work without permission in the company’s promotional campaign, according to a statement by the company on Wednesday.
The Verge reported on Tuesday that Xiaomi used three pieces of art from British 3D artist Peter Tarka in advertisements to promote its devices in Spain.
Tarka told The Verge that he created one of the pieces in May 2018 as part of his Installations collection. Xiaomi’s designer just erased some of the elements from the piece and replaced them with the company’s products, according to the report.
Tarka said he was “100% sure” Xiaomi had used his work and no one from Xiaomi ever reached out about licensing or commissioning his art.
Xiaomi said in the statement that it had dismissed the employee who is responsible with “immediate effect,” and it had reached out to Tarka to apologize.
The content has been removed from Xiaomi Spain’s website.
Xiaomi announced its global expansion plan in 2014 after its China sales slowed due to market saturation and competition from Chinese companies such as Oppo, Vivo, and Huawei. But intellectual property disputes are proving to be an ongoing hurdle in its global expansion plan.
In December 2014, India’s Delhi High Court issued a temporary order and blocked Xiaomi from importing, advertising, and selling smartphones that infringed on eight patents held by Ericsson.
In December 2015, the company was sued by American company Blue Spike LLC, which claimed that Xioami had infringed on its patents with devices such as its Mi 5 and Mi 5 Plus smartphones. The company had been planning to enter the US market prior to the lawsuit but delayed the move until late 2018, according to media reports.
Before it went public on the Hong Kong Exchange in June 2018, a report by research firm Counterpoint said Xiaomi’s business model could be easily replicated by bigger players such as Huawei or Samsung because of its lack of investment in its own intellectual property or research and development.
Xiaomi said in the Wednesday statement that it would further strengthen its internal approval processes to prevent the situation from happening again.
]]>Huawei promises consumers in the Philippines a full refund if Gmail and Facebook won’t work on its devices – South China Morning Post
What happened: Huawei, the world’s second-largest smartphone maker, said it would fully refund the cost of its smartphones and tablets to consumers in the Philippines if its devices are unable to support popular apps such as Gmail, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. The refund program will span two years from purchase, local media reported. Huawei declined to reveal if the program would be extended to other overseas markets.
Why it’s important: Huawei CEO Ren Zhengfei has confirmed on Monday that its overseas smartphone sales dropped 40% because of the United States’ persistent crackdown on the company. The company expects its international smartphone sales to fall 40% to 60% for the year. The refund program is an effort to save its smartphone business from declining. But, for the long-term Huawei will have to rely on its self-developed mobile operating system, an alternative to Android which is expected to roll out this fall.
]]>Three years ago, when an 18-year-old Chinese schoolgirl died as a result of a telephone scam, it sparked a heated discussion about personal information protection on the internet.
Xu Yuyu, a high school graduate from east China’s Shandong province, died of cardiac arrest on August 19, 2016, two days after she gave nearly RMB 10,000 (around $1,400) to someone posing as a local education official. The fraudster had told Xu to transfer the money, which her family had planned to use for her university tuition fees, so that she could access her financial aid.
Chinese media reported that Xu received the scam call within days of applying for financial aid at the local education bureau. In September 2016, an investigation (in Chinese) by state broadcaster China Central Television revealed that the scammer, named Chen Wenhui, had purchased online the personal information of tens of thousands of high school graduates, including their names, phone numbers, home addresses, and schools.
Xu’s case coincided with a whirl of other telephone scams that happened in the same month. Another incident, in which a lecturer at Beijing’s prestigious Tsinghua University was swindled out of more than RMB 17 million by fraudsters, led to a nationwide outcry over the country’s lack of personal information protection.
China has since accelerated legislation on the issue, with more than 200 laws, rules, and national standards being brought up by the country’s legislative bodies, government agencies, and cyberspace watchdogs. A dedicated law that emulates the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of the European Union, which will potentially bring tech companies in line with stringent personal data regulations, is also in the works.
May 25 marked the first anniversary of the GDPR, Europe’s strict data protection rules. In a statement, Andrus Ansip, vice-president of the European Commission’s Digital Single Market strategy, and Věra Jourová, Commissioner for Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality of the European Commission, said the game-changing rules had not only made Europe fit for the digital age, but also become a global reference point.
The GDPR allows people to request access to their personal data as stored by online service providers and restricts how those companies obtain and handle the information. When the law took effect one year ago, it was considered the world’s toughest framework to protect people’s online privacy.
Bjørn Stormorken, CFO of Sweden-based social networking platform Idka AB, told TechNode that the GDPR had created a whole new industry, in which law firms, auditors, and software consultancies offer compliance advice pertaining to the new rules.
The reason for the rapid growth of this “compliance” industry was not to promote privacy and protect fundamental rights, Stormorken notes. “Rather, it was: How can you, with minimum costs, become GDPR-compliant in your business?”
In the first 12 months of implementing the GDPR, the European Commission has fined more than 90 companies a total of more than 56 million euros (around $62.5 million).
The process of compliance may cost a lot in the beginning, but in the long run, it will become “business as usual” with a slight operational cost increase, said Stormorken. “The development of systems and technologies that support and uphold democratic values and respect of basic human rights have proven to be most resilient and valuable.”
“The principles of the GDPR are also radiating beyond Europe,” said Ansip and Jourová in the European Commission statement. “From Chile to Japan, from Brazil to South Korea, from Argentina to Kenya, we are seeing new privacy laws emerge.”
China, which has the most internet users in the world, does not yet have a privacy law, but the country’s top legislative body has put one on its agenda. Ahead of that, various legislative attempts were made to establish norms for personal information protection, including a national standard that is similar to GDPR.
“China can learn a lot from GDPR, including conditions of user consent, the formulation of an enterprise’s privacy policy, the establishment of the right to be forgotten, and punitive measures against violations,” Qi Aimin, a professor at Chongqing University’s School of Law, told TechNode.
China’s legislative process on the protection of personal information began in November 2016, when the Cybersecurity Law was adopted by the Standing Committee of China’s top legislature, the National People’s Congress (NPC). The law, which took effect on June 1, 2017, banned online service providers from collecting and selling users’ personal information without user consent.
The law establishes basic privacy requirements: It bans network operators from gathering data that is not relevant to their services, bans sharing identifiable data without consent, and requires companies to safeguard personal data.
The law does not spell out what companies need to do to comply with key requirements involving consent, anonymization, and securing personal information. But these questions are addressed in a document published by China’s National Information Security Standardization Technical Committee (TC260), the country’s main standards body.
In March 2018, the TC260 issued a national standard, the Personal Information Security Specification, which covers the collection, storage, use, sharing, transfer, and disclosure of personal information.
This specification is considered one of the most similar to the GDPR. While the Cybersecurity Law summarizes fundamental principles of personal information, the TC260 specification provides detailed guidance for compliance in information processing.
This standard was followed by strengthened regulations on businesses’ collection and use of personal information.
According to a report by the China Internet Network Information Center, an administrative agency responsible for internet affairs supervised by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), the number of internet users in China reached 829 million by the end of 2018, among which 817 million people used mobile phones to access the internet.
With nearly 99% of netizens surfing the internet via mobile phones, regulators in China have launched a campaign that focuses on the illegal collection and use of personal information by smartphone applications.
In January 2019, internet watchdogs began to inspect popular smartphone apps to determine whether they engage in illegal or excessive collection of user information.
Apps offering ordering food, navigation, and car-hailing services were the primary targets in the campaign, which will last through December 2019, according to a statement by the CAC, the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), and the State Administration for Market Regulation.
January also marked the establishment (in Chinese) of a special administration working group dedicated to apps by the TC260 and the Internet Society of China, a nongovernmental organization supported by the MIIT, to promote closer evaluation of illegal collection and use of personal data by mobile apps.
In order to develop online privacy protection norms for mobile apps, the CAC released a new set of draft privacy guidelines for app operators on May 5. They outline seven situations that constitute the illegal collection and use of personal data, including the collection and use of users’ personal information or the provision of personal information to third parties without the consent of the user.
In the latest move, on May 28, the CAC introduced a new data security regulation, stating that customized content using recommendation algorithms driven by personal information, including news feeds and advertising, should be explicitly labeled.
According to Qi, there are currently over 200 Chinese laws, rules, and related normative documents covering the protection of personal information, both in civil and criminal aspects. However, he believes that they are still inadequate to protecting the personal information of netizens.
The Personal Information Security Specification only provides guidelines for enterprises when they are dealing with personal information; it cannot be invoked in court, nor by administrative agencies to levy administrative punishments, said Fang Chaoqiang, a lawyer at Beijing Yingke Law Firm.
Fang said that national standards in China usually help law-enforcing departments implement higher-level laws and rules. “When it comes to administrative penalties and civil lawsuit procedures, national standards can provide better criteria,” he said.
In a commentary published last year, Samm Sacks, a cybersecurity policy and China digital economy fellow at the New America think tank, opined that national standards in China are better understood as a kind of policy guideline or regulation, and that government authorities are likely to refer to the specification when conducting various reviews and approvals.
Like the GDPR, China’s Personal Information Security Specification includes guidance on user consent, data protection, data access, the obligation of disclosure, and the evaluation of data security, but overall it is more permissive. For instance, the GDPR has provided six lawful bases that allow data controllers to process personal data, such as user consent, legal obligation, and vital interests, but the specification only lists four circumstances where data controllers are not allowed to process personal data.
Fang said the specification would also act as a guideline for legislators making related laws. Thus, the upcoming personal information protection law will probably contain most of the personal data protection elements featured in the GDPR, though it might show more tolerance.
As part of European Union law, the GDPR has created several rights for EU citizens to protect their privacy, including rights to be forgotten, to object to the use of their personal data, and to access their data.
The current Personal Information Security Specification does not give Chinese citizens any right to protect their privacy because it is not a law. But legal experts expect that a dedicated personal information law may achieve the goal.
“Without a unified personal information protection law, the right to personal information cannot be established in the civil law system,” said Qi, adding that China’s protection of personal information should be promoted.
Qi himself has advocated for legal protections of personal information in China. In 2005, he drafted an advisory version of the Personal Protection Law (in Chinese).
“I have been pushing the legislation of personal information protection law for a long time, and it was successfully brought into the legislative plan of the current term of the NPC,” said Qi. “We will see the Personal Information Protection Law be introduced and implemented in the next five years.”
Qi also says that China’s legislators should not “copy” the GDPR because China has a large number of internet users and a booming e-commerce economy.
“China’s legislation on personal information protection should balance the interests of individuals, enterprises, and governments, but this should be based on the establishment of citizens’ privacy rights,” he said.
Fang hopes that the forthcoming Personal Information Protection Law will be as transparent as EU’s GDPR.
“It’s a fact that Chinese people are not as sensitive as people in Western countries when it comes to personal information and privacy. As a result, our country’s legislative process on personal information protection started well later than those in Western countries,” said Fang.
“Laws are dynamic. In the future, China’s laws and rules on personal information protection are very likely to become as unified and clear as the GDPR,” he added.
]]>U.S. chipmakers quietly lobby to ease Huawei ban – Reuters
What happened: American chipmakers Qualcomm and Intel are lobbying the US government to ease a ban on selling components to Chinese smartphone and telecommunications equipment maker Huawei. The chipmakers argue that Huawei products such as smartphones and computer servers are unlikely to pose the same security concerns as its equipment for the new fifth-generation networks, known as 5G. One person familiar with the issue quoted by Reuters said that the lobby was not about helping Huawei but preventing harm to American companies.
Why it’s important: Huawei spent $70 billion buying components in 2018, of which $11 billion went to US chip companies including Qualcomm, Intel, and Micron. US-based chipmaker Broadcom, a major supplier of wireless communication chips for smartphones and other devices made by Huawei has forecasted a decline in its second-quarter revenues and lowered its expectations for the rest of the year. Micron, which generated 13% of its revenue from Huawei in the six months ending late February, also said the ban brings uncertainty to the semiconductor industry.
]]>Ren Zhengfei, founder and CEO of Chinese telecommunications equipment giant Huawei, said on Monday he expected the US trade blacklist will reduce production output by $30 billion over the next two years.
“We never expected that the United States would be so determined to attack us and we were unaware that the attack would be so broad,” (our translation) Ren said in a panel discussion with two Americans at the company’s Shenzhen headquarters. “But we don’t think the efforts will thwart our progress.”
The panel discussion, dubbed “A Coffee with Ren,” featured the Huawei CEO speaking about topics including network security, the US-China relationship, and global technology trends. The discussion was jointly held by American economist George Gilder and Nicholas Negroponte, the co-founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab.
Ren said in the discussion that there are still many universities working with Huawei, even in the US. “I want to invite more US politicians to visit our company. If they find out that we are being innovative, they may think we can be good friends, and we can be trusted.”
The company will invest $100 billion in research and development, as well as the reconstruction of its network structure, to make it more secure and more credible, Ren said during the discussion.
The panel offered little counterpoint to the Huawei founder’s views on the blacklisting or broader efforts from the US government to spread the ban to other countries.
Negroponte said the US President Donald Trump promised to reconsider the Huawei issue if the trade negotiation could agree on a deal. “This is obviously not about national security; it’s about something else,” he said.
The Trump administration has been campaigning for countries to ban Huawei equipment from their next-generation wireless networks, accusing the company of planting “backdoors” in their equipment to spy on other countries networks.
Ren said Huawei equipment is absolutely “backdoor-free,” and the company is willing to sign “no-backdoor” agreements with every country in the world.
“Huawei has connectivity to more than 3 billion people. Over the last 30 years, Huawei has proved that our networks are secure and have not broken,” said Ren.
After being placed on a trade blacklist by the Trump administration last month, Huawei is preparing for a drop in international smartphone shipments by 40% to 60%, according to a Bloomberg report on Monday.
Ren confirmed Huawei’s overseas smartphone sales had dropped 40%, but did not specify a time period.
Huawei revenue grew 19.5% year-on-year to RMB 721.2 billion (around $107.3 billion) in 2018, according to the company’s annual report published in March. Ren forecasted the company’s revenues in 2019 and 2020 would remain around $100 billion.
“By 2021, we will see new life, but we have a lot of changes to make, and it will take time,” he said.
]]>China’s largest telecommunications network operator announced Sunday it had awarded its first round of 5G network equipment contracts worth around $2 billion to four suppliers from different countries, including European company Ericsson and Nokia.
Chinese telecom equipment giant Huawei was awarded the bulk of the tender. It will provide 588 units of Mobility Management Entity (MME) and System Architecture Evolution (SAE) telecom equipment, the core network product of the next generation of wireless network, accounting for 51% of the total tender.
Swedish company Ericsson and Finnish company Nokia are the second- and third-largest 5G equipment providers for China Mobile. Ericsson will provide 384 units of MME/SAE equipment, and Nokia will offer 116 units, followed by Chinese company ZTE with 43 units.
China Mobile, also the world’s largest telecom operator by mobile subscribers, is starting to build its 5G network after acquiring on June 6 a 5G commercial use license from the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Ericsson and Nokia are expected to gain less 5G market share than they held during the 4G roll out because China’s three major state-owned telecom companies—China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom—may have to support Huawei following a global backlash led by the US government.
An analyst quoted by China Daily, a state-run English-language newspaper, said the significant share of Ericsson and Nokia in China Mobile’s 5G equipment tender highlights that China delivers its promises of sticking to international cooperation.
A commentary (in Chinese) published Monday by Beijing Youth Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Youth League committee in Beijing, said the tender had proven the Chinese government and Chinese telecom operators weren’t defensive about Ericsson and Nokia just because they were foreign companies. “Instead, the Chinese market has given them opportunities to participate in the country’s 5G network rollout fairly,” the commentary said.
Huawei said in a statement that the company’s 5G equipment had reached the standard of commercial use, and the company would “spare no effort” to back Chinese telecom operators in their 5G rollouts.
]]>Huawei files to trademark mobile OS around the world after U.S. ban – Reuters
What happened: Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei is aiming to trademark its self-developed Hongmeng mobile operating system (OS), an alternative to Google’s Android OS, in at least nine countries and in Europe, according to data from the U.N. World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). The Shenzhen-based company has filed for a Hongmeng trademark in Cambodia, Canada, South Korea, and New Zealand, the data showed. The company also applied to trademark the OS at the European Union Intellectual Property Office on May 14, just around when it was blacklisted by the United States.
Why it’s important: Huawei has sped up Hongmeng’s roll out after it was locked out of future Android updates last month. The company had to revise a goal to become the biggest smartphone vendor by the end of the year because of the US blacklist. The promised OS is expected to be available on Huawei phones in the fall, but the company still faces challenges such as how to provide alternatives to Google services and build an app ecosystem to replace those that rely on Google. It is also reported that Huawei has shipped one million smartphones with the new OS onboard for testing.
]]>China launches Nasdaq-style tech board in Shanghai, expects challenges -Reuters
What happened: China officially launched its Nasdaq-style high-tech board, formally known as the STAR Market, on Thursday, a major step toward financial reform in the country. Yi Huiman, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s top securities regulator, presided over the launch ceremony at a financial forum in Shanghai. Chinese vice premier Liu He participated in the launch ceremony to emphasize the importance of the STAR Market. Setting up the new tech board “is a brand new exploration, and there could be various difficulties and challenges,” Yi said.
Why it’s important: The new board was announced in last November by Chinese president Xi Jinping to attract Chinese high-tech companies to raise funds on domestic capital markets. Regulators have significantly lowered the listing threshold for the new board, allowing pre-profit firms to list. So far, 120 companies have applied to list on the board, among which six companies have been approved to go public on the new board and are waiting for final review by the CSRC.
]]>Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei has had to recalibrate its goal of becoming the biggest smartphone vendor by the end of the year after the United States put the company in a trade blacklist.
Shao Yang, vice president of Huawei Consumer Business Group Strategy Marketing, said at the opening of CES Asia in Shanghai on Tuesday that Huawei had been expected to surpass South Korean smartphone maker Samsung in smartphone shipments by the fourth quarter of 2019, but the company had to revise the plan because of the US ban.
“It will surely take more time than planned to achieve the goal, but Huawei’s determination to become the number one [smartphone vendor] won’t change,” said Shao.
The Shenzhen-based firm overtook Apple to become the world’s second-largest smartphone vendor by market share at the end of the second quarter of 2018. Yu Chendong, the CEO of Huawei’s consumer division, said in a press conference in April that the company was likely to become the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer this year.
The company is now betting the future of its consumer business on smart home, a centralized control system to control appliances and devices remotely from any internet-connected device. The sector is expected to flourish, shored up by deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) technology and the next-generation wireless network known as 5G.
Shao said Huawei believes the smartphone could potentially become an “entrance” to all smart home applications that remotely control the system. People usually use domestic appliances from different brands, which makes it difficult to connect them to a smart home system. “If there is not a ‘common language’ that connects all these devices, every one of them is isolated, speaking their own dialect,” (our translation) Shao said during the conference.
Huawei released HiLink, a smart home app that connects all domestic appliances on user smartphones, in 2015, he said.
The company, however, didn’t provide details about how it would invest in the sector or enhance the development of smart home. Shao said Huawei has worked with more than 100 domestic appliance brands in China to make their products compatible with each other as of now.
Addressing an audience on Thursday at the CES Asia, Zhou Jingcai, senior director of Huawei Cloud’s strategy and business development division, said Huawei has strong technical advantages in areas such as artificial intelligence and 5G.
“Artificial intelligence and 5G will bring numerous benefits to the development of smart home by providing high-speed connection and cloud-based computing,” he said.
Shao said the number of users on Huawei consumer devices, including smartphones, laptops, and tablets, exceeded 500 million.
Revenue from Huawei’s consumer business, which includes smartphones, laptops, and wearables, reached RMB 348.9 billion (around $50.4 billion) last year, accounting for 48.4% of the company’s total revenue.
]]>After Google blocked Huawei from using part of its mobile operating system, Android, following an order by the US government, the Chinese smartphone maker has plans to develop its own mobile operating system. While not impossible, this goal could prove difficult to achieve.
Coding a mobile operating system is a solvable problem. But Huawei faces numerous challenges, including how to provide alternatives to Google services, background processes on the Android operating system that help to integrate popular apps developed by Google, and an app ecosystem. An industry insider told TechNode that Huawei can build an Android ecosystem without any Google services, but it would need cooperation from other app developers.
“Whatever you [create] as an alternative to the standard Google Android, it has to be a joint effort,” said Tiago Alves, vice president of Asia Pacific at Aptoide.
Aptoide, a Portugal-based company that offers an alternative to the Google Play app store, has had an ongoing dispute with Google since the maker of Android flagged the rival app market as being “harmful.” The move caused Aptoide to be hidden on Android phones by Google Play Protect, Google’s built-in malware protection software.
Alves said it would be difficult for a single entity to create an alternative to Android, and the process should be a “joint effort,” where Android services are contributed by different providers.
Google announced last month that it would block Huawei from some updates to the Android operating system. Future versions of Huawei smartphones that run on Android will lose access to popular apps such as YouTube and Gmail developed by Google.
The announcement came as Google attempted to comply with a trade blacklist that bans Huawei from doing business with US companies without government approval.
On May 14, Huawei was granted the trademark, “Hongmeng,” for its operating system by China’s trademark office. The company has also registered the name “Ark” for the operating system in Europe.
For Huawei, the real challenge is not building the operating system from scratch, but providing services and an app ecosystem to replace those that rely on Google. The company’s consumer business head Richard Yu has promised that the operating system, which will reportedly be compatible with the Android ecosystem of apps, will be ready for use in China by fall this year, and international markets early next year.
Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software at Shanghai-based consultancy Intralink, told TechNode that smartphones with Huawei’s operating system could be competitive in China, but few in Western Europe or North America would buy them because they would lack popular services including Gmail and Youtube.
Alves agreed that at the moment no consumers in Europe would want a phone without Google services. Nonetheless, he said it would be possible to build an Android ecosystem without Google, though it would take a long time.
Alves said that Google provides 60 different services on its Android operating system, including essential mobile phone services such as apps for text messages and contacts, as well as popular apps developed by Google.
“You would have to replace each one of these services with good alternatives,” he said.
Alves believes that Aptoide could provide an alternative to Google Play, and other third-party apps could also provide substitutes to Google services such as Google Maps and Google Play Music.
Aptoide is rumored to be in talks with Huawei to replace the Google Play Store on the Chinese company’s future smartphones, but Alves said that there was no official deal, though the company has already had many discussions with Huawei.
“As of now, Aptoide does not have any commercial agreement with Huawei. We have always shared a great relationship and our goal is not to directly replace Google Play Store on their devices, although we’re open to helping find the best solution for Huawei and its users going forward,” the company said on its official Twitter account.
If the Huawei operating system can offer all 60 of these Google services—something that will take a while to develop—then users will buy a phone that uses the system, said Alves.
But even if Huawei can create such apps, the company will still have to convince users to use those alternatives to Google apps, said Will Wong, research manager at the International Data Corporation, a market research firm.
“Google apps are kind of indispensable to many users outside China. It will heavily affect their life if they can’t use Gmail and YouTube,” said Wong.
“It’s possible to replace those apps, but it’s challenging to change user habits,” he said.
A Huawei spokesman said the company had no comment on the issue at the moment. A Google spokesperson declined to comment when contacted by TechNode.
Alves said that Google’s move to block Huawei should be a “wake-up call,” speaking to the US company’s market power—what happened to Huawei could happen to other app developers and original equipment manufacturers that rely on Android.
“If something like this repeats, they will have a big problem. Because there is no alternative ecosystem to Google,” said Alves.
Aptoide has learned this lesson the hard way: Google Play flagged Aptoide as a harmful app since last summer and hid it in users’ Android devices, decreasing Aptoide’s user number by 20%, said the company.
Aptoide launched last week a campaign website to call on Google to “Play Fair,” accusing the search engine and smartphone operating system giant of squeezing consumer choice by “preventing users from freely choosing their preferred app store.”
Alves said Huawei and Aptoide were not the only companies threatened: other smartphone makers including Oppo, Vivo, Samsung, and Xiaomi should also learn from the experience. “I think it’s a wake-up call for them, [proving] that it’s a bad thing to be in the hands of one single entity.”
“We really believe that the movement to create a solid alternative to the Google Play Services experience has to start. But, again, as I mentioned, it’s going to take a while to develop,” Alves said.
]]>Delay in Huawei Ban Is Sought by White House Budget Office – The New York Times
What happened: Russell Vought, the acting director of the Office of Management and Budget, has asked in a letter to the US Vice President Mike Pence and several members of Congress to delay a measure that bars US government agencies from contracting with Chinese telecommunications provider Huawei for two years. Vought said the measure would cause too much burden for American companies if it was enacted within one year as planned. He also seeks to delay a rule that prohibits federal grant and loan recipients from using Huawei equipment.
Why it’s important: The measure targeting Huawei was included in the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). Huawei on March 6 filed a lawsuit in the US, arguing the NDAA was unconstitutional because it singled out Huawei. The Chinese firm filed a motion last month to accelerate the process of the lawsuit. The American tech sector has also complained that it was unrealistic to entirely cut business with Huawei because the telecommunications supply chain is intertwined with equipment from companies in multiple nations.
]]>Exclusive: Some big tech firms cut employees’ access to Huawei, muddying 5G rollout – Reuters
What happened: Tech companies worldwide including US chipmakers Intel and Qualcomm, mobile research firm InterDigital Wireless Inc., and South Korean carrier LG Uplus have restricted employees from informal conversations with Chinese telecom giant Huawei in response to the recent US blacklisting of the Chinese firm. These companies have told their employees to stop talking about technology and technical standards with counterparts at Huawei. Intel, Qualcomm, and InterDigital have issued internal guidance to employees to ensure they comply with the US ban on Huawei.
Why it’s important: Though the US Department of Commerce has barred American companies from doing business with Huawei without approval, it has not banned their contact with Huawei. The department also authorized US companies to interact with Huawei in standards bodies through August “as necessary for the development of 5G standards.” The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), a New York-based professional association, lifted a ban that blocked Huawei employees from participating in peer reviews for its research papers last Monday after a storm of protest from China’s academia.
]]>China Summons Tech Giants to Warn Against Cooperating With Trump Ban – The New York Times
What happened: The Chinese government summoned several global technology companies including US software giant Microsoft, South Korean smartphone maker Samsung, and US computer maker Dell, for talks last week, warning that complying with a US ban on selling American technology to Chinese firms may face further complications for all sector participants. British chip designer ARM was also called in by Chinese official in the meetings; the company halted supplies to Huawei last month. The talks followed the US ban last month on selling technology and components to Chinese telecom giant Huawei. Chinese officials did not mention Huawei but asked these foreign companies not to make hasty or ill-considered moves before the situation was fully understood.
Why it’s important: China has begun fighting back at the US for banning Huawei. The meeting came after China’s announcement that it was putting together an “unreliable entities list” of foreign companies and people that “blockade and stop supplying Chinese companies for non-commercial reasons.” Using American tech companies as a bargaining chip in diplomatic deals is a common tactic for China, but experts cited in the story said such a play is less likely to be effective because it forces the companies to choose between complying with pressure from Beijing and violating US law.
]]>Crucial step forward taken for 5G with commercial licenses – China Daily
What happened: The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) of China has granted licenses for the next-generation wireless network to the country’s major three telecom carriers—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—as well as the state-owned China Broadcasting Network Corp. The MIIT minister Miao Wei said China welcomes foreign companies to actively participate in the construction of the country’s 5G market and share benefits generated by technological progress. Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei said in a statement on Thursday that the company is ready to help China accelerate the commercial use of 5G.
Why it’s important: China planned to commercialize the 5G in 2020, while the latest move makes a statement that China’s 5G won’t be delayed because of the US trade ban on Huawei. It will also push the three major telecom carriers to accelerate their 5G network rollout plans. As of now, South Korea, the US, Australia, and the UK have launched their commercial 5G services. But Huawei equipment is either totally banned or restricted from the 5G rollouts in all of these markets except South Korea. Huawei said in the statement that it had so far obtained 46 5G commercial contracts in 30 countries.
]]>The Shanghai Stock Exchange has approved its first three companies to go public on the bourse’s new Nasdaq-style high-tech board, according to a statement published Wednesday by the exchange.
Shenzhen Chipscreen Biosciences Co., Suzhou TZTEK Technology Co., and Anji Microelectronics Technology (Shanghai) Co. have been approved, said the exchange. The three companies are respectively biotech, semiconductor, and artificial intelligence companies, and are expected to list on the Science and Technology Innovation Board at the beginning of July.
After receiving the final approval document signed by the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the three companies will need to file applications to register with the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the country’s securities watchdog. The CSRC will decide whether the registrations will be accepted within 20 days, according to listing rules (in Chinese) published by the regulator.
The new board is a testing ground for China’s experiment with a registration-based IPO system to attract Chinese technology companies looking to raise funds on domestic exchanges.
Before the new tech board was proposed, strict listing criteria forced China’s biggest tech firms, including Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, and JD, to list on exchanges overseas. Tencent is listed in Hong Kong while Baidu, Alibaba, and JD are registered in New York.
The CSRC has said the new board will focus on companies in high-tech and strategic emerging sectors such as new-generation information technology, advanced equipment, new materials and energy, and biomedicine, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
The priority sectors echo the 10 advanced industries highlighted by Made in China 2025, a government-led industrial program at the center of the contentious US-China trade dispute. The US has said the program aims to surpass western technological prowess in advanced industries by using subsidies and pursuing intellectual property acquisition.
]]>Samsung Cuts Jobs at Its Last Smartphone Plant in China – Caixin
What happened: Samsung, the biggest smartphone maker in the world, is laying off employees at its last smartphone manufacturing plant in China. The South Korean smartphone maker told employees at its plant in Huizhou in southern Guangdong Province to voluntarily sign up for a layoff compensation plan by June 14. The plant is Samsung’s last manufacturing facility in China after its plant in the northern port city of Tianjin shut down in December 2018. The Huizhou plant manufactured 62.6 million smartphones in 2017, accounting for 17% of Samsung’s global production that year.
Why it’s important: Samsung faces fierce competition and rising costs in China. The company sold 3.4 million smartphones in China in 2018, accounting for only 0.8% of the country’s total smartphone sales, according to market research firm Strategy Analytics. The company had 20% of China’s smartphone market in 2013. Production costs in China are also on the rise. The average monthly wage in Huizhou surged to RMB 5,690 (around $822) in 2018 from RMB 1,894 in 2008. The company is relocating its smartphone manufacturing lines to Vietnam, which now comprises 40% of its global smartphone production.
]]>Nokia says it has moved ahead of Huawei in 5G orders – Reuters
What happened: Finnish telecommunications company Nokia said it has secured 42 commercial orders for the next-generation of wireless networks, surpassing its Chinese rival Huawei. Customers are increasingly looking to Nokia to equip their 5G core networks, either to have dual sourcing for the most sensitive parts of their networks or to replace existing providers, said Nokia director Federico Guillen. Huawei has secured 40 5G contracts around the world by the end of March, according to the company while Swedish 5G competitor Ericsson has publicly announced 19 contracts, of which eight are live.
Why it’s important: Nokia and Ericsson are expected to benefit from a wounded Huawei, which faces trouble on a global scale. The United States and Australia have banned Huawei equipment from their 5G network rollouts, while New Zealand and the UK have limited Huawei’s participation in major 5G networks. That leaves the two European companies a huge market gap to fill. However, they may expect less 5G market share in China than what they had during the country’s 4G rollout. In an initial bid for 5G equipment by China’s largest carrier China Mobile, Ericsson was only allocated 5% of the tender and Nokia gained none; the bulk of the bid went to Huawei and its domestic rival ZTE.
]]>The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) said on Monday that it had raised a ban on Huawei employees that blocks them from reviewing submissions to its journals, according to Reuters.
The New York-based professional association said last week that it feared “severe legal implications” for using Huawei scientists as reviewers in vetting technical papers and banned employees of the Chinese telecommunications equipment giant from participating in peer reviews for its research papers.
The IEEE ban came after the US Department of Commerce added Huawei and its affiliates to a trade blacklist, requiring a license for certain companies to buy US components and technology.
IEEE China said in a statement on Monday on its website that the initial restriction was to protect volunteers and members from legal risk.
Following the IEEE ban, China Computer Federation, a Beijing-based computer professional association announced that it would suspend ties with the IEEE and would also delete some IEEE journals from its list.
As part of the protest, 10 Chinese academic societies, including the Chinese Institute of Electronics, the China Institute of Communications, and the Chinese Association for Artificial Intelligence, issued a statement (in Chinese) to condemn IEEE’s decision.
“The restriction of scientists’ participation in academic exchanges violates the common value of science and academic freedom, it has also trampled on the normal order of academic exchanges and science development,” (our translation) the associations said in the statement.
IEEE said it had received the clarification it requested from the US Department of Commerce and the risk had been addressed. Based on the new information, employees of Huawei and its affiliates are allowed to participate as peer reviewers and editors in the association’s publication process, said the statement by IEEE China.
“All IEEE members, regardless of employer, can continue to participate in all of the activities of the IEEE,” IEEE China said in the statement.
]]>Huawei reassesses goal to be world’s bestselling smartphone vendor after US blacklist – South China Morning Post
What happened: A Huawei executive said the company is now closely assessing the effect of a US government trade blacklist. Zhao Ming, president of Honor, a Huawei smartphone brand, said that it was too early to say when the company would achieve the goal of overtaking Samsung and becoming the world’s largest smartphone vendor. Huawei’s CEO of consumer business Richard Yu said in January that the company would achieve that goal by 2020 at the latest. Huawei’s smartphone manufacturer, Taiwan-based Foxconn, has stopped several production lines for Huawei phones in recent days as the company reduced orders for new phones, according to people familiar with the matter.
Why it’s important: Huawei’s share of global smartphone shipments in the first quarter reached 15.7%, up from 10.5% in the same period last year, according to a report by research firm Gartner. The company is currently the second-largest smartphone vendor by shipments, while South Korean electronics giant Samsung is the largest with 19.2% of the market in Q1, declining slightly from 20.5% seen in the same period last year. Huawei is closing the gap with Samsung, but the escalating fallout from the US ban, especially the unavailability of Google apps and services, is taking its toll.
]]>Huawei launches 5G lab in South Korea, but keeps event low-key after U.S. ban – Reuters
What happened: Chinese telecoms equipment maker Huawei launched an open lab for the next-generation 5G wireless network in South Korea on Thursday. The company said it would invest about $5 million in the lab and build a 5G ecosystem through cooperation with local technology and telecom companies. Huawei had initially considered inviting the press to the launch in South Korea, but after the recent blacklisting by the United States, it decided to keep the event low-key and kept the press out. The lab is Huawei’s first open 5G services development center in the world that will allow other companies to test their platforms, according to the company.
Why it’s important: South Korea’s SK Telecom launched the world’s first nationwide 5G services in April, but the US is urging the country to ban Huawei products. South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said last week that it was in talks with the US about national security concerns over the use of Huawei’s equipment. Currently, Huawei provides 5G gears for a small South Korean carrier LG Uplus, who promised to step up security checks on Huawei equipment. The country’s two biggest carriers, SK Telecom and KT, do not use Huawei gear; SK Telecom reportedly granted contracts to Samsung, Nokia, and Ericsson to supply its 5G equipment.
]]>MediaTek aims to take on Qualcomm with new 5G chip – Reuters
What happened: Taiwan-based chipmaker MediaTek on Wednesday released a new chip that contains the company’s 5G modem at the Computex trade show in Taiwan. By building in a high-powered processor and artificial intelligence, the new 5G chip is designed for high-end smartphones, challenging Qualcomm’s market dominance. Market leader Qualcomm released its second-generation 5G chip for smartphones in February. Huawei and Samsung are also developing 5G chips to supply their own phones. Intel said it would exit the 5G modem business after Apple reached a deal with Qualcomm.
Why it’s important: The new 5G chip makes MediaTek one of the few companies in the world that have the ability to supply chips that connect phones to the next generation of wireless networks. But the MediaTek chip can only handle one of the two variants of 5G networks, known as the sub-6 variants. That means it will not work on some 5G networks from carriers such as Verizon and AT&T from the US that use another variant, the millimeter wave. The company said such design would help keep the chip’s costs down and it could be used on networks of major carriers such as T-Mobile in the US and many Chinese networks.
]]>Chinese telecoms equipment maker Huawei said on Wednesday it has filed a motion requesting the court to rule in its favor in reference to a lawsuit filed in March.
The company said that the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which was signed by President Donald Trump on Aug. 13, 2018, singled out Huawei without an opportunity for rebuttal or defense. The legislation banned US government agencies from buying telecommunications equipment from Huawei or its rival ZTE.
“The ban is a quintessential bill of attainder and a violation of due process,” said Song Liuping, the chief legal officer at Huawei, in a commentary published in the Wall Street Journal on Monday. “The law provides Huawei with no opportunity to rebut the accusations, to present evidence in its defense, or to avail itself of other procedures that impartial adjudicators provide to ensure a fair search for the truth.”
The Wednesday motion that Huawei filed seeks a summary judgment asking the court to declare the law unconstitutional, according to Song.
Huawei filed a lawsuit on March 6 in Plano, Texas, where Huawei’s American headquarters are located, challenging the constitutionality of the ban. The Eastern District of Texas court has scheduled a hearing for September 19 to consider Huawei’s claims.
Glen Nager, Huawei’s lead counsel for the case, said in the statement that the case was purely “a matter of law” as there are no facts at issue, justifying the motion for a summary judgment to speed up the process.
“The US Congress has repeatedly failed to produce any evidence to support its restrictions on Huawei products. We are compelled to take this legal action as a proper and last resort,” said Guo Ping, Huawei’s rotating chairman, in a statement announcing the filing.
The US ban on Huawei escalated when Trump signed an executive order banning telecom equipment and services from foreign companies that could pose a threat to national security on May 15, and the Commerce Department placed Huawei on an “Entity List” that requires the company to gain a US government license to by American components and technology.
“This sets a dangerous precedent. Today it’s telecoms and Huawei. Tomorrow it could be your industry, your company, your consumers,” said Song in a statement, addressing the addition of Huawei to the Entity List.
“The judicial system is the last line of defense for justice. Huawei has confidence in the independence and integrity of the U.S. judicial system. We hope that mistakes in the NDAA can be corrected by the court,” Song added.
]]>Exclusive: Huawei reviewing FedEx relationship, says packages ‘diverted’ – Reuters
What happened: Chinese telecoms equipment maker Huawei said on Friday that US package delivery company FedEx Corp diverted two parcels destined for a Huawei address in Asia to the United States and attempted to do the same thing to two others without a detailed explanation. Huawei said the two packages, which were sent from Japan and addressed to Huawei in China, were diverted to the US, and FedEx also attempted to divert two more packages sent from Vietnam to Huawei offices elsewhere in Asia. Huawei said the four packages only contained documents and “no technology.” A spokesman of Huawei said the company would have to review its relationship with FedEx.
Why it’s important: After Google pulled Huawei’s Android license and UK-based chipmaker ARM cut ties with it, the US sanction against the Chinese company seems to have applied to a distinctly separate industry: logistics. It was rumored last week that German courier group DHL had suspended services for Huawei products, which DHL has denied (in Chinese). As a US company, FedEx may have to comply with the Trump Administration’s ban on Huawei by suspending its business ties, but diverting its packages to a third party raises privacy concerns, a key component of US allegations against Huawei.
]]>The team behind Huawei’s self-developed OS, “Hongmeng,” is looking beyond just making an Android substitute.
Huawei’s OS Kernel Lab for the development of its proprietary OS began recruiting in 2016 for its branches in China, the US, Canada, and Germany. It was looking to hire full-time engineers, system architects, researchers, and interns to develop a “next-generation OS” integrating up-and-coming technologies including 5G, augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), autonomous vehicles (AV) and more, according to job listings posted by Huawei’s software institute on its official WeChat subscription account.
The lab is based in six locations including Beijing, Hangzhou, and Shanghai, and with universities including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Stanford, and Yale, according to the website and job postings. MIT and Stanford have recently suspended ties with the troubled telecom giant, and Yale could not immediately be reached for comment.
“We are committed to researching future OS kernel,” an English-language 2018 job listing for the lab read. The team was responsible for developing an OS for next-generation technologies, “leading the direction of the OS industry development,” the post said.
Successful applicants will receive “unlimited and unprecedented high salaries,” (our translation) promises the latest recruitment post on WeChat dated March 25.
TechNode visited the Institute of Parallel and Distributed Systems (IPADS) lab on the Shanghai Jiao Tong University campus on May 21 and confirmed that its director is Chen Haibo, who is also the project director at Huawei’s OS Kernel Lab.
Chen joined Huawei’s OS Kernel Lab in 2017, after which its online profile became much more visible. For example, it was listed as the first contributor to Linux’s open source community, meaning the lab submitted the most Linux kernel patches among Chinese contributors.
Chen did not respond to multiple attempts from TechNode for comment.
Chen is a renowned operating system expert, chairing a top OS conference, Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP) in 2017 and is a recipient of the Young Computer Scientist award from the Chinese arm of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), according to the IPADS lab website.
Hongmeng, which translates into genesis, has been a lively topic among Chinese netizens since a student from Chen’s lab revealed it as the name of Huawei’s self-developed OS on a Weibo post in May, which has since been deleted, featuring a photo taken two years ago of a slide from a school sharing session.
China’s trademark office’s public records confirm that Huawei applied for the trademark on the Hongmeng name in April 2018 and was granted the mark in May.
“Why do you think it’s a substitute? It could be a completely new system developed by China!” Xia Yubin, an assistant professor and colleague of Chen, said to TechNode at the lab.
Xia confirmed details in the media about the OS were inaccurate, including that the foundation of the OS is based primarily on Android and that Hongmeng’s security has already been deployed in Huawei smartphones.
The assertions, detailed in the leaked photo, referred instead to “other projects conducted by our school,” Xia said.
Google’s announcement that it would partially cut off Huawei devices from its Android operating system on May 20 followed the news of the Huawei’s OS.
“The Huawei OS is likely to hit the market as soon as this fall, and no later than spring next year,” Huawei’s mobile chief, Richard Yu responded in a private group chat that was soon widespread on the internet. Caixin confirmed the statement citing Fang Xingdong, a Chinese web entrepreneur and founder of research institute ChinaLabs, who was in the same group chat.
Ren Zhengfei, Huawei’s CEO, talked about the OS during a Chinese media conference on Tuesday, saying that US sanctions won’t affect the company’s operating system. “In the most advanced technology area, at least in 5G, it won’t be affected. And no one can catch up with us in two or three years” (our translation).
Additional reporting by Wei Sheng. Contributions from Tony Xu.
]]>Huawei said on Sunday that the company’s current products and services would not be affected by restrictions on participating in alliances with several global standard setters.
“Huawei will continue actively participating in related standard and industrial organizations and build a benign, fair, open, and sustainable industrial ecosystem,” said the company in a statement (in Chinese).
The Wi-Fi Alliance, which sets the standards for wireless technology whose members include Apple, Qualcomm, Broadcom, and Intel, said last week that it had “temporarily restricted” Huawei’s participation in activities in compliance with the US government’s blacklisting , according to Nikkei Asian Review. The US government placed Huawei on a trade blacklist that bans the transfer of US technology to the Chinese company without a license on the grounds of national security.
Huawei voluntarily withdrew its membership on May 17 from JEDCE, a semiconductor standards setter whose participants include global chipmakers Qualcomm, Xilinx, and Samsung Semiconductor.
Huawei has also been expelled from the member list of the SD Association, a US-based organization that sets memory card standards. The group told Nikkei Asian Review that the decision was made to “comply with US Department of Commerce orders.”
“The reason why standard organizations, open-source communities, and industrial associations work is that all of their activities follow the principles of transparency, openness, fairness, and non-discrimination,” Huawei said in the statement.
The US export ban has effectively backed Huawei into a corner where US companies or even companies from third-party countries that use US technologies are not allowed to do business with the Shenzhen-based telecom giant without permission.
Google announced last week that it had blocked Huawei from accessing popular services, including the Google Play Store, Gmail, and YouTube apps on the company’s future Android phones. ARM, a UK-based chip designer, also cut off ties with Huawei to comply with the US ban.
Huawei didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment when contacted by TechNode.
Speaking at the Emerge by TechNode conference on Shanghai on Thursday, Asia tech reporter Paul Mozur of The New York Times called the US ban a “death star that can destroy any company it is pointed at.” He added that no electronics company could really survive being fully cut off from US technologies.
The two largest economies are inextricably intertwined. Huawei is critically important for China and the rest of the world because the company makes base stations, routers, and other back-end hardware that make cellular networks work, and Huawei’s competitors in Europe are moving towards services and other more profitable businesses, Mozur said.
“So in the long run, if you look 10 to 15 years down the line, you can see a very realistic scenario in which the only game in town to make a lot of hardware to make cellular networks work is Huawei, and there is just no alternative,” said Mozur.
Huawei, the second-largest smartphone maker in the world, has also said it has a “plan B” in case it loses access to American technology like Android.
The company was granted on May 14 a trademark, “Hongmeng,” for its self-developed operating system (OS) to replace Google’s Android from the trademark office of China’s National Intellectual Property Administration, according to Chinese media outlet 36Kr.
Products and services that will use the trademark include smartphones, laptops, tablets, operating systems, and chatbot software, according to the trade office’s website.
Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei’s Consumer Business Group, said in an interview with CNBC on May 22 that the company’s own operating system for smartphones and laptops were ready for use in China by fall this year, and for international markets early next year.
“There is a question of whether the new OS will be able to work with Android apps because there is a massive network effect in the app economy that everything is either working with Apple or Android,” said Mozur.
“If these apps can actually run on the Huawei operating system, then what Huawei has done is effectively forked Android … then things are kind of going back because Google will lock you out of their ecosystem forever,” he added.
Some are skeptical that Huawei will succeed in a field where other tech giants have failed: South Korean smartphone maker Samsung and Microsoft both built their own alternatives to Android, but neither gained a following significant enough to pose a threat to the current duopoly of Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS.
Samsung released the first version of Tizen, a Linux-based mobile operating system, in May 2012. The OS is now primarily used in smartwatches and other wearable devices, and has only 0.24% of the smartphone operating system market worldwide as of end-April, according to web traffic analysis website StatCounter.
Microsoft launched its mobile operating systems, the Windows Phone, in October 2010. The company announced on October 8, 2017, that the work on Windows 10 Mobile, a successor of Windows Phone, was drawing to a close due to lack of market penetration and resultant lack of interest from app developers.
]]>As growth in domestic internet users slows and economic momentum decelerates, China’s technology companies are looking to emerging markets for new opportunities. Chinese tech startups and giants alike are shifting competition to Southeast Asia and India hoping to replicate their home turf successes.
The appeal of the two regions is obvious: they boast large populations and internet user penetration is rapidly growing.
Silicon Valley has already made significant inroads; tech titans including Facebook, Google, and Amazon have already cultivated strong followings for their respective social, search, and e-commerce services. Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba, Tencent, and Bytedance, as well as thousands of startups, are also shifting their sights to the region for growth.
The most critical problem for Chinese companies to expand to overseas markets is how to acclimatize, according to panelists speaking on Thursday at the Emerge by TechNode conference in Shanghai. Southeast Asia consists of 11 countries with different languages and culture, while India is a multi-ethnic country with 22 official languages.
Wendy Min, director of Ctrip International Affairs; Bella Tu, investment director of Gobi Partners; Dev Lewis, research associate of Digital Asia Hub; and Elliott Zaagman, a TechNode contributor discussed strategies for Chinese companies expanding to Southeast Asia and India at the event on Thursday.
“The Indian market is very diversified, unlike the Chinese market which is unified with only one [official] language,” Lewis said to the conference attendees. He added that there were at least five markets divided by different languages in India, including English and Hindi, which are two of the biggest, as well as another four regional languages.
“So it makes it a lot more difficult in terms of the building of products—sometimes we have to use five different teams to build the same products,” said Lewis.
The most knotty problem for Chinese startups that want to expand to overseas markets is how to hire local employees, said Tu of Gobi Partners. It’s common in China for tech companies to require employees to work overtime, spurring the now infamous 996 work schedule, but such work demands are unacceptable in most Southeast Asian countries, she added.
“The best way is to make sure that you find very good local partners so that you can understand local culture and understand how to hire local people,” said Tu.
The 10 markets that make up the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) are home to more than 660 million people. Active internet users in Southeast Asia will reach 480 million by 2020, according to a report by Google and Temasek, a Singaporean state-owned holding company.
India, a country of more than 1.3 billion people, will have 666 million internet users by 2023, up from 525 million in 2018, according to market and consumer data provider Statista.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi on Monday said its first-quarter revenue rose 27% from a year earlier to RMB 43.8 billion (around $6.3 billion), driven by steady growth in overseas sales, and exceeding analyst expectations by a solid margin.
Xiaomi’s adjusted net profit for the first quarter increased 22.4% year over year to RMB 2.1 billion.
Xiaomi’s results show that the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker by sales volume is weathering a shrinking smartphone market in China, the world’s biggest. It is increasing focus on markets such as India and Europe. Markets outside China brought in 38.0% of its total revenue in the first quarter, representing a 34.7% year-on-year increase, according to the company.
A report from research firm Counterpoint showed that Chinese smartphone market sales volume declined 7% year-on-year in the first quarter. Xiaomi said it believed that on-going government stimulus, including the reduction of value-added tax, would “greatly benefit the entire smartphone industry” in China.
On a call with reporters, Xiaomi CFO Shou Zi Chew said that smartphone sales were experiencing a period of decline before the “5G spring” came, but the company was adopting a multi-brand strategy and focusing on expanding business in “selected markets” such as India.
Chew also said the company had not been affected by the recent restriction on Huawei from using Google services on its future Android smartphones, adding that the company had long been developing its own MIUI, an Android-based mobile device operating system.
The company’s smartphone segment recorded approximately RMB 27.0 billion in revenue in the first quarter, representing a year-over-year increase of 16.2%. The company said its smartphone sales volume in the first quarter reached 27.9 million units, exceeding the more than 27.5 million units the company revealed ahead of the earnings report to dispute a low estimate by market research firm IDC.
As of the end-March, the number of internet connected devices excluding smartphones and laptops on Xiaomi’s internet of things (IoT) platform reached 171.0 million units, a year-on-year increase of 70.0%, according to the company. Xiaomi said it would continue to invest more to develop its artificial intelligence-powered IoT platform to enhance the appeal of its products.
]]>Exclusive: Google suspends some business with Huawei after Trump blacklist – source – Reuters
What happened: Google has blocked Huawei from some updates to the Android operating system to comply with a trade blacklist that bans the Chinese smartphone maker from doing business with US companies without government approval. Huawei now only has access to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP), which is available for free to anyone who wishes to use it. The company will not be able to use popular services including the Google Play Store, Gmail, and YouTube apps on future Android phones. It also means Huawei will only be able to push security updates for Android once they’re made available in AOSP.
Why it’s important: Google apps and services are requisites for Android smartphones in markets outside of China, where smartphone shoppers are unlikely to buy an Android phone that lacks access to Google’s Play Store, which attracts the lion’s share of apps. Huawei’s smartphone business will definitely see an impact as half of the smartphones it sold in 2018 under the Huawei and Honor brands were to markets outside of China. Huawei said it has been preparing for its own technology in case it is blocked from using Android, though the ecosystem for its proprietary OS is lacking. Long term, the restriction may motivate Huawei to develop a viable alternative to Google’s operating system, as the search giant is pushing its own smartphone brand Pixel at a similar price range to Huawei handsets.
]]>Huawei’s Hisilicon says it has long been preparing for U.S. ban scenario – Reuters
What happened: Chinese chipmaker HiSilicon said it has long been prepared for a situation in which its parent company Huawei could one day be unable to obtain chips and technologies from the United States. The company said it had been secretly developing substitutes to American products and now it is ready to put them to use to make sure Huawei continues its business. The US Commerce Department on Thursday officially added Huawei to a so-called Entity List that would ban the company from buying parts and components from American firms without US government approval.
Why it’s important: Though Huawei has its own chipmaking business, the impact of the Commerce Department’s trade blacklist on the company may still be severe. Of the $70 billion that Huawei spent on components and other supplies last year, $11 billion went to American companies, according to the company. HiSilicon may prove a critical asset for Huawei; analysts believe that its chip technology rivals that of market leaders such as Qualcomm. But it won’t offset the US threat entirely—the company still needs American components, IP, and tools to design new chips.
]]>US President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that allows the US to ban telecommunications equipment and services from foreign companies that could pose a threat to national security, making good on a threat that escalates the battle against Chinese telecom giant Huawei.
The order doesn’t list any countries or companies by name but it instructs the Commerce Secretary, Wilbur Ross, to ban transactions “posing an unacceptable risk,” which include import of gear or services from companies that have close ties to foreign governments and could use their equipment to monitor or disrupt US telecommunications or other infrastructure.
In addition to the executive order, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday that it had placed the Huawei and 70 of its affiliates on a list of firms that are deemed a risk to national security. Companies on the so-called Entity List would not be allowed to buy American components and technologies without US government approval.
The executive order invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which authorizes the president to regulate commerce after declaring a national emergency in response to any unusual threat to the US with a foreign source.
Huawei said in a statement sent to TechNode on Thursday that “restricting Huawei from doing business in the US will not make the US more secure or stronger; instead, this will only serve to limit the US to inferior yet more expensive alternatives.”
“In addition, unreasonable restrictions will infringe upon Huawei’s rights and raise other serious legal issues,” said the company.
The executive order, together with the Commerce Department’s Entity List, have put Huawei into the same highly risky situation that its peer ZTE was in a year ago which nearly vanquished the company.
“Although Huawei is somewhat more independent from US tech than ZTE, it still relies on [the US] for key parts of its business,” said Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software of Shanghai-based consultancy Intralink.
Huawei has its own chip design subsidiary, HiSilicon, so it does not rely on US semiconductor supplier Qualcomm, said Stewart. “But HiSilicon still needs American components, IP, and tools to design new chips. Without these, it would either slow down or stop chip design. Either way, products would come out behind competitors and would be highly damaging.”
]]>Huawei moved to grow its enterprise business by launching new cloud database and storage products on Wednesday, after announcing last month that it would expand its presence in the global cloud arena.
The Shenzhen-based firm, best known for its smartphones and telecom equipment, said in a statement that the new cloud-computing products would help the company build a data industry ecosystem. The two new products include an artificial intelligence-backed database called GaussDB and a distributed storage system, the FusionStorage 8.0.
Huawei announced last month that it would partner with Spanish telecom carrier, Telefonica, to operate cloud services in Brazil and Chile as it expands the business globally.
The release of its cloud-computing products come as the company’s carrier business falters amid intensifying global scrutiny over the security of its equipment for next-generation wireless networks, known as 5G. The company is growing its enterprise business, which contributed 10.3% of company revenue last year.
As a result of the US-led backlash against its telecom equipment, Huawei’s carrier business declined 1.9% last year compared with an increase of 23.8% in its enterprise business.
The global cloud infrastructure market is currently dominated by US giants such as Amazon’s AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud, with respective market share of 32.3%, 16.5%, and 9.5% in the last quarter of 2018, according to researching firm Canalys.
Meanwhile, a report by industry consultancy IDC shows that China’s cloud system and management software market is expected to grow to $650 million in 2023 from $105 million in 2018 driven by increasing demand.
In five years, “China’s spending on private cloud infrastructure will surpass that of the US and become the world’s largest market,” said the report.
China’s cloud services market has also been a crucial part of the on-again-off-again trade talks with the US. As it stands, foreign cloud service provider operations are largely hampered by local regulations. The country’s cloud market is dominated by Alibaba Group with 43% of the market in the first half of 2018, followed by Tencent Cloud with 11.2% market share, according to IDC.
Earlier this month, it was reported that Huawei’s database rival Oracle is planning to lay off hundreds of staff in China as it restructures to focus on cloud computing. There is also speculation that Oracle’s China Research and Development Center will be closed soon.
Huawei denied that the company’s new database and storage products were the company’s attempt to fill the market gap left by Oracle.
“The strategic purpose of Huawei’s releasing of the database product is to boost the whole industry ecosystem, rather than to replace any competitor’s products,” (our translation) said Wang Tao, Huawei’s president of ICT Strategy & Marketing in a press conference held in Huawei’s Beijing research and development center on Wednesday.
“The arrangement [to release the database product] was made before the Oracle layoff,” Wang added.
The same day as Huawei released its two cloud products, it was reported that the US president Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order this week that would ban US companies from purchasing telecom equipment from manufacturers regarded as a threat to national security. Huawei is thought to be at the top of that list.
Wang responded to the potential US ban in the press release by saying that Huawei was a global company and it would barely be affected given the company’s limited amount of business in the US.
“Cybersecurity is primarily a technical issue,” said Wang. “But we have seen some governments mislead the public by turning cybersecurity into a political and ideological issue, which won’t be beneficial to cybersecurity. Declaring products from specific countries and companies are unsafe won’t ensure cybersecurity.”
Security concern over Huawei’s products has extended beyond telecom equipment. Addressing a question about the security of Huawei’s new database product, Wang responded that Huawei always followed local regulations and laws about data protection in all countries and regions in which it operates.
“Huawei’s products, including the new database product, have higher safety standards than any other products of other suppliers in the industry,” Wang said. “Please trust us!”
The question, which was raised by a US television journalist, triggered an uproar from the Chinese reporters in the meeting room.
“Why do they always ask about this? That’s a typical American stereotype,” one reporter asked another seated nearby.
Additional reporting by Nicole Jao.
]]>US President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order this week that will prohibit US firms from doing business with Huawei, Reuters reported citing three unnamed US officials.
If signed, the order will not name any specific names or companies, but bars US companies from using telecoms equipment made by foreign firms that pose a national security risk. Washington considers Huawei to be one of these companies, citing its ties with the Chinese government. The order has been in the works for over a year, but has been delayed several times, Reuters reported. It could be delayed again.
In response to the potential ban from the US market, Huawei’s President of ICT Strategy and Marketing Wang Tao stated Wednesday at an event in Beijing, “We are a global company, and we don’t have too much business in the US. Any change in any country won’t affect our global businesses.”
Just over half of Huawei’s total revenue last year was earned in China, with revenue from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) its second-largest region comprising 28% of sales. Revenue from North and South America region were a small but rapidly growing portion of the company’s total revenue in 2018, driven by a boom in “new digital infrastructure” construction in Latin America, according to the company.
The executive order will invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers (IEEP) Act, a federal law that grants the president authority to regulate commercial activity if there is a threat to national security. Invoking the IEEP Act essentially declares a national emergency over an “unusual and extraordinary” foreign threat to the US. It has been used to stop funding to terrorist organizations and prohibit trade with North Korea, among others.
A similar but different order was signed by President Trump in August 2018, banning US government agencies from using Huawei and ZTE equipment. This ruling was part of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2019, a bill that is passed annually by Congress dictating the Department of Defense budget and thus only applies to government agencies and contractors, not all commercial activities. The ban on ZTE was eventually lifted.
The new executive order comes at a sensitive time for US-China relations, only a few days after new tariffs were announced by both sides in lieu of a trade deal that had been in negotiation for months. Washington has been lobbying globally against the deployment of Huawei equipment in 5G networks, citing national security risks.
On the home front, the US government is conducting legal and regulatory efforts against what it perceives as Chinese companies infiltrating key US networks and industries to advance foreign interests. Less than a week ago, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted unanimously to bar China Mobile from offering its services in the US market.
In January 2019, US prosecutors charged Huawei in two separate cases. The first alleges theft of trade secrets from T-Mobile, a cellular network provider that Huawei was providing phones to that is based in Washington state, where the charges were filed. The second case is a 13-count indictment filed against Huawei and its CFO Meng Wanzhou for reportedly planning to circumvent US sanctions on Iran.
Meanwhile, Huawei is trying to build relationships and secure contracts with other governments and companies around the world.
On Tuesday, Huawei’s chairman said that the Chinese telecoms giant is willing to sign no-spy deals with governments, including the UK.
“Cybersecurity is primarily a technical issue… We have seen some governments mislead the public by turning cybersecurity into a political and ideological issue,” Wang said.
Additional reporting by Eliza Gritsi.
]]>China’s internet watchdog last week took the first step toward developing online privacy protection norms when it released a new set of draft privacy guidelines for app operators.
The draft guidelines by the National Information Security Standardization Technical Committee (TC260)—which is jointly administered by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) and the Standardization Administration of China—outlined seven situations that constitute the illegal collection and use of personal data. These included the collection and use of users’ personal information or the provision of personal information to third parties without the consent of the user.
The draft rules, which currently are not legally binding, have been released for public comment. Once finalized, they will be used by China’s cyberspace watchdogs, including the CAC, the State Administration for Market Regulation, and the Ministry of Public Security, to enact privacy laws.
A commentary (in Chinese) published Tuesday by state-run news agency Xinhua said the guidelines were “the world’s first legislative attempt” to categorize illegal behavior against app users’ personal data.
“The big data economy based on personal information has begun to come in conflict with the old legal system … the protection of personal data is critical to safeguard cybersecurity and internet users’ legal rights,” the commentary from Xinhua said.
A special administration working group dedicated to apps (in Chinese) was set up by the TC260 and the Internet Society of China, a non-governmental organization supported by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, in January to promote closer evaluation of illegal collection and use of personal data by mobile apps.
Up to the beginning of April, the working group had received around 3,500 reports by app users involving more than 1,300 apps, according to the overseas edition of the People’s Daily (in Chinese).
A report (in Chinese) by the China Consumers Association, a national organization operating under the instruction and supervision of the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, showed that 91 out of 100 apps the association had reviewed involved the excessive collection of users’ private data.
Popular selfie app Meitu was criticized by the report for excessively collecting users’ biometric information and personal financial information. The report also accused Industrial and Commercial Bank of China of not containing a privacy policy in its app.
In a report covering the third quarter of 2018, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information (MIIT) singled out premium ride-hailing service providers Shenzhou and Shouqi Yueche for not “releasing explanations regarding collection of passengers’ personal information.”
Qi Aimin, a professor at the Chongqing University’s School of Law, told TechNode that the draft guidelines would effectively contain the chaotic situation in China’s app market where the users’ right to privacy is frequently violated.
“The draft provided law enforcement departments with clear guides, and it’s beneficial for the mobile app industry to improve its standard of privacy protection,” said Qi.
The guidelines also cautioned against the collection of personal data of minors under the age of 18 and subjecting them to advertisements without guardians’ consent.
According to a report (in Chinese) by China Internet Network Information Center, an administrative agency responsible for internet affairs supervised by the CAC, the number of internet users under the age of 18 in China reached 169 million up to the end of 2018, accounting for 93.7% of the country’s minor population. There is no dedicated legislation in the country to protect minors from online personal information gathering.
However, the draft guidelines could face challenges when it comes to enforcement.
“The guidelines have listed almost all situations of illegal collection and use of private data that are common in the industry, but some of the situations may be hard to identify in reality,” said Qi the law school professor.
The guidelines, for example, said privacy policies of mobile apps should not be “unintelligible and lengthy,” which is impossible to define, Qi noted.
]]>Apple and the iPhone Near Trade Crosshairs Again – The Wall Street Journal
What happened: US President Donald Trump last week threatened a tariff of 25% on $325 billion in Chinese imports that haven’t previously been targeted by duties, which would affect almost all Chinese exports to the US, including Apple’s most important devices, including iPhones, iPads, and Macs, that are assembled in China. Apple also counts on Greater China for about one-fifth of its sales, making it vulnerable if China fights back with higher duties against American companies. Apple would also be a likely target of China’s punitive actions as iPhone has 7.4% of the country’s smartphone market.
Why it’s important: As an American company that manufactures most of its devices in China, Apple is exposed in the escalating trade war. Apple last month posted its first consecutive drop in quarterly sales and profit in more than two years as iPhone sales fell 17% in the first quarter of 2019. The trade war does not appear to be resolving anytime soon as the US-China trade talks ended last week without a deal. Although Apple is diversifying its supply chain by planning to assemble devices in India, it will take time for the company to transfer production from China, making it unlikely to avoid the US tariffs this year.
]]>Trump Lets Tariff Increase Go Ahead, Threatens More as Trade Talks Resume – The Wall Street Journal
What happened: The US President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on more than $200 billion Chinese imports took effect Friday with tariffs leaping from the current 10% to 25%. The hike on tariffs comes amid two days of trade talks between top US and Chinese negotiators as they look to resolve a year-long trade war between the world’s two largest economies. More than 5,700 categories of goods are subject to the tariffs and most of them are capital and intermediate goods such as circuit boards, microprocessors, vehicle parts, and machinery.
Why it’s important: Under the new tariffs, telecommunications equipment is the top category, with about $19.1 billion of goods facing higher duties. Telecom has become the worst-hit sector in the shadow of the perpetual trade war. Trade conflicts also affect US consumers and businesses. Small carriers in the US feel the brunt as they rely heavily on Chinese telecom equipment makers such as Huawei and ZTE that provide a wide range of gear at competitive prices.
]]>FCC Blocks Chinese Company’s Bid For International Phone Services In The U.S. – NPR
What happened: The United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has decided to deny an application by China Mobile to provide international calls and other services in the country. FCC chairman Ajit Pai said the Chinese government would use China Mobile to conduct activities seriously jeopardizing national security, law enforcement, and economic interests of the US. The Thursday announcement came after a unanimous 5-0 vote from the FCC’s Republican and Democratic commissioners.
Why it’s important: The FCC decision is the latest in a series of US government efforts to block a Chinese firm from certain sectors in the country. It also comes at a time when a pivotal round of trade talks between the US and China on Thursday failed to produce an agreement, and new tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods took effect Friday. The year-old trade war shows little sign of abating. Tech firms in China have already been impacted while the launch of a new Chinese high-tech stock board hangs in the balance.
]]>At its May open meeting that will be held on Thursday, the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will vote on an order to stop a Chinese state-owned carrier from providing telecommunications services in the US.
China Mobile USA, a subsidiary of China Mobile, filed an application in September 2011 to the FCC to carry international voice traffic between the US and other countries. The company stated that it doesn’t intend to provide telecom services within the US.
Now, nearly eight years later, the FCC will make its final decision on the application—the outcome doesn’t look good for the Chinese carrier.
Last month, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said that he did not believe that approving China Mobile’s application would be in the public interest, citing national security concerns.
“It is clear that China Mobile’s application to provide telecommunications services in our country raises substantial and serious national security and law enforcement risks,” said Pai.
He also appealed to his colleagues to join him in voting to reject the application. Pai’s party, the Republican Party, holds three of the five commission seats.
The draft order to be voted on Thursday cited national security risk as the reason for rejecting China Mobile’s application. It also implied China Mobile might be controlled by the Chinese government to conduct computer intrusions and attacks against the US.
“The Executive Branch agencies identify significantly enhanced national security and law enforcement risks linked to the Chinese government’s activities since the Commission last granted international Section 214 authorizations to other Chinese state-owned companies more than a decade ago,” said the draft order.
The FCC requires any person or entity that provides telecoms services to or from the US to receive an authorization under Section 214 of the Communications Act of 1934. This authorization is called an international Section 214 authorization, which China Mobile USA’s 2011 application was filed to obtain.
The US government also made a similar allegation against another Chinese telecom company, Huawei. The Trump administration has banned Huawei equipment in the construction of US cellular networks over concerns that the company could be compelled by the Chinese government to spy or for sabotage.
Whether Huawei is controlled or even owned by the Chinese government has been difficult to assess due to its vague organizational structure. The ownership of China Mobile, however, is clear.
China Mobile USA discloses in its application that its indirect controlling parent company, China Mobile, is 100% owned by the Chinese government, and China Mobile was subject to the supervision of the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, a Chinese government body.
China Mobile USA is owned by China Mobile International, a Hong Kong-based subsidiary that is wholly owned by China Mobile.
China Mobile USA argued that as a business registered in Delaware, California, it was immune from the Chinese government’s influence and control, the draft order revealed.
However, the executive branch agencies said that China Mobile USA’s status as a US-registered company “does not diminish the national security and law enforcement risks associated with the indirect ownership and control of China Mobile USA by the Chinese government.”
China Mobile USA did not respond to TechNode’s request for comment. An FCC representative declined to comment and said all information could be found in the draft order that was listed on the commission’s website.
In a letter sent on May 1 to FCC Secretary Marlene Dortch, counsel for China Mobile USA Kent Bressie said that the company believed that the draft order was guided more by tensions in the bilateral US-China relationship than by American commitments to market access, transparency, and timeline elements in basic telecommunications under the General Agreement on Trade in Services.
Wang Chunhui, a professor at Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, told TechNode that the US should be a free market, where the government should decide whether to accept foreign carriers to provide telecoms services by bidding processes, rather than administrative instructions.
“FCC’s voting on the order to deny China Mobile’s application without any legal processes will compromise the US’s principle of the rule of law, and also disagrees with international trade rules,” said Wang.
Legal precedents do exist: BT (British Telecom), Deutsche Telekom of Germany, and Telekomunikasi Indonesia International of Indonesia all have carrier businesses in the US.
As the US shuts its doors to Chinese telecom companies, China, by comparison, is opening its telecom industry up for foreign company participation.
The total number of foreign-invested telecom firms with operation permits in China totaled 121 at the end of 2018, up 39% year on year, according to Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua, citing data from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology.
BT in January became the first non-Chinese telecom firm to get a nationwide operating license in China. The company attained two licenses that allowed it to provide internet connection services to domestic clients.
Though the licenses don’t allow BT to provide mobile phone service in China, where the wireless carrier market is dominated by three state-owned carriers, China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, it could signal that China is opening up its telecom sector to foreign companies, the same report from Xinhua said.
]]>Slump in stock market threatens new Shanghai tech board, may even lead to postponement – Bloomberg
What happened: Chinese stock markets tumbled Monday after US president Donald Trump threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese imports. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index has dropped 11% from an April high after surging at the start of the year, marking its biggest loss since 2016. The stock market slumped as China readies its Nasdaq-style board, the Science and Technology Innovation Board, to launch on the Shanghai Stock Exchange as soon as next month. Analysts said that the slump could impact the progress of the new tech board, and might even lead to a postponement.
Why it’s important: The new tech board is expected to provide a new option for initial public offerings (IPOs) of Chinese high-tech firms thanks to its relatively low threshold for listing. If the rollout of the new board is delayed, more than 100 Chinese tech firms will face unknown wait times to list. The US-China trade war is impacting Chinese tech firms: Video game live-streaming platform Douyu delayed its IPO roadshow on Monday due to global market turmoil. Tech firms are particularly susceptible because they are more vulnerable to market volatility than companies in traditional industries.
]]>Transsion Holdings, the largest mobile phone vendor in Africa, said it was confident that domestic competitors such as Huawei and Xiaomi wouldn’t present much of a challenge in emerging markets.
In a statement filed Monday to the Shanghai Stock Exchange in response to regulators’ risk inquiries, the Shenzhen-based mobile phone maker said Huawei and Xiaomi will barely impact its businesses in emerging markets such as Africa and India, and that it would retain market share and brand influence as the competition unfolds.
Transsion held 48.7% of Africa’s mobile phone market and 34.3% of its smartphone market in 2018, as well as 6.7% of India’s mobile phone market in the same year, according to research firm IDC. Huawei meanwhile held 9.9% share of the smartphone market in Africa, according to IDC data.
However, documents filed earlier reveal that Transsion may view rivals as more of a risk than expressed in this most recent statement. In its prospectus filed in April, Transsion cited the growing presence of rival phone makers on the African market as a risk to its business. The company filed its application to the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s new tech board on April 1, planning to raise RMB 3.3 billion (around $490 million) in its initial public offering (IPO).
Huawei entered the African smartphone market in 2011 by providing affordable smartphones via retail networks consisting of local telecom carriers. Xiaomi set up a business unit in January to expand on the African continent by cooperating with Africa’s leading e-commerce platform, Jumia.
Transsion has established a research and development system that fits local market demands, a complete after-sales service system, and stable retailing system in emerging markets, said the company in the statement. “We have built competitive barriers in emerging markets,” it added.
Transsion has been selling products in more than 70 countries in regions all over the world and has established partnerships with over 2,000 dealers, according to its prospectus.
Its online services in Africa could help it build a business ecosystem, the company said. Its Spotify-style music streaming service Boomplay has 42 million monthly active users in Africa and is now the dominant music platform in the region.
Transsion said in a statement to TechNode last month that its smartphone operating system (OS), the Android-based Transsion OS, has become a mainstream smartphone system in emerging markets. “Our mobile internet platform based on the vast amount of users and data lays the foundation for Transsion to develop the African market in the future,” said the company.
]]>An application for Shanghai-based online education firm Hujiang’s initial public offering (IPO) may have expired, reported Chinese financial blog, IPO Zaozhidao, on Tuesday.
Hujiang filed the IPO application on July 3, and passed the review on the Hong Kong stock exchange post-listing hearing on Dec. 7, according to its disclosure page on the exchange’s website.
The page has not been updated since. A six-month deadline following the post-listing hearing dictates that the company’s IPO efforts will be suspended, according to IPO Zaozhidao’s report, which has been widely cited in Chinese media.
TechNode could not independently verify the six-month rule with the Hong Kong stock exchange.
Hujiang confirmed to Chinese media Tencent Tech on Tuesday that the company did adjust its Hong Kong IPO plans, but that it had not “failed to go public” as online rumors implied. The company added that it would figure out an appropriate time to go public on a suitable stock market, but did not comment on reasons for the change.
In March, the company was rumored to have laid off around 1,000 employees across business units and corporate functions. Hujiang responded (in Chinese) afterward that the company was “reorganizing and combining some of its loss-making businesses” as it looked to withstand risks and connect with capital markets.
The company said that its IPO process was still ongoing and it would go public at the right time, amid huge fluctuations in capital markets beginning the second half of last year that impacted its Hong Kong IPO efforts.
Founded in 2001, Hujiang is one of the largest online education sites in China. The company was valued at RMB 7 billion (around $103 million) after its Series D that raised RMB 1 billion in October 2015.
The company had been running with increasing deficits from 2015 to 2017, with respective net losses of RMB 280 million, RMB 422 million, and RMB 537 million, according to its prospectus.
]]>Chinese Startup DouYu Delays U.S. IPO Launch on Trade Jitters – Bloomberg
What happened: Chinese video game live-streaming platform Douyu is considering delaying its IPO roadshow, which was scheduled on Monday US time, by at least a week. People with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg that the decision was made following global market turmoil after US president Donald Trump threatened new tariffs on Chinese goods. The Tencent-backed company filed its IPO application to the New York Stock Exchange last month, seeking to raise up to $500 million.
Why it’s important: In the past two decades, the number of public companies listed in the US nearly halved, and each has grown much bigger, a sign of unhealthy industry concentration. But Chinese tech companies have become a rich source for US IPOs in recent years. Thirty-three Chinese companies went public in the US in 2018, accounting for 17% of all US IPOs. If the trade war continues to escalate, Chinese tech firms may have to find other markets for financing. China has already set up a Nasdaq alternative, the Science and Technology Innovation Board on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, for high-tech firms seeking IPOs.
]]>Xiaomi refuted a recent report that estimated its smartphone shipments fell short of the 27.5 million figure the company confirmed it shipped in the first quarter (Q1) of 2019 in a statement filed on Thursday to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Research firm IDC estimated in a report released April 30 that Xiaomi’s smartphone shipment volume for Q1 2019 fell 10.2% year over year to 25.0 million units.
Xiaomi responded in its statement dated Thursday that “some information from certain market research institutions,” which was quoted by several media publications, was “inaccurate and unfair” and misrepresented the company’s actual performance. According to the company, its Q1 smartphone shipments declined 1.8% compared with the same period a year earlier.
Xiaomi also said that the information contained in the statement was not audited, and the finalized data would be included in the company’s Q1 earnings report.
IDC told Chinese media on Saturday that it would update Xiaomi’s Q1 smartphone shipments to 27.5 million units next week.
Major smartphone market research firms such as the US-based Strategy Analytics and Hong Kong-based Counterpoint also recently released reports about global smartphone shipments in Q1.
In these reports, Strategy Analytics said that Xiaomi shipped 27.5 million smartphones in Q1 and Counterpoint estimated 27.8 million units, both indicating the company’s Q1 smartphone shipments weakened year over year to a limited degree.
]]>Huawei surpasses Apple as second-largest smartphone maker – Business Insider
What happened: Huawei’s smartphone shipments grew 50.3% year over year in the first quarter of 2019 to 59.1 million units. The Shenzhen-base telecommunications giant overtook Apple to become the second-largest smartphone maker worldwide with a market share of 19.0%, according to research firm IDC. Smartphone shipments for Apple meanwhile dropped 30.2% in the first quarter compared with the same period a year earlier, reducing its market share to 11.7%. Samsung shipments also fell in the first quarter by 8.1%, although it still holds the top spot with 23.1% share of the global smartphone market.
Why it’s important: The global smartphone shipment volumes decreased 6.6% year over year in the first quarter, declining for the sixth consecutive quarter. Total global smartphone shipments dropped 4.1% in 2018 compared with 2017. The continued weakness in the first quarter signals that 2019 will be another slow year for the worldwide smartphone market. Huawei’s performance was the only highlight in the quarterly data, with gains in both volumes and share. IDC attributed Huawei’s success to its balanced portfolio targeting all smartphone segments from low to high. Huawei’s high-end models created a strong brand affiliation for other cheaper models, which supported the company’s overall shipment performance, IDC said.
]]>Amateur comedian and former online video producer Zhu Yi recently become a full-time vlogger.
Every week, the 28-year-old makes two or three short video blogs, or vlogs. While this type of video content originally appeared on US platform YouTube, they have become increasingly popular in China in the last year, with a number of Chinese websites hosting this new content genre. While there is no strict definition for what constitutes a vlog post, it’s widely agreed that the creator generally shares details of their personal life.
Online video platforms and tech giants alike are looking for “the next big thing,” and some see great potential for vlogging in China. Hoping to seize the initiative, websites such as Bilibili and Sina Weibo have begun rolling out incentive schemes to provide vloggers with additional exposure, advertising commissions, or even cash subsidies.
However, the capital markets in China are still on the fence, with little or no investment happening to date.
Zhu vlogs for Jiangbing, a short-video app developed by iQiyi, the online video unit of Chinese search engine giant Baidu. In his vlog entries, which typically last about one to two minutes, Zhu recounts the often-mundane details of his life. In one recent entry, he recounted a weekend trip to the northwestern Chinese city of Xi’an, where he discovered that the city was a paradise for snack lovers.
After short videos took the Chinese internet by storm in 2016, a batch of startups popped up to host the video clips, including Tencent-backed Kuaishou and Bytedance’s Douyin. The sector is now dominated by tech giants, with more than 90% of total short-video usage time concentrated across top five platforms, as indicated in a report from data and analytics institute Evergrande Think Tank.
Zhu first heard the term “vlog” a few months ago when he decided to quit his job as an online video producer.
He’d had a close brush with fame once before. Two years ago, he had been approached by Papi Jiang, a Shanghainese comedian and online celebrity whose racy monologues in a digitally altered voice have garnered her more than 30 million followers on Weibo. She had tried to sign Zhu as a member of her multichannel network, known as the Papitube.
“I turned down the offer because I wasn’t paid at the initial stage of the contract,” he said. When vlogging began to snowball in popularity during the second half of 2018, Zhu was determined to go for it. “I didn’t want to miss my chance at becoming famous—again,” he said.
Zhu’s vlogs currenly only attract a few hundred views each, which hardly makes him an online celebrity. As a newcomer to the vlogging scene, Zhu says he is still struggling to find a way to monetize his videos. Jiangbing pays him somewhere between RMB 100 and RMB 1,000 (around $14.90-$149) as a “subsidy” for each vlog that he uploads exclusively to their platform. These payments from Jiangbing are currently Zhu’s only source of income.
Zhu hopes that sponsors will find him once his channel becomes a hit. He is also optimistic about the prospect of selling snacks through e-commerce platforms after he attracts more followers.
“I’m a foodie myself. I’m sure my fans will be interested in this,” he said.
If vlogs are to become the next big thing for China’s internet, they will first have to overtake short video, which currently reigns supreme.
Douyin, which is known as TikTok outside of China, is among the most successful short-video apps in the country. It had 250 million daily active users as of the end of 2018, according to a report released by Bytedance.
Its biggest rival, Kuaishou, has a wide reach in China’s smaller cities, towns, and rural areas, with about 160 million daily active users, according to Tencent.
Short videos, which usually last from 15 seconds to a few minutes, are always jammed with background music and special effects, and most importantly, they make people laugh. Their appeal lies in providing a quick shot of immediate gratification.
Vlogs tend to employ more editing techniques and filters; they also last longer than short videos, ranging from a few minutes to more than 10 minutes in duration. They tend to have a more confessional tone, but some vlogs have an educational component; they appeal to audiences who trust the vlogger’s knowledge and experience.
Data from Baidu Index, a tool that tracks keyword search volume on the Baidu search engine, shows that the frequency of searches by Chinese internet users for the word “vlog” started rising in September 2018. By March 2019, the average daily search volume had increased 324%. The trend continues upward.
Last September, China’s Twitter-equivalent Sina Weibo organized an online event encouraging users to upload vlogs to the platform. Users who posted more than four vlogs in 30 days could be verified as vloggers by Weibo to gain more exposure on the platform, according to Weibo Vlog, an official account that promotes such activity on the social media site.
Later in 2018, Bilibili, a video-streaming site popular with young netizens, launched a “30-day vlog challenge” to encourage people to share their life stories using the new format. Bilibili announced afterward that of the 22,016 people who took part, 8,729 completed the challenge.
“I don’t think there is any difference between the vlog in China and that on YouTube … They both have a core element: to express people’s images and their lifestyles,” said Wang Yibo, who began uploading his fitness vlogs to Bilibili in 2017.
Wang maintains several playlists on Bilibili, including one that teaches viewers how to make post-workout meals and one that shares fitness tutorials. But he reserves “vlog” hashtags to label videos that relate to his personal experiences.
While the content and approach to vlogging are similar in the US and China, the monetization paths are still very different.
Last year, Forbes estimated that the highest-paid YouTube vlogger, 7-year-old Ryan Kaji of Ryan Toysreview, earned $22 million in the 12 months leading up to June 1, 2018. About $21 million of his earnings appear to come from pre-roll advertising on his YouTube channels; the remaining $1 million comes from sponsored posts.
Logan Paul, another YouTuber on Forbes’ annual Highest-Paid YouTube Stars list, also earned most of his $14.5 million income in the same period from YouTube ads, according to Forbes.
Clearly, ad revenue generates most of the income for YouTube vloggers. Just 1,000 views on the video site will earn a creator somewhere between 25 cents and $4, according to YouTube channel statistics firm SocialBlade.
Vloggers in China, by contrast, cannot expect much revenue-sharing from video site advertising. Most video platforms do not pay creators based on their video clicks—and those that do, pay very little.
Chen Zhanwei, 25, operates a video channel named CatLive with his girlfriend, sharing stories about the four cats that live with them in Chengdu.
CatLive’s first video appeared online in April 2017. Since then, Chen Zhanwei has shared more than 100 videos that have attracted more than 10 million followers across multiple platforms, including Weibo, Bilibili, YouTube, and Bytedance’s Douyin and Xigua, an interest-based short-video aggregation app.
For the last two years, the videos on the CatLive channel have been very consistent: The cats are the protagonists; they jump around, play, and fight each other. Even though the content of his videos hasn’t changed, Chen tends to hashtag his new videos with the trendy new vlog label.
“It’s not only because platforms are promoting vlogs, but also because of sponsors’ demands,” said Chen. His sponsors include Chinese smartphone maker Huawei and the American ice cream brand Häagen-Dazs. In February and March, Chen says, these companies all specified that they only want vloggers to promote their products.
Chen did not reveal precisely how much Huawei paid him, but he said that the contract amount exceeded RMB 100,000 (just under $15,000).
According to Chen, for every 100,000 views that his videos amass on different sites, he gets paid RMB 300 from Bilibili, RMB 300 from Tencent’s online media platform Qiehao, and RMB 500 from Baidu’s equivalent, Baijiahao.
He earns around RMB 80,000 every month through these online platforms’ pay-per-click advertising revenue sharing, which only covers the cost of making the videos. A team of five people help him with shooting and editing videos.
He refused to reveal how much he earns from sponsored posts but indicated that it constitutes most of his income.
Even though online video platforms are doing their best to promote vlogs, Chinese netizens have not yet fully embraced them. Short videos are decidedly more popular with online content audiences. A report by Chinese research firm iiMedia Research shows that the number of short-video users reached 501 million in 2018.
Chen Fei (unrelated to Chen Zhanwei), a blogger who covers the digital media industry at Technology Suo, told TechNode that vlogging is still a niche in China, and that it is far from becoming nationally popular because it lacks differentiated content and a clear path to monetization.
Back in 2017, when online video platforms began chasing short videos, considerable capital flooded into the sector. On March 23 of that year, Tencent injected $350 million into short-video app Kuaishou; Bytedance announced on May 16 that the company would invest RMB 1 billion in its short-video app Huoshan. Later that year, Bytedance acquired popular lip-syncing app Musical.ly for $1 billion, and subsequently rebranded it as TikTok.
By contrast, the vlog sector still lacks investment. Despite the nascent marketing efforts to promote the making and viewing of vlogs, none of the video platforms have yet invested real funds in it.
“Capital is always profit-oriented, and it’s unnecessary to invest in the sector before it can build a sustainable ‘production and consumption’ ecosystem,” said Chen Fei.
However, the value of vlogs consists in their potential to convey more information than short videos can, making them a perfect tool for advertising, said Sun Jing, an analyst at Changsha-based Fengmang Research Institute.
Moreover, adds Sun, viewers are less annoyed by advertisements in vlogs because they feel a stronger connection with vloggers, who share more personal information with their audience.
Prior to this year, Zhu the vlogger had been posting self-made comic vignettes imitating gags from actor Stephen Chow Sing-Chi’s classic Hong Kong movies on his Weibo account. Each of these videos attracts a few thousand viewers. “That wasn’t enough to support me quitting my job,” he said.
As a full-time vlogger, Zhu has kept some of this comedic flair in his videos in the form of exaggerated facial expressions and voices, but he now tries to share more about his daily life instead of relying on gags and punch lines.
“My followers didn’t stick with me very much when I made comic videos, but now they do,” said Zhu, adding that what his audience likes most seems to be the feeling of connecting with him as a real person.
]]>Vodafone Found Hidden Backdoors in Huawei Equipment – Bloomberg
What happened: Vodafone Group Plc, Europe’s biggest phone company, said it found hidden backdoors going back years in the software of internet routers supplied by Huawei for the carrier’s Italian business. Vodafone asked Huawei to remove those backdoors in 2011, and the supplier later replied that the issues were fixed. However, further testing showed that the security vulnerabilities remained. Vodafone also said backdoors were identified in other network parts supplied by Huawei. The carrier said the problems have now been resolved. There was no evidence of any data being compromised, said Vodafone.
Why it’s important: Vodafone’s reports of backdoors found in Huawei equipment support allegations made by the US that Huawei’s equipment is vulnerable to exploitation, particularly by the Chinese government. But Vodafone also said that it was not uncommon for vulnerabilities in equipment from suppliers to be identified by operators and other third parties in the telecom industry. The London-based carrier stated in March that a complete ban on using Huawei equipment would be seriously damaging to the UK’s 5G future.
]]>ZTE, China’s second largest telecommunications equipment maker, expects net profit of between RMB 1.2 billion (around $178 million) and RMB 1.8 billion in the first half of this year, according to a statement filed to the Hong Kong and Shenzhen stock exchanges on Monday.
The company recorded losses of RMB 7.8 billion in the same period last year, which the company attributed in the statement to the $1 billion fine it paid for evading US sanctions by selling telecom equipment to Iran and North Korea. The US government then banned US companies from selling components to ZTE for seven years, which brought the company to a standstill because of its dependence on American-made parts.
In its quarterly earnings report filed to the two exchanges, ZTE said its first-quarter revenue was RMB 22.2 billion, down 19.3% year on year. Its net profit in the first quarter was RMB 862 million, a 115.95% increase from the same period a year earlier.
ZTE said it would continue focusing on its carrier business and is prepared for 5G commercialization.
The company spent RMB 3.1 billion on research and development in the first quarter, accounting for 23.2% of its total expenditures, according to the statement.
ZTE also plans to raise up to RMB 13 billion on mainland China’s A-share market to develop 5G technologies and related products, it said.
ZTE has been a primary player in formulating global 5G standards, and a major contributor to 5G technology development, Xu Ziyang, president of ZTE’s Telecom Cloud and Core Network product line, said in a shareholder meeting last month. ZTE owns more than 3,000 5G-related patents as of end-March, which brought the company into the “the first echelon” of 5G patents, Xu added.
The company will build three 5G labs in China, Belgium, and Italy this year in an effort to reassure government agencies and telecom network operators about the integrity and security of its 5G equipment.
]]>Xiaomi Chief Appears to Lose 1 Billion Yuan Bet – Bloomberg
What happened: A storied five-year bet between Xiaomi chairman Lei Jun and Gree Electric chairwoman Dong Mingzhu is due, and the smartphone entrepreneur seems to have lost RMB 1 billion (around $150 million). The wager dates back to Dec. 12, 2013, when Lei bet Dong RMB 1 during a televised event that Xiaomi’s revenue would surpass Gree’s within five years. Dong countered, raising the bet to RMB 1 billion. Home appliance manufacturer Gree on Sunday reported revenue of RMB 198 billion for 2018, beating Xiaomi by about RMB 20 billion.
Why it’s important: Back in 2013 when the bet was made, the two leaders were awarded as examples of successful entrepreneurs in China’s booming tech and industrial industries by state broadcaster CCTV. At that time, Gree outranked Xiaomi in everything from revenue to factories and employees. Lei believed that his online selling strategy would eventually outplay Gree’s home appliance business empire. But it seems that there is no real loser, as Xiaomi has grown into a smartphone giant from a little-known startup in the just five years, selling 118.7 million smartphones in 2018. Lei himself received compensation totaling around RMB 10 billion in 2018.
]]>Chinese Brands Capture a Record 66% of the Indian Smartphone Market in Q1 2019 – Counterpoint
What happened: Chinese smartphone makers controlled a record 66% of the Indian smartphone market in the first quarter of 2019, according to Hong Kong-based Counterpoint Research. The volumes for Chinese brands rose 20% year on year backed by growth from Vivo, Oppo, and Realme. Shipment volumes for Vivo jumped 119%, while Oppo rose 28%. Xiaomi led the market with a record 29% share, though its shipments declined by 2% compared to the same period last year. In the meanwhile, the overall Indian smartphone shipments grew 4% year on year.
Why it’s important: As the market slows in China, India has become a battlefield for Chinese smartphone makers seeking growth. India represents significant opportunity, with its population of 1.3 billion and a relatively low smartphone penetration rate of 36% in 2018, which is expected to reach 60% by 2022. Xiaomi unseated Samsung from the top spot in India’s smartphone market last year, and Chinese makers including Vivo, Oppo, and Transsion occupied four of the top five smartphone brand spots. Collectively, Chinese smartphone manufacturers controlled more than half of the market in the first quarter.
]]>Following a recent report that cast doubt over Huawei’s claim that it is wholly owned by its employees, the Shenzhen-headquartered tech giant called a press conference on Thursday aimed at clearing the air.
During that briefing, Huawei reiterated that it is fully owned by its employees, describing, once again, its intricate corporate structure. The company, however, produced little new information that could put the ownership issue to bed once and for all and didn’t fully address questions about who effectively controls Huawei.
An academic paper arguing that Huawei’s claim of employee ownership is implausible under Chinese law was published on April 15, stirring major debate around Huawei and any ties it might have to the Chinese government.
In it, authors Christopher Balding of Fulbright University Vietnam and Donald Clarke of George Washington University examined publicly available sources, which showed that Huawei’s operating company belongs to a holding company, with Huawei founder, Ren Zhengfei, holding a 1% share.
The remaining 99% is held by a “trade union committee,” which was established under China’s Trade Union Law. However, under Chinese law trade unions answer to the state, which could mean that 99% of Huawei is effectively controlled by Chinese authorities, the academics asserted.
Earlier this week Huawei dismissed the report by Balding and Clarke, saying that it was “based on unreliable sources and speculations, without an understanding of all the facts.” To which the authors Huawei replied that the company didn’t specify what it considered to be “unreliable or wrong, or from which we drew the wrong conclusions.”
At the press conference, Jiang Xisheng, chief secretary of the Huawei’s board of directors, said that a company of Huawei’s size is legally obliged to establish a trade union, which organizes social and recreational functions for the employees and has to abide by Chinese law.
As a result, it is registered under the Shenzhen Federation of Trade Unions, the body which is responsible for overseeing Shenzhen’s trade unions. The federation certifies trade unions and carries out annual audits, but this doesn’t mean that Huawei’s trade union takes orders from it, Jiang said.
Huawei has assigned an additional function for the trade union committee by making it the owner of 99% of the holding company, thus legally entrusting it to implement the company’s employee shareholding scheme. That program covers some 97,000 Huawei current and former employees, and entitles them to shares and related dividends.
Employees buy into this employee shareholding scheme using money from their own pockets. Should they wish to forgo the shares, they can only sell them back to the company.
“Because of this employee shareholding scheme, Huawei is owned and controlled by its shareholding employees,” Jiang said during the press conference. “That is why we have maintained our independence over the past three decades, allowing us to stick to our strategies.”
But the two academics argue that the shareholding scheme amounts to, at most, a profit-sharing scheme, far from actionable ownership, which would give the employees some real control over the company.
At the press conference, Huawei said that the shareholders run the risk of seeing their shares depreciating, and that this proves that the shares are more than contractual interests in a profit-sharing system.
“Huawei’s share capital comes from our employees’ own money. Our employees will not allow external influences to compromise their own interests or damage the company’s long-term development,” said Jiang.
Huawei claims that the shareholders’ voting powers puts them at the helm. They vote for a “representatives’ commission,” which in turn votes for the Huawei board of directors, the body that makes operational decisions.
But founder Ren Zhengfei is entitled to veto power in both bodies, meaning he can dismiss the shareholders’ majority vote at any time.
Jiang said that there were seven members in the trade union committee, and none of them were members of the company’s board of directors.
The question of who controls the company is at the center of an international debate, as the US is trying to shun Huawei from the development of 5G networks.
Washington has tried to convince governments around the world to ban the Chinese company from the next generation of the internet, claiming that Huawei’s links to the Chinese government could have serious national security implications.
With additional reporting by Eliza Gkritsi.
]]>A joint venture established by a US chip giant and the government of one of China’s poorest provinces and that was expected to provide a boost to the country’s server chip sector will shut down by the end of April, according to The Information.
The joint venture, Huaxintong Semiconductor Technologies (HXT), was founded in 2016 by Qualcomm and the government of the southwestern Chinese province of Guizhou to design and produce chips typically destined for use data-center servers in China.
The joint venture has research and development centers in Beijing and Shanghai and is 55% owned by the Guizhou government and 45% by Qualcomm.
The two parties planned to invest a total amount of RMB 4.4 billion (around $655 million) in the venture. As of August 2018, Qualcomm and Guizhou government had invested a combined RMB 3.8 billion in HXT, according to Chinese corporate database Tianyancha.
Executives at HXT said in internal meetings last week that the collaboration would cease by April 30, according to The Information, citing HXT employees.
HXT hasn’t officially confirmed the report yet. The company’s official website does not list any contact information and nobody replied to an inquiry from TechNode sent to HXT’s contact email address listed on Tianyancha.
Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software of Shanghai-based consultancy Intralink, told TechNode that a scheduled meeting between him and HXT in May had been canceled—something he attributed to the closure.
Backed to 2016 when it was established, HXT was highly valued by the Guizhou province—the province’s Communist Party chief and government head both attended the company’s foundation ceremony.
Guizhou, which was considered as a rural and impoverished province, is now trying to achieve faster economic growth by investing in a series of hi-tech industries such as big data and artificial intelligence. HXT was expected to be the first batch of Chinese companies to have the ability to develop and produce server chips used in data centers.
“The cooperation with Qualcomm is a bonanza for Guizhou to develop its integrated circuit industry,” Qin Rupei, acting vice governor of the province, said during the foundation ceremony.
The company released its first generation of commercially available processor for servers, the StarDragon 4800, and announced its mass production in November 2018. The StarDragon 4800 is based on the ARM, an architecture adopted by Qualcomm to build server chips.
In December, Qualcomm laid off 269 employees at its offices in the US, mostly in its data center unit. That round of layoffs, plus other similar redundancies in 2018 in its data center business unit, reduced the number of employees working for that company unit to about 50 from nearly 1,000 one year before, indicating that Qualcomm was planning to retreat from the server chip sector.
The data center business unit of Qualcomm was established to develop processors for data-center servers, and HXT relies on that technology to develop server chips in China.
Qualcomm said in subsequent a statement that it planned to continue supporting the HXT server joint venture. However, Qualcomm’s decision to pull out of ARM server chip market last year wasn’t a good sign for HXT, considering it is a joint venture with Qualcomm and Guizhou government, said Stewart of Intralink. He added that this probably made the Guizhou government less confident in their investment.
With both sides of the joint venture lacking faith in the server chip sector, HXT appears to have been faced with the prospect of a funds crunch as the global market for ARM servers remains lukewarm.
Intel holds more than 95% of the market with its server chips that are run on the so-called x86 architectures, a family of instruction set architectures based on the Intel microprocessors.
The booming mobile network and cloud computing are run by data centers all over the world, making for strong server chip demand.
Qualcomm, which specializes in mobile chips, has spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing substitutions for Intel server chips based on the ARM architectures.
Qualcomm began selling a server chip, the Centriq 2400 based on ARM, from 2017. At launch in November 2017, the chip line had drawn interests from potential customers such as Microsoft, whose Azure is the world’s second-largest cloud service provider.
But since then Qualcomm has been silent about the Centriq chip’s progress.
The HXT joint venture was also part of Qualcomm’s bid to challenge Intel’s server chip market dominance. The partnership with the provincial government would potentially have given the company easier access to the Chinese data center market, as Guizhou wants to become a big data hub in China.
“Designing and manufacturing such a large complicated chip means spending lots and lots of money and time,” said Stewart. “It seems that HXT couldn’t stick it out.”
]]>May to ban Huawei from providing ‘core’ parts of UK 5G network – The Guardian
What happened: Britain will allow Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei limited access to the country’s next generation of mobile networks, known as 5G. Prime Minister Theresa May ordered the ban after a meeting with ministers on the National Security Council (NSC). Huawei will be allowed to supply some “noncore” parts of the 5G mobile infrastructure like antennas. However, some May’s cabinet ministers, including the foreign secretary, the home secretary, and the defense secretary, raised concerns, arguing instead for a total ban on the supplier.
Why it’s important: While Huawei can say that it has avoided a complete ban from supplying 5G equipment to the UK, providing only “noncore” equipment is not exactly an endorsement of its repeated claims that it is free of interference from the Chinese government. Also, Huawei is already a “noncore” supplier for Britain’s existing mobile network. The partial acceptance implies that the British government still buys US allegations that Huawei’s equipment could be used by Beijing for spying or sabotage.
]]>The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) of China said in a press conference Tuesday that it approved of foreign tech firms conducting cloud-computing business in China via cooperation with local firms.
“Under the premise of obeying Chinese laws and policies, foreign companies are welcomed to participate in the cloud computing market and help to boost the market,” Wen Ku, head of the MIIT information and communication department, said in the press conference.
The MIIT statement follows Premier Li Keqiang’s proposal to allow trial operations for foreign cloud-service providers. In the meeting with 36 heads of foreign corporations earlier this month, Li said China is considering a “liberalization pilot” in a free trade zone to open cloud computing to foreign companies.
Foreign cloud service providers would be allowed to build their own data centers in the free trade zone, according to the proposal.
China’s current rules on data storage and cybersecurity forbid foreign firms to provide cloud-computing services in China directly. Even though cloud giants such as Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM have businesses in China, they have to find local partners and license them to use their own technologies and run their brands. These businesses are effectively operated by their Chinese partners.
For example, Apple began transferring the iCloud accounts of its China-based customers to a local partner’s servers. Apple’s China-based customers had to agree with a new terms of use signed with the Chinese operator before they could continue using Apple’s cloud storage service.
With the new MIIT approval, foreign firms are expected to be able to set up joint ventures with local partners and conduct cloud-computing businesses. It gives foreign firms better access to China’s fast-growing cloud-computing market, but is still far from a free market.
Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies described such practice as “making discretionary, piecemeal adjustments rather than outright liberalization,” according to the Wall Street Journal.
The announcement comes as the US-China trade war edges closer to a deal, which tries to resolve long-standing concerns about Beijing’s economic practices, including forcing American companies to turn over valuable technology as a condition of doing business in China and restricting American firms from participating in certain industries.
]]>Surveillance Clips Show Chinese Billionaire With Accuser – The Associated Press
What happened: Two edited videos of JD.com founder Richard Liu and a woman who has accused him of rape were posted Monday to Chinese microblogging site Weibo. The woman filed a lawsuit against Liu on Apr. 16, four months after prosecutors declined to file charges citing lack of evidence. One video shows that Liu and the woman, named Liu Jingyao (no relation), left a group dinner in Minneapolis and the other shows the woman holding Liu’s arm as they walked to her apartment. The law firm representing Liu Jingyao said the videos are consistent with what she told law enforcement, but Liu’s attorney in Minnesota said the clips had dispelled “the misinformation and false claims that have been widely circulated.”
Why it’s important: Though nothing in the videos disproves Liu Jingyao’s account of the alleged attack, the two videos have sparked widespread discussion on Weibo. Many have commented that the videos reveal a “plot reversal,” indicating that Liu may have been falsely accused. The Associated Press reported that Liu’s attorney showed the news agency full, unedited surveillance videos, which contained the same footage as the online videos. The user behind the account, named “Mingzhou Events” (translated), is unknown. It was created on Jan. 31 and has no other posts.
]]>A repository containing a large number of user names and passwords for Chinese video-streaming site Bilibili was found on open-source software development platform GitHub, Chinese media reported on Monday.
The repository, called “Bilibili website backend codes,” has been taken down by GitHub “due to excessive use of resources,” said the company. It contained more than 50 megabytes of source code, according to a Reddit post dated Monday. A key opinion leader (KOL) on microblogging site Weibo posted two screenshots of the leaked codes, which has since been taken down. One screenshot shows the redacted username and password for a Bilibili user.
The repository was created by a GitHub user named “openbilibili,” who hasn’t uploaded any other projects. The GitHub profile shows the account was created in April.
Bilibili is a video-streaming website with a focus on providing content, particularly animation, comics, and games (ACG) to a younger user segment. It is backed by Chinese tech giants Alibaba and Tencent and listed on Nasdaq. The site had 92.8 million monthly active users as of end-2018.
Bilibili responded on Monday that the company had reviewed the leaked codes and found that they were from an older version of the website, according to The Paper (in Chinese). “We have taken defensive steps to ensure the accident won’t compromise user data security,” said the company.
Bilibili also said that it had reported the case to the authorities.
The GitHub repository had amassed at least 6,000 stars, a tool for users to bookmark a post, before it was taken down. However, downloading from GitHub is simple: On every repository page there is a “clone and download” button which allows users, even if they are not logged in to the website, to download the whole project as a compressed file.
GitHub is a web-based platform that developers use to collaborate on projects, helping developers track changes in source code during software development. However, the service has been used for other purposes, such as data leakage and protesting long working hours in China’s tech industry.
Another GitHub-linked data leak relating to Chinese tech company was revealed in March by Dutch cybersecurity researcher Victor Gevers, who discovered a publicly available trove of what appeared to be Huawei enterprise network credentials on the platform.
]]>Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei announced on Monday that its first-quarter revenue grew by 39% year on year to RMB 179.7 billion (around $26.8 billion) and net profit margin was about 8%.
The company said in an unaudited quarterly earnings report that it had signed 40 commercial contracts for 5G, the next generation of mobile networks that promise ultra-fast data speeds, with global carriers and shipped more than 70,000 5G base stations to markets around the world in the first quarter of 2019.
“2019 will be a year of large-scale deployment of 5G around the world, meaning that Huawei’s Carrier Business Group has unprecedented opportunities for growth,” said the company in a press release.
Huawei said its consumer business, which includes smartphones, PCs, and other internet-powered devices, performed well with smartphone shipments reached 59 million units in the quarter.
Huawei has been releasing annual reports since 2006 when it published its 2005 financial figures, though the company is not listed on any stock market. However, it is the first time that Huawei has released a quarterly earnings report, as the company is seeking to shore up trust in its scandal-plagued 5G equipment business.
A Huawei spokesperson declined to comment on why the company decided to start publishing its quarterly earnings report at this specific time, and would not confirm whether it would be a routine.
Huawei is the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker and has become a major 5G technology supplier. But the US government has been campaigning to exclude Huawei equipment from its allies’ 5G networks, citing security concerns. The latest allegation from the US government includes claims that Chinese security agencies help fund Huawei.
Huawei reported in March that it earned RMB 721.2 billion and generated a net profit of RMB 59.3 billion in 2018, despite crackdowns by the US over its technology.
]]>CIA warning over Huawei – The Times
What happened: The Times reported on Sunday that the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had accused Chinese telecom giant Huawei of receiving funding from the People’s Liberation Army, China’s National Security Commission, and a third branch of the Chinese state intelligence network, citing a “UK source.” The CIA shared the claims with other members of the “Five Eyes,” an intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, earlier this year. The CIA awarded a “strong but not iron-cast classification of certainty” to its finding and added that the Chinese ministry of state security had approved the funding, according to the report.
Why it’s important: The latest news is the most specific to date concerning US allegations about the nature of Huawei’s relationship with the Chinese government, though the company has stressed that it is not controlled by any government agency. The allegations come as the US campaigns to persuade its allies to ban Huawei equipment from their 5G network rollouts. The US accusation was based on the assumption that Huawei would have “no choice but to comply with demands of the Chinese government,” but this time the CIA provides evidence: its funding. Again, Huawei responded by saying that the accusation is backed up by “zero evidence from anonymous sources.”
]]>In 2018, Transsion Holdings sold 124 million mobile phones, capturing 48.7% of Africa’s mobile phone market, and 7% worldwide. But the Shenzhen-based mobile phone maker is far from a household name in China, unlike its domestic peers Xiaomi and Huawei. In fact, Transsion has never sold a single mobile phone in China.
On April 1, Africa’s top mobile phone vendor filed an application to go public on Shanghai Stock Exchange’s new tech board, planning to raise RMB 3.3 billion (around $490 million) in its initial public offering (IPO).
Transsion Holdings, which owns three phone brands—Tecno, Itel, and Infinix—held a combined 48.7% share of Africa’s mobile phone market last year, according to its prospectus, citing data from research firm IDC.
But sluggish growth in China is pushing domestic smartphone companies to look elsewhere for growth, and as many are discovering, Africa holds promise. This puts Transsion in a vulnerable position, especially since its low-tech, low-cost phones will find it increasingly difficult to compete with the sleek-yet-affordable smartphones produced by the likes of Huawei and Xiaomi.
The company was founded in 2006 by former employees of Ningbo Bird Company, which was once one of the biggest mobile phone makers in China. Transsion’s co-founder and CEO, Zhu Zhaojiang, was formerly the director of Ningbo Bird’s overseas business unit. Zhu told Chinese media in 2016 that while visiting 90 countries and regions to promote Bird phones, he noticed relatively little mobile phone competition in Africa and saw that it could be a huge market.
In its prospectus, Transsion states that the company is “committed to providing overseas emerging market users with high-quality smart communications terminal devices.” In addition to its dominance in Africa, the company also has 6.7% of India’s mobile phone market.
A year after establishing itself in Africa, the company released the Tecno T780 in Nigeria, becoming the first phone maker to offer a mobile phone with dual SIM card slots. The company even released a phone with four SIM card slots, the Tecno 4Runner, in 2008.
Transsion’s chief marketing officer Liu Junjie attributed the company’s success to its localization strategy. “Most African users have more than one SIM card, but they can’t really afford more than one phone. Seeing this demand, we took the lead in providing dual-SIM card phones in Africa, and they were very popular,” Liu told the Southern Daily (in Chinese).
To avoid expensive call rates between different telecom networks, many African users carry two or more SIM cards and swap them as needed. According to a report by US-based mobile devices research firm ScientiaMobile, around 87% of Kenya’s users used multi-SIM smartphones in 2018, the highest percentage anywhere in the world. In other African countries such as Ghana, Nigeria, and Egypt, more than 70% of smartphone usage originates from devices with multi-SIM functionality.
The Africa opportunity is not lost on other Chinese phone brands.
In response to questions from Technode, Transsion said it continued to observe consumer needs in emerging markets to deliver differentiated products, adding:
“We are happy to see Chinese enterprises entering overseas markets. And we believe that Chinese brands should work together to expand influence worldwide.”
“The strategy of other players, such as Huawei, is to simply sell standard devices to the African market, and the devices are the same as what they sell elsewhere,” Sun Yanbiao, director of Shenzhen-based Mobile No.1 Research Institute, told TechNode. “But Transsion sells devices that are customized for the African market, and this is the company’s main advantage,” he said.
Despite describing itself no less than five times as the “king of Africa’s mobile phone market” in its prospectus, the company cites the growing presence of rival phone makers on the continent as a risk to its business.
Transsion’s advantage derives from its strategy of delivering phones as cheap as $10 to emerging markets. The company’s dominance in these emerging markets comes from selling low-cost units in high volumes.
In 2018, Transsion earned RMB 22.5 billion by selling 124 million mobile phones. Of that total, 72.6% (90 million units) were feature phones—handsets with physical keyboards and limited functionality.
Its smartphone sales were more profitable, but pale in comparison to the revenue of companies such as Huawei, which earned RMB 348.9 billion by selling 206 million smartphones globally in the same year.
As of the end of 2018, Transsion only had 34.3% of Africa’s smartphone market, but that still puts the company ahead of Samsung (22.6%) and Huawei (9.9%), according to an IDC report.
Huawei entered the Africa market in 2011 by launching a smartphone priced from $100 in Nigeria, the continent’s most populous country. Since then, Huawei has been focused on providing affordable smartphones to the continent, hoping to seize market share from feature phone makers.
Huawei also sells its handsets via telecom carriers such as South Africa’s Vodacom and MTN and Nigeria’s Globacom. It is the biggest telecoms equipment supplier in Africa.
Now Transsion faces an additional competitor in the form of Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi.
Xiaomi announced in January that it would set up a business unit to expand on the African continent, appointing Vice-President Wang Lingming to head up the new unit.
Xiaomi has been selling its handsets in Africa since 2015 by cooperating with local distributors, but this regional unit marks its official debut on the continent.
“In the past few years, China’s mobile phone market has become saturated, so Chinese phone makers are all looking for new markets to absorb their overcapacity,” said smartphone industry blogger Ye Long, who runs the technology blog Miao Telecoms. “The global mobile phone market is in a period of sluggish growth, but Africa is still on a rise.”
Just a few weeks before the announcement of its African unit, Xiaomi had announced that its line of mid-range smartphones, the Redmi, was being spun off as a separate sub-brand. Redmi, along with Xiaomi’s India-focused brand Poco, will continue selling affordable handsets to price-sensitive markets.
In February, Xiaomi signed a partnership agreement with Africa’s leading e-commerce platform, the Nigeria-based online marketplace Jumia, to open a Mi official store to access millions of customers across 14 countries, including Nigeria, Egypt, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Morocco, and Ghana.
Xiaomi’s first release in Africa will be the Redmi Go, which uses the Android Go, a stripped-down operating system developed by Google for lower-end devices.
The average selling price (ASP) of Xiaomi’s smartphones was around $143 in 2018, according to Xiaomi’s annual report from last year. Meanwhile, Transsion smartphones had an ASP of just under $69, with feature phones as low as $9.80 in 2018.
The moves hint that Xiaomi’s strategy in Africa may focus on selling affordable smartphones through e-commerce platforms. “The e-commerce model is part of Xiaomi’s DNA and we believe that working with Jumia will help us bring innovation for everyone across the continent,” Xiaomi vice-president Wang Xiang was quoted in state-run English-language newspaper China Daily.
When contacted by TechNode, Xiaomi’s African business unit declined to comment on its strategy for branching out into the African market.
As compared with Xiaomi’s e-commerce strategy, Transsion relies more on its massive offline retail networks across the continent.
Transsion’s prospectus states that its sales model depends primarily on dealers and secondarily on network operators. “We have been selling products in over 70 countries and regions all over the world, and have established partnerships with over 2,000 dealers,” said the company.
Transsion seems unlikely to change that approach. According to their prospectus, the company plans to invest as much as RMB 333 million, accounting for 10% of its total funding amount, in building out the information management systems of its 6,000 retail shops across Africa in the next two years.
“Transsion and Xiaomi are eyeing different groups of customers because of the huge gap between their product prices,” said Sun. He added that there was barely any overlap between Transsion’s retail networks and Xiaomi’s e-commerce approach of cooperating with Jumia, whose network only covers relatively well-developed markets such as Nigeria and Kenya.
Sun sees the dynamic between Transsion and Xiaomi as more cooperative than competitive. “The two phone makers are working together to develop the huge African smartphone market,” he said of the current situation.
Still, though Transsion sidestepped the fierce competition in China by exploring emerging markets, it’s indisputable that domestic competitors are now making inroads into its home court.
In the short term, it may enjoy a kind of truce with Xiaomi due to differences in demographic targeting and marketing strategy, but the battle for emerging-market consumers between the two giants seems inevitable.
Ye, the blogger, said that, given Xiaomi’s success in India and its advantage in e-commerce, the company could easily erode Transsion’s current competitive advantage in offline retailing.
“It’s clear that Transsion’s easy days in Africa are coming to an end,” said Ye.
]]>Over the last year or so, Beijing-based online celebrity Liu Qikun has noticed a significant drop in his income from videos: from as high as RMB 200,000 (around $30,000) a month to a few tens of thousands. Liu pursues a full-time career based around Douyin, one of China’s most popular short-video platforms.
Argentinian app star Brian O’Shea, who studies in Beijing, has seen a similar slump in the growth of followers. Back during the “golden days” of the app last year, “I got a million fans in 24 hours at some point,” he told TechNode. “Every time I would upload a jiaozi video, a dumpling video, I would get 200,000 fans,” he said, referring to the humorous clips in which he consumes unusual dumplings of his own creation.
“That was great, but now it’s slowed down because the algorithms change depending on the number of fans. So now it’s really hard for a big account to get a good promotion,” O’Shea said. While updated official figures aren’t available, his personal impression is that Chinese viewers aren’t spending as much time on Douyin as before.
In 2018, however, user traffic on the app soared. Last fall, Zhang Fuping–vice president of Bytedance, the company behind Douyin and its international version TikTok–said that the domestic daily active user (DAU) count had hit 200 million as of October. Monthly active users (MAU) surpassed 400 million, he added.
Both figures rose more than 30% from statistics released by the company just five months prior. In December, another Bytedance report even showed a slightly higher rate of growth near the end of the year. The simultaneous explosion of TikTok on the international scene has been similarly well-documented. The company hasn’t publicly released active user numbers for Douyin in 2019, however.
[infogram id=”douyin-mau-and-dau-1h0r6rw11d834ek”]
While figures collected by research group iiMedia are much lower than Bytedance’s claims, analyst Liu Jiehao (who is not related to Liu Qikun) agrees that Douyin saw an “explosive stage of growth” last year. “In 2019 Douyin’s monthly active users basically stayed around the level of 230 million,” Liu Jiehao told TechNode.
That plateau in popularity is reflected across the industry: after reaching an estimated penetration rate of some 60% among Chinese mobile internet users in 2018, short-videos simply have less room to grow. In February the research group predicted that while China’s short-video audience will keep expanding in the next two years, year-on-year growth will drop to around 25% in 2019, compared to more than 100% in 2018.
Opportunities to monetize have a more optimistic outlook, at least for the near future. The short-video industry reached RMB 11.7 billion ($1.7 billion) in value over 2018, according to iiMedia. This year, they’ll generate around RMB 23 billion ($3.5 billion), according to projections by the research group.
When asked whether Douyin KOLs have experienced a slowdown in visitor traffic over recent months, a Bytedance representative declined to comment.
If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here.
Influencer Liu Qikun, whose online handle is “Uncle Beibei” (our translation), supplements his earnings from short videos with a job at a multi-channel network (MCN), where he advises other Douyin celebrities on their careers.
He’s staked a lot on the potential of the short-video industry. “About half a year after I encountered Douyin, I quit my banking job [in Hulun Beir, Inner Mongolia] and came to Beijing to make short videos.”
If that seems abrupt, consider Liu’s similarly dramatic rise on Douyin. For his first ever entry on the platform, he lip-synced Keith Ape’s “It G Ma” from the front seat of a car for a video challenge—a competition among influencers to make the catchiest rendition of trending content.
Liu’s exaggerated facial expressions and comedic timing paid off, gaining him first place in the challenge rankings as well as 50,000 followers.
After roughly 10 months and some viral videos later, Liu had racked up 1 million fans. He began receiving invitations from Douyin to pair up with potential advertising clients, as well as attend offline events to meet other influencers.
However, many of those events required him to visit Beijing. To keep growing his presence on Douyin, Liu decided to move to the capital. Now, around two years after his first video, he has nearly 3 million followers on Douyin as well as his job at the MCN.
“With Douyin and other apps, the difference is that on Douyin the content can grow viewers more quickly. There is more content and categories of content. To put it another way, there are more users…”
However, Liu considers his full-time Douyin-based career to be rare. He suspects that’s due to the sheer growth in number of Douyin influencers, causing individual celebrities to earn less on average.
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Other reasons, according to iiMedia analyst Liu Jiehao, include a general economic slowdown that’s tightened budgets for advertising brands. In addition, the rise of MCNs like Liu Qikun’s have helped increase the “supply” of content, not to mention stars: besides advising and managing influencers’ careers, his company also scouts for new talent.
In Liu Qikun’s opinion, the lifespan of an average “pan-entertainment” influencer without a specialty—such as makeup tutorials, for instance—is only six or seven months.
“Audiences will suffer aesthetic fatigue,” he told TechNode. Liu himself switches up his style every three months or so based on trends; his repertoire includes slapstick humor, imitations of children, as well as scripted/subtitled stories, all 15 seconds or less.
“If you haven’t put out a major hit for a long time, they might forget about you,” Liu said.
If you can’t see the YouTube player above, try watching here.
At the Beijing-based MCN where Liu works, many influencers balance Douyin with other internet tech-related work, or full-time employment.
Even O’Shea, who has racked up more than 5 million Douyin followers while still a student, isn’t sure how long the platform will last. “It’s really hard to say, because the Chinese market grows fast, changes fast.”
“Even if it [Douyin] has slowed down, it’s still the hottest app out there. So far nothing has come out to replace it,” O’Shea said.
“It can be stressful” being a short-video celebrity, O’Shea said before pausing to take a photo with a fan. It was the third time he’d been approached during a 30-minute phone conversation with TechNode. “But it’s still the best job in the world.”
In addition to acting, a related passion, he hopes to continue creating short videos “at least for the next five years.”
Liu Qikun, the influencer who moved to Beijing to pursue online performance, believes that Douyin’s business is a “sustainable thing, as long as the internet is around.” Just like YouTube elsewhere in the world, short-video and livestreaming platforms have brought influencers and audience members closer across China.
Liu attributes the success of Douyin and similar apps to creating new forms of interaction. “Before, you wouldn’t see what other people’s lives are like, but now you can see it on your phone.”
With additional reporting by Cassidy McDonald and Sheng Wei, and contributions from Tony Xu.
]]>Amazon is shrinking its e-commerce offerings in China, where market share for the US mega e-tailer is barely negligible amid fierce competition from countless rivals including giants such as Alibaba and JD.
“We will cease support for third-party merchants on Amazon China’s website starting Jul. 18, 2019,” (our translation) the company said in a statement to TechNode on Thursday. Amazon provides its merchants with tools to boost selling, including fulfillment and advertising services, according to its website.
Its withdrawal from the domestic marketplace will allow the company to sharpen focus on its cross-border e-commerce business, which mainly sells overseas products to Chinese customers, and its cloud computing service, it said in the statement.
The global e-commerce giant had struggled to gain share since it strode into China’s booming e-commerce industry in August 2004 through the acquisition of online book seller Joyo for $75 million from Xiaomi founder Lei Jun, the largest shareholder of the company at the time.
Yet according to market research institute eMarketer, Amazon China held less than 1% share of the total e-commerce market as of June 2018, eclipsed by Alibaba, which holds a share of more than half the market, and JD.com with less than a fifth. Social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, local retailer Suning, and Tencent-backed Vip.com round out the top five.
To some, the news is just a formal acknowledgement of Amazon’s reality in China.
“Honestly, I didn’t even know they still had a domestic business left,” Ker Zheng, marketing specialist at a Shenzhen-based e-commerce solution provider Azoya, told TechNode.
“They should have done away with the domestic business a long time ago. There’s no point to compete with Alibaba, JD, and JD isn’t even that profitable,” he added.
Netizens on social media appear to agree. “Amazon shut their in-house inventory business several years ago. Third-party merchants business is also not doing well. For me, Amazon has quit the game for a long time,” (our translation) one Weibo user using the handle Summer wrote in a post dated Thursday.
The company’s strategic decision to retain key segments is a reflection of its platform’s polarity in China. “Not a big deal for me as long as Kindle and the cross-border operation is around. Amazon offers smaller discounts than Taobao and JD,” a Weibo user going by Shanika said.
China’s e-commerce market requires deep commitment that not all companies are prepared for.
“Basically all platforms provide a commodity service, since everyone sells the same products. To differentiate you have to either provide a lower price or a better customer experience, which means wider product selection, faster shipping. All of that requires a ton of investment and not making money for a long time. JD is willing to do it but not Amazon,” Zheng said.
Commitment can also mean evolving with consumers. Cao Lei, director of the China E-Commerce Research Center, attributes the company’s failure to gain a solid foothold to its lack of innovation. “The e-commerce platforms in China, both old and new, have developed lots of localized business models, such as Pinduoduo’s “group purchase” model and multi-echelon distribution model, to acclimatize themselves to the local market. But Amazon has missed many chances to make innovations, and lost a large number of users,” said Cao.
Regardless of its missteps, Amazon maintains that the move is not a complete pull-back from the China market, but is “a transitional period” (our translation).
However, the US giant also lags the competition in the cross-border e-commerce segment.
China’s leading e-commerce platforms, including Alibaba and JD, announced commitments to assist with importing a combined $250 billion worth of foreign goods at the first-ever China Import Expo held in Shanghai in November.
Rivals Tmall Global, NetEase Kaola, JD Worldwide, and Xiaohongshu lead the market, leaving Amazon China with a 6% share of the vertical as of the fourth quarter of 2018, according to data from research institute Analysys.
“[It] makes much more sense to focus on cross border imports since they have an advantage in sourcing foreign goods,” Zheng of Azoya told TechNode.
The company’s other remaining business in China faces hurdles of its own. Amazon Web Services (AWS), the empire’s cloud computing platform, is a slow mover in the burgeoning cloud computing market.
Figures from Synergy Research Group showed that it held the leading share of the Asia-Pacific region with 24.1% share in revenue in the fourth quarter of 2018. However, in China, domestic tech giants hold the lion’s share with AliCloud comprising 40.5%, Tencent coming in a distant second with 16.5%, and AWS with around 9.7% share.
AWS made its China debut in August 2016, when it licensed the rights to Chinese telecommunication and data service provider Sinnet to offer local cloud services. China’s cyberspace watchdog requires foreign enterprises partner with local companies in order to run cloud infrastructure services in China for data security reasons.
Early reports about the company’s shrinking China business were fractured, signaling internal confusion about the move.
Reuters reported on Wednesday that Amazon was preparing to close its China marketplace by withdrawing support for third-party merchants over the next 90 days. Chinese media also reported the closure of its main domestic retail business in China, citing a source as saying some employees are now hunting for new jobs.
However, according to China Business Journal, Amazon China announced the decision to close its e-commerce business including the proprietary retail segment in an internal meeting that took place Thursday morning.
Amazon China’s president, Zhang Wenyi, who took the post in April 2016, will reportedly leave, according to an unnamed executive. Around 2,000 people work for the company in China, and will learn more about the company’s layoff plans next week, said the source.
Amazon is not the first international retailer to fail in China. The platform’s refusal to adapt to Chinese consumer preferences may have also taken a toll.
“If Amazon continues its cross-border e-commerce into China, it is highly suggested that they adapt and provide Chinese consumers the entertaining shopping experience that Chinese consumers like, instead of a global interface and rigid structure pushed to the consumer,” said Ron Wardle, CEO of e-commerce solutions firm, Export Now (Shanghai) Inc.
Cao of the E-Commerce Research Center agreed that Amazon China’s special “foreign-company style” corporate culture led to its weak execution of innovative ideas. “Decisions such as changing festival logos and launching new projects have to be approved by the company’s US headquarters, which results in its inefficiency and lack of indigenization,” he said.
JD.com founder and CEO Richard Liu—a leading figure in China’s e-commerce landscape whose own company and management has recently come under close scrutiny—uses a battle metaphor to describe the dynamic in a March 2018 video interview.
“It’s like soldiers who are told that they only have 10,000 bullets and before shooting each of the bullets, they have to check with the general whether more ammunition is coming. How can you expect the soldiers to win a war like this?” Liu said.
Additional reporting by Emma Lee and Wei Sheng. With contributions from Colum Murphy.
]]>FCC looks to slap down China Mobile’s attempt to join US telecom system – TechCrunch
What happened: The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Ajit Pai said on Wednesday that he opposed China Mobile providing connectivity and mobile services in the US, citing security concerns, and said the commission would vote on an order to deny the company’s application in May. “It is clear that China Mobile’s application to provide telecommunications services in our country raises substantial and serious national security and law enforcement risks. Therefore, I do not believe that approving it would be in the public interest,” Pai said in a statement. China Mobile, which filed the application in 2011, was not seeking to provide domestic cell service but international connections between the US and locations abroad.
Why it’s important: The denial of China Mobile’s application is without precedent, it also comes at time when the US battle against China’s expansion in the telecoms industry escalates. The Trump administration has banned equipment from Huawei, China’s largest telecom equipment company, over fears that the Chinese government could use it as a gateway to spy or disrupt western communication networks. The FCC also said China Mobile was indirectly and ultimately owned and controlled by the Chinese government and calls through the company’s networks “could be intercepted for surveillance and make the domestic network vulnerable to hacking and other risks.”
]]>Apple and Qualcomm reached a settlement on Tuesday to drop all litigation over patent royalties that extended over two years, clearing the way for the American electronics maker to use Qualcomm’s 5G chips in its new iPhones.
Apple is reportedly planning to purchase 5G modem chips from Qualcomm for use in its 2020 iPhones. Nikkei Asian Review quoted a source as saying that Apple will purchase modem chips, including 5G, from the chipmaker for iPhones in 2020 after the deal is finalized.
The report also said that the deal came too late for Apple to use Qualcomm chips in its 2019 iPhone lineup, but the company has already started testing Qualcomm’s 5G chips for 2020 devices.
Before the Apple-Qualcomm dispute was settled, Apple was facing a 2020 release date for 5G iPhones, well behind competitors including Samsung, which will launch the Galaxy S10 5G in May, and Huawei, which will launch its first 5G smartphones, the Mate 20X and the foldable Mate X, this summer.
Apple’s rival Huawei had indicated on more than one occasion that it was willing to sell its 5G Balong 5000 chipsets to Apple. Huawei CEO Ren Zhengfei said the company was “open to Apple in this regard” in an interview with CNBC that aired Monday.
However, Apple gave no indication of taking Huawei up on its offer. Huawei’s rotating Chairman Ken Hu said on Tuesday at an annual analyst summit in Shenzhen that the company hadn’t held discussions with Apple on 5G chips. Hu also added that he looked forward to Apple’s competition in the 5G phone market.
Huawei also plans to release another 5G smartphone before October, said Shawn Sheng, the vice president of Huawei’s Handsets Product Line and Consumer Business Group, on Tuesday’s Huawei analyst summit.
]]>Chinese mobile game giant Tencent is in touch with several original design manufacturers (ODMs) to develop its own gaming phone, according to an unconfirmed report (in Chinese) by Chinese media 36Kr.
Citing sources, the report said that the Inlab of Tencent’s Interactive Entertainment Group, the company’s game business division, is working on a gaming phone, which utilizes a Qualcomm processor, and uses hardware from one of the ODMs, the lineup of which is said to include Taiwan-based Asus, Singapore’s Razer, and Xiaomi-backed Blackshark.
The gaming phone may be sold under a Tencent brand or both brands of Tencent and the OMD that makes the phone. The report didn’t give details about the price the phone or when it would be available in the market.
A spokesman for Tencent declined to comment when contacted by TechNode.
The computer and smartphone maker Asus has been negotiating with Tencent to develop a gaming smartphone that highlights Tencent mobile games, according to Taiwanese media Digitimes (in Chinese). But that plan was later interrupted when gaming hardware manufacturer Razer appeared on the scene seeking similar cooperation with Tencent.
The 36Kr report quoted an insider close to Blackshark as saying that the gaming phone maker was still discussing with Tencent to roll out a crossover smartphone, which would use a Qualcomm 855 processor, in the second half of the year.
Blackshark did not reply to TechNode’s request for confirmation.
Tencent, the biggest gaming company in the world, may be seeking areas for growth by entering the gaming hardware as gaming revenues flag amid increased scrutiny of the industry by Chinese authorities. The country’s publication watchdog, the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television, stopped the approval of all video game titles in March 2018, which was not resumed until the end of the year.
As a result, Tencent’s revenue from gaming fell 4% in the third quarter of 2018 and saw no year-on-year growth in the fourth quarter.
However, making hardware is never easy for internet companies, and competition in the smartphone market is already fierce.
“Across the world, the only internet company that succeeded in the smartphone market in Google… Tencent’s gaming phone plan won’t see any results in the short term,” according to a smartphone industry insider quoted by 36Kr.
Another example is selfie and social app-maker Meitu, which on Monday gave up its loss-making smartphone business by handing it over to Xiaomi, marking an end of its six-year experiment with smartphones.
]]>短视频平台试点防沉迷系统:每天限40分钟 禁打赏 – Xinhua
What happened: China’s internet watchdog will require all major short video platforms in China to roll out “anti-addiction” parental controls by the end of May. The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has been testing the system on popular short video apps such as Bytedance’s Douyin, Huoshan Short Video, and Tencent-backed Kuaishou. The system allows parents to turn on a “youth mode” feature that restricts minors to 40 minutes of use per day and disables gift-giving or account top-up activity.
Why it’s important: Chinese regulators are becoming increasingly vigilant about the amount of screen time minors are exposed to, a topic that is bearing increasing scrutiny across the globe. A recent New York Times article correlating poverty with higher screen time echoes realities in China. State media (in Chinese) said last year that “left-behind children,” or those who stay behind in rural areas while their parents work in big cities, were especially obsessed with online entertainment. However, apps in China are not barred from collecting personal information from minors, whereas apps are forbidden in the US to collect data users under the age of 13 without parental consent.
]]>March mobile phone shipments to China fall 6 percent as economy slows – Reuters
What happened: Shipments of mobile phones to China faces declined for the fourth consecutive month, falling 6% month-on-month in March, according to a report (in Chinese) by the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT). Shipments dropped to 28.4 million units in March from 30.2 million units in March 2018. The number of new devices launched also fell 35% from a year earlier, with 52 new mobile phones hitting the market. Mobile phone shipments in 2018 fell 15.5% year-on-year in China, the world’s largest mobile phone market.
Why it’s important: In addition to the slowdown in economic growth, analysts also attribute the underperformance of the mobile phone market to a lull in feature innovation before widespread 5G network rollout. The domestic mobile phone market is nearly saturated and is waiting on next-generation wireless technology to bring new profit margins. A report by Counterpoint Research said 5G smartphone shipments are expected to grow 255% by 2021, almost reaching 110 million units. The report indicated growth would be slow during the initial commercialization phase in 2019, but an uptick in sales would appear once 5G infrastructures were ready.
]]>单日19.3亿元!“手机+AIoT”战略落地 小米9周年米粉节收官 – Sina Finance
What Happened: Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi recorded RMB 1.9 billion (around $280 million) in sales during the company’s ninth anniversary promotional event on Tuesday known as the “Mi Fan Festival.” The revenue from the one-day festival nearly doubled revenue generated by the event last year, which totaled RMB 1 billion. Xiaomi said in a statement that sales benefited from the company’s new strategy focusing on the development of smartphones and artificial intelligence of things, or AIoT, though it did not include revenue figures for AIoT devices.
Why it’s important: Xiaomi’s annual financial report 2018 showed that revenue from its internet of things (IoT) and lifestyle products segment accounted for 25% of its total revenue, and surged 86.9% year-on-year to RMB 43.8 billion. The company did not disclose total figures for AIoT devices but did include sales volume for specific devices during the event, including the more than 450,000 XiaoAi Speaker units sold, which generated more than RMB 100 million. Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun said in January that the company planned to invest at least RMB 10 billion into the AIoT sector over the next five years.
]]>Huawei is ‘open’ to selling its 5G modems, but only to Apple – Engadget
What happened: Huawei is reportedly “open” to selling its 5G Balong 5000 chipsets, but only to its rival Apple. The chipset is said to be the world’s first 5G modem that fully supports interoperability over 5G networks built on 4G infrastructure and dedicated 5G equipment. Chinese media reported Tuesday that Huawei refused to comment on the issue and a Huawei chip business insider said that this might be Apple’s “wishful thinking.”
Why it’s important: Following its feud with Qualcomm, a leader in 5G-enabled chips, Apple will not be able to offer a 5G iPhone until 2020 should be unable to find a ready supply of modems. Apple’s new supplier Intel won’t have chips available in time to support the 2019 release of 5G iPhones. Meanwhile, Samsung turned down Apple’s request to supply its 5G modem chip, with the South Korean smartphone giant saying that the supply volume was insufficient. As a result, Huawei has become one of the few options left for Apple. The Balong 5000 is “already available” to support Huawei’s 5G phones—the Mate 20X and the foldable Mate X—that will launch this summer, according to Huawei’s announcement from this year’s Mobile World Congress.
]]>华为Mate X折叠屏手机上架官方商城,6月开卖 – IT Home
What happened: Huawei’s new foldable smartphone, the Mate X, is now listed on Huawei’s official online store, the Vmall, though it is not yet available for purchase. The website doesn’t specify how much the foldable phone will cost, but Huawei said it would start at €2,299 (around $2,580) when announcing its launch at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona in February. The Chinese tech giant also said the phone would hit the market in the middle of 2019.
Why it’s important: The Huawei Mate X is the smartphone maker’s first 5G-enabled handset that folds into a 6.6-inch smartphone from an 8-inch tablet. Its whopping price tops that of the Samsung equivalent, the Galaxy Fold, which will sell for $1,980. Samsung is releasing the Galaxy Fold on Apr. 26, with AT&T and T-Mobile selling the phone in the US market. The Huawei handset, however, won’t be available in the US; the smartphone maker is cautious about the US market ever since carriers backed away from plans to sell its Mate 10 smartphone, reportedly after pressure from the US government.
]]>Fifteen shareholders of bicycle-rental startup Hello TransTech have withdrawn from the company, according to Chinese business research platform Tianyancha.com.
The Ant Finance-backed company’s registered capital was reduced by nearly RMB 992 million (around $147.6 million) to RMB 43 million, according to the platform. The changes were disclosed on Wednesday.
Hello TransTech did not respond to TechNode’s request for comment.
It’s possible that the company is optimizing its equity structure to prepare for a new round of financing, Chen Chengzheng, a corporate lawyer at Fujian Newstone Law Firm, told TechNode.
Bloomberg reported on Wednesday that the company planned to raise at least $500 million in funding. The company raised nearly RMB 4 billion from Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial and Primavera Capital Group in September 2018, valuing the company at $2.5 billion. Co-founder Li Kaizhu said in January that the company would seek a future IPO without specifying a time-frame.
The company rebranded itself as Hello TransTech from Hellobike in September to expand its services to a wider variety of transportation businesses. The company launched its carpooling service nationwide in January after its main rival Didi Chuxing suspended a similar service following the two murders of female passengers by their Didi Chuxing drivers.
]]>MIT cuts funding ties with Huawei and ZTE citing US investigations – South China Morning Post
What happened: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) pauses its funding ties with Chinese telecom equipment makers Huawei and ZTE in light of the US government warning against potential security risks associated with the two companies. MIT’s associate provost Richard Lester and vice-president for research Maria Zuber said in a letter to faculty on Wednesday that MIT “is not accepting new engagements or renewing existing ones with Huawei and ZTE or their respective subsidiaries due to federal investigations regarding violations of sanction restrictions.”
Why it’s important: MIT’s severing of ties follows similar moves by Stanford University, University of California at Berkeley, and University of Minnesota, which have all cut future research collaborations with Huawei. These actions are in response to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which US President Donald Trump signed into law last August. The act bans recipients of federal funding from using telecoms equipment made by Huawei or ZTE. US universities that fail to comply with the act by August 2020 risk losing federal research grants and other government funding, according to Reuters.
]]>European mobile network operator Orange announced on Wednesday that it had made Europe’s first voice and data call over a full 5G mobile network in cooperation with Chinese telecoms equipment maker ZTE.
Previous 5G calls in the region were made using Non-Standalone (NSA) architecture, which uses existing 4G network infrastructure to support 5G networks. The test, which took place in Valencia, Spain, used full Standalone (SA) mode, meaning the 5G network is built independently without architecture from current systems and therefore allows for 5G enhancements, according to the company statement. It was the first 5G SA call in Europe.
Spanish press reported the company’s plans to work with ZTE, Huawei and Nokia in its 5G trials across the country in early January. The operator stated that it would trial 5G technology in Valencia in partnership with ZTE, in Seville with Huawei, and in Vigo with Nokia.
“The test lays the foundation of 5G network’s commercial use, it also marks that Orange’s cooperation with ZTE has entered a more substantial phase, compared with its cooperations with Huawei and Nokia,” Xiang Ligang, director of the Information Consumption Alliance of China, told TechNode.
“But the test is still far from the commercial use of 5G,” Xiang said, adding that the process could last as long as a year.
Orange network director Mónica Sala said in the statement that it was a key to learn about this new and disruptive technology while taking advantage of continuous 4G growth to offer to customers “the best 5G network at the right time.” She added, “ZTE’s know-how has been shown in this milestone and we are very proud of the results.”
Orange is a French multinational telecoms operator. It is the fourth-largest mobile network operator in Europe after Vodafone, Telefónica and VEON.
ZTE chairman Li Zixue said last month in a shareholder meeting that the company owned more 3,000 5G patents, and had cooperated with 30 telecoms operators regarding 5G networks.
]]>一线|独家:金立破产清算案初审曝光 债权总额173亿元 – Tencent Tech
What happened: A Shenzhen court held a hearing of creditors associated with phone maker Gionee’s bankruptcy liquidation case on Tuesday. The court said that 372 creditors claimed debts of RMB 17.3 billion (around $2.6 billion) from Gionee. The debt administrator appointed by the court announced a repayment scheme based on liquidating Gionee’s assets and will form a creditors’ commission consisting of six creditors and one Gionee employee. The hearing pertains to a bankruptcy liquidation application filed by creditors, including Huaxing Bank, against Gionee, which the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court accepted in December 2018.
Why it’s important: Founded in 2002, Shenzhen-based Gionee was once one of China’s largest mobile phone makers. The company had 4.7% of China’s mobile phone market in 2012 and had expanded to India, Southeast Asia, and Africa before it went bankrupt. The company ran into trouble beginning in December 2017, and is facing hundreds of debt-related lawsuits. It was reported (in Chinese) that Gionee chairman Liu Lirong lost RMB 10 billion of company funds while gambling in Saipan.
]]>When the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) recently unveiled its list of nine companies that had been approved to file initial public offerings (IPO) on the proposed Science and Technology Innovation Board (STIB), one stuck out.
Suzhou-based semiconductor manufacturer Hejian Technology is remarkable because it is the only company on the list that has yet to turn a profit. It reported a net loss of RMB 146 million (around $21.7 million) in 2018, and has run at a loss for three years, according to its prospectus (in Chinese) filed to the exchange.
China’s two stock exchanges, also known as the A-share markets, have a series of stringent entry requirements that allow only profitable companies to list. For example, to file for an IPO on the SSE, an applicant must record net profits for the last three years which total more than RMB 30 million. The same rule applies to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE).
If Hejian Technology passes all of the regulatory reviews, a process expected to last as long as six months, and lists on the STIB, it would be the first loss-making company to launch an IPO on mainland China’s two stock exchanges, Dong Dengxin, director of the Financial Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told TechNode.
Other companies on the list included three electronic equipment makers, three high-end equipment manufacturers, and two companies from emerging industries such as new materials and biology.
In the past, strict listing criteria have forced China’s biggest tech firms including Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, and JD to list on exchanges overseas. Tencent is listed in Hong Kong while Baidu, Alibaba, and JD are registered in New York.
Now, China is significantly lowering the listing threshold for the new board. This signals the country’s most recent attempt to attract Chinese technology companies to IPO on home stock markets. The STIB’s registration system allows companies to go public if they satisfy one of the five sets of financial indicators, including one that stipulates revenues but not profit. The financial indicator Hejian Technology chose requires applicants to be valued at not less than RMB 3 billion and to have generated revenues of not less than RMB 300 million in the most recent year.
“By choosing Hejian Technology, the regulator is signaling that the STIB will be different from the main board and embrace promising high-tech firms that are not able to generate profits in the short run,” Dong said.
Before the STIB, China has tried several times to lower its stock market threshold.
The SZSE established the ChiNext board in 2009 to serve China’s high-growth enterprises. The ChiNext board has a relatively low barrier for entry, requiring applicants to have generated profits of more than RMB 10 million for two consecutive years combined.
The relatively low standard doesn’t make the ChiNext a first choice of high-tech firms, as it is still an approval-based IPO system where applicants have to go through a lengthy vetting process before listing.
China also set up a National Equities Exchange and Quotations (NEEQ) system for trading shares of public limited companies that are not qualified to be listed on either the Shenzhen or Shanghai stock exchanges.
The NEEQ doesn’t have a profitability requirement for listing, but retail investors with less than RMB 5 million of financial assets to invest are not allowed to trade. Partially because of the barrier set for investors, the NEEQ is facing a problem of low trading volume: local media (in Chinese) reported that the cumulative trading volume of NEEQ in 2018 was RMB 88.8 billion, down more than 60% compared with that of 2017.
Retail investors that want to trade on the new Shanghai bourse will also have to show that they have at least RMB 500,000 in investment capital and two years of equity trading experience.
According to the Shanghai Stock Exchange Statistical Annual (2018), the number of accounts owned by natural persons with RMB 500,000 in investment capital in the exchange was 5.7 million, representing 14.4% of the total accounts.
“The difference is that retail investors are allowed to indirectly participate in trading on the STIB through financial products provided by securities brokerages,” said Dong.
The SSE also stated that the investor access system was not meant to keep retail investors out of the STIB.
Hejian Technology is one of the three chipmakers that are on the new board’s list. The other two are: Shanghai-based TV box chipset manufacturer Amlogic, whose clients include Sony, Xiaomi, and Alibaba; and Shandong-province based Raytron Technology, which is a micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) sensor maker.
“The semiconductor industry is part of the new generation of the information technology sector, which ranks first on the China Securities Regulatory Commission’s list of recommended sectors for the STIB,” said Fang Jing, an analyst at the China Merchants Securities. Policy initiatives around the STIB and targeted sectors leave little doubt that the state is vigorously backing the semiconductor industry, he added.
The list reflects the 10 priority sectors highlighted by Made in China 2025, a government-led industrial program at the center of the contentious US-China trade dispute. The plan maps out China’s roadmap to surpass western technological prowess in advanced industries by using subsidies and pursuing intellectual property acquisition.
In addition to vast subsidies, loans and bonds, private capital is the latest resource being mobilized to meet the Made in China 2025 goal. “By launching the new board, the state is in fact providing venture capital with a smooth exit option, and stimulating more funds to flow into the high-tech sectors,” Dong said.
]]>联通eSIM全国开通 我们离扔掉实体SIM卡还有多远? – Ofweek
What happened: Chinese state-owned telecoms operator China Unicom announced Friday that it would extend its eSIM business nationwide after a year-long trial in seven cities. The telecom giant said it has built an eSIM management system using its own, self-developed technology. The company also announced that it has integrated its eSIM technology with more than 20 intelligent devices, including the Huawei Watch series and Apple Watch 4.
Why it’s important: eSIM adoption is widely seen as a critical factor to develop the market for the internet of things (IoT). All three Chinese telecom operators—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—have launched their respective eSIM solutions. Hardware manufacturers like Huawei and Apple are willing to promote the adoption of eSIM because it has potential space-saving advantages. However, the new technology allows wireless carriers to be relegated to mere service providers for eSIM devices, since users will be able to easily switch between carriers. As the most smallest of the three state-owned telecom companies, China Unicom’s early-to-market strategy is a bid for strategic advantage in the promising IoT market.
]]>Is Huawei facing global scrutiny over the security of its 5G gear? Hard to tell with the strong results the telecommunications giant saw in 2018, based on its 155-page annual report released Friday.
Despite troubles that began with an August ban of its equipment by the US government, Huawei revenue grew 19.5% year-on-year to RMB 721.2 billion (around $107.3 billion) in 2018. Net profits surged 25.1% year-on-year to RMB 59.3 billion.
The company’s sales revenue from its consumer business grew 45.1% during the year to RMB 348.9 billion. As a result of a US-led boycott of its 5G equipment over security concerns, Huawei’s carrier business weakened 1.9% to RMB 294 billion, compared with a 2.5% increase the year before. As of Friday, three countries including the US, Australia, and New Zealand have banned Huawei from providing equipment for their 5G networks. A report issued Thursday by a UK government agency saying Huawei has done little to address previously identified security flaws added fresh concerns to the embattled telecom equipment maker.
Huawei invested RMB 101.5 billion, or 14.1% of its sales revenue, in research and development, ranking fifth globally in “The 2018 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard,” the report said. The Shenzhen-based firm owned 87,805 patents as of end-2018, of which 11,152 were granted in the US. “Our technological patents are valuable to the information societies worldwide, including the United States,” Huawei stated in the report. Huawei’s patent filings in the US, like other Chinese tech and telecom companies, reflect steep growth in research and development investments amid a government-led push for global technological leadership.
Huawei has secured over 30 commercial 5G contracts with global telecoms operators up to the end of February 2019, with more than 40,000 5G base stations being shipped to all over the world.
“Through heavy, consistent investment in 5G innovation, alongside large-scale commercial deployment, Huawei is committed to building the world’s best network connections,” said Huawei Rotating Chairman Guo Ping at the release of the annual report. Huawei will continue to strictly comply with all relevant standards to build secure, trustworthy, and high-quality products throughout this process, Guo added, a nod to the ongoing battle for its reputation.
The company’s enterprise business revenue grew 23.8% to RMB 74.4 billion by providing services like cloud storage, big data, and solutions for the internet of things (IoT).
]]>Huawei Equipment Has Major Security Flaws, U.K. Says – The Wall Street Journal
What happened: A report released by a UK watchdog said that Huawei poses a major risk to the country’s telecom networks because it failed to address security flaws in its products and demonstrate a commitment to fixing them. The report is an annual update from the Huawei Cyber Security Evaluation Center (HCSEC), a laboratory that the company set up in 2010 to examine its products used in British networks. The report said “further significant technical issues have been identified in Huawei’s engineering processes,” which could lead to new risks in the UK’s telecom networks.
Why it’s important: British officials attributed the defects to Huawei’s “poor software engineering,” and stated that they were not a result of Chinese state interference. While it stopped short of recommending a ban on Huawei from supplying equipment for UK 5G networks, the report rebuked Huawei for its failure to address previously identified security concerns. This is blow to the telecom giant, which had seen some respite from US pressure following its worldwide media campaign to repair its image. Huawei struck back at the US with a lawsuit filed in early March seeking to overturn a ban against its equipment.
]]>上海电信预计上半年可提供首批5G能力 – Shanghai Securities News
What happened: China Telecom’s Shanghai branch announced on Tuesday that the company is going to test its gigabit 5G networks in three spots in Shanghai in the first half of this year, including an industrial park, the city’s financial district, and a hospital. The next-generation wireless networks will be applied to different scenarios in these areas, including a cloud-based intelligent manufacturing system powered by high-speed 5G networks at the Shanghai Lingang Industrial Park, and an overall healthcare solution based on 5G technologies at the Yueyang Hospital. In the Lujiazui financial district, the company will provide 5G connectivity to financial institutions such as the Shanghai Stock Exchange to “explore the application of 5G to the financial industry.”
Why it’s important: This rollout marks the latest development in the 5G tests the Chinese government has been “guiding” with the three major mobile operators in various cities. A report by the Internet Society of China said that the first step of China’s 5G commercial deployment would be supporting applications such as connected cars and the industrial internet. It’s also believed that 5G will boost the internet of things since it was designed to connect billions of devices and sensors at a lower cost than older technologies.
]]>ZTE steps up 5G investments as it seeks comeback after near-death experience – South China Morning Post
What happened: Shenzhen-based telecommunications equipment maker ZTE is expected to build three cybersecurity evaluation centers in China, Belgium, and Italy this year, similar to the one that Huawei operates under the supervision of the UK government. ZTE aims to reassure government agencies and telecoms network operators about the integrity and security of its 5G equipment. The company already secured six commercial 5G contracts in addition to its vast supply deals with China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom, the three major telecoms network operators in China. The company will soon release a white paper about its 5G cybersecurity efforts.
Why it’s important: ZTE has kept a low profile since last March when the company was brought to the brink of collapse after Washington DC banned American companies from selling components to the Chinese company for violating US sanctions against Iran. As the fourth largest telecoms equipment supplier worldwide, ZTE is unlikely to abstain from the 5G race. On top of the six commercial 5G contracts mentioned above, the company has also been cooperating with about 30 telecoms network operators around the world on 5G research and development as of the end of February.
]]>Pentagon eyeing 5G solutions with Huawei rivals Ericsson and Nokia: official – Reuters
What happened: The US Department of Defense is talking to Huawei rivals Ericsson and Nokia about its 5G development plans, according to Ellen Lord, the Pentagon’s chief weapons buyer. The US is also laying the groundwork to develop its own technology to support 5G-enabled communications, Lord said. She added that the military-to-military discussions about future 5G networks were going well for the United States, with many European allies “leaning forward” to engage in a dialog on its development.
Why it’s important: Following its August ban of Huawei equipment purchases citing security risks, the US government has also warned European Union members about using Huawei technology, which it said could undermine transatlantic military and intelligence co-operation. The European Commission will ignore US calls to ban Huawei equipment and leave it to individual countries to decide on national security grounds while recommending that members share more data to tackle cybersecurity risks related to 5G networks, according to Reuters.
]]>The Shanghai Stock Exchange unveiled last Friday the first group of nine companies that were eligible to file for initial public offerings on China’s new Nasdaq-style high-tech board, the Sci-Tech Innovation Board (STIB).
The list consists of four electronic equipment makers, three high-end equipment manufacturers, and two companies from emerging industries such as new material and biology.
The STIB was initially launched by Chinese President Xi Jinping in his keynote speech at the opening of the first China International Import Expo in Shanghai last November, aiming to experiment a registration-based IPO system.
China’s securities watchdog, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), has said that the new sci-tech board in the Shanghai Stock Exchange would focus on companies in high-tech and strategically emerging sectors such as new generation information technology, advanced equipment, new materials and energy, and biomedicine, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
The CSRC released regulation details on the STIB on March 1, under which eligible companies can become listed by filing required documents, instead of bidding for approval from the securities regulator. Which means the new board also allows companies that haven’t generated a profit to register for an IPO.
Among the nine companies that are ready to go public on the STIB, Jiangsu-based semiconductor manufacturer Hejian Technology is the only one that is not yet profitable. The company seeks to raise RMB 2.5 billion (around $370 million) in its IPO. It reported a net loss of RMB 146 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, and has shown deficits for three years running, according to the prospectus (in Chinese) that the company filed to the exchange.
]]>携号转网即将全国推行 操作麻烦多或阻碍用户转网积极性 – Securities Daily
What happened: China will implement mobile number portability (MNP) nationally this year, after nine years of trials. The program was initially announced by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang when he delivered his government work report to the National People’s Congress earlier this month. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) told Chinese media that the MNP program among China’s three wireless carriers would be carried out in the latter half of the year, while the switch to virtual network operators would not be viable until next year.
Why it’s important: The MIIT has given out 15 virtual network operator licenses, including to tech companies like Alibaba and Xiaomi. Demand from Chinese mobile users has been increasing for an easy way to switch their numbers between major wireless carriers and virtual network operators, which provide plans that are almost 60% cheaper than those of the former ones. The number of virtual network operator users reached 80 million by the end of 2018, accounting for only 4.6% of total mobile users, yet it is expected to experience a growth spurt after the MNP program’s final implementation.
]]>China’s three major telecommunications network operators are cautious about investments in 5G infrastructure, as revealed by the companies’ 2018 annual results.
The combined spending of China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom is expected to reach RMB 286 billion (around $43 billion) in 2019, while their aggregate investment in 5G is estimated to be less than RMB 34 billion.
The numbers show that the three giants of China’s telecom industry are cautious about their investments in 5G, given that the country is determined to become the world leader in 5G technologies and roll out 5G for commercial use in 2020. By comparison, the total investments will need to reach RMB 1.23 trillion in order to build China’s 5G networks, according to China Securities International.
China Mobile said that the company would continue to conduct 5G network tests and perform trials on business applications to ensure the pre-commercial launch of 5G services this year.
The company plans to spend the most among the three operators in 2019, with a capital expenditure of RMB 149.9 billion. China Mobile didn’t reveal its budget for 5G but stated that it wouldn’t be more than that of 2018, which amounted to just over RMB 17 billion.
China Unicom’s spending for this year is expected to reach RMB 58 billion, with up to RMB 8 billion being invested in 5G networks.
“The right time is yet to come when we have to massively invest in 5G,” China Securities Journal quoted Wang Xiaochu, chairman of China Unicom, as saying. He added that 5G technology is still in its exploratory stage.
China Telecom will allocate RMB 9 billion to 5G networks from its RMB 78 billion capital expenditure for 2019. The company expects to build around 200,000 5G base stations by the end of 2019.
]]>华为电视将于4月发布,目标年销售1000万台 – Jiemian
What happened: A supply chain executive of Huawei’s television segment told Chinese media Jiemian that the company would release its rumored Huawei TV next month, which could possibly be equipped with dual cameras, along with gaming and social media features. The executive also said that Huawei TV aims to sell 10 million units each year, which would make up 20% of China’s TV market. In addition to consumer devices, Huawei would also branch out into the commercial TV market, said him.
Why it’s important: The rise of 5G technology has sparked a trend whereby smartphone makers move into the TV business. Analysts said Huawei’s television plan aims to create more entry points into future 5G-powered internet of things scenarios by establishing a smart home system. Meanwhile, Shenzhen-based smartphone manufacturer OnePlus announced in September that it had decided to enter the smart TV market, and expects to release its first 4K Ultra HD TV in 2019.
]]>China to lead APAC tech spend, 5G race ahead of global markets – ZDNet
What happened: China is expected to spend $256 billion on technology goods and services this year, with 5G to account for 57% of this, according to a report by research firm Forrester. The country has outspent the US in the 5G field by around $24 billion since 2015, with China’s three major telcos unveiling plans to launch commercial 5G networks by next year. The report said that China’s investment in telecommunications would remain robust and it was “best positioned” to win the global race in 5G implementations this year.
Why it’s important: China’s lead in the 5G war appears to come from technology, yet it is primarily driven by cash. For instance, Huawei owned 1,529 “standard-essential” 5G patents, more than any of its rivals both at home and abroad. And the company’s advantage in the design of 5G proceeds from its massive research and development budget, as reported by the Wall Street Journal. The same article said that the US and its allies were setting more barriers to China’s 5G players, especially Huawei, in their 5G network deployments, but that wouldn’t change the underlying truth that technology developed in China would be at the center of the next-generation communications networks.
]]>美图2018年财报喜忧参半 互联网业务将“接棒”智能手机 – 21st Century Business Herald
What happened: Chinese selfie app maker Meitu has announced its annual results for the 12 months ended Dec. 31, 2018, reporting a net loss of over RMB 1.2 billion (around $179.6 million). The Xiamen-based company’s total revenue declined 37.8% to RMB 2.8 billion (around $419 million), which the company attributed primarily to a slower smartphone business. Meitu said that of its net loss, some RMB 0.5 billion was linked to its smartphone activities. The company said it expected to wind down that business line by the middle of this year. Last November, Meitu announced a partnership with Xiaomi, in which Xiaomi would represent all future Meitu branded smartphones other than the Meitu V7. That model was released at the end of 2018.
Why it’s important: Starting out as a beauty filter app maker, Meitu developed its first selfie smartphone called the Meitu Kiss in 2013. Since then, the company has released several smartphones that highlight selfie features. But the company only sold 3.5 million smartphones in the five years of its hardware business, according to an earlier announcement. After handing its smartphone business over to Xiaomi, Meitu will shift focus back to core activities and says it is committed to developing next-generation image technology and algorithms.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp. announced on Tuesday its first consolidated financial statements since listing in Hong Kong in July, reporting RMB 13.48 billion (around $2 billion) in profit last year, bouncing back from a RMB 43.9 billion loss in 2017.
The Beijing-based company generated revenue of RMB 174.9 billion (around $26 billion) for 2018, representing a year-on-year increase of 52.6%, but missing the RMB 176 billion average estimate from analyst forecasts compiled by Bloomberg.
Xiaomi’s smartphone segment recorded revenue of approximately RMB 113.8 billion ($16.6 billion) in 2018, a 41.3% year-over-year increase, driven by growth in both smartphone sales volume and average selling price. Smartphone shipments saw robust growth, increasing 29.8% year-on-year to 118.7 million units in 2018, a marked difference from the 4.1% year-on-year decline in the global smartphone market, according to figures from International Data Corp (IDC).
Revenue from its IoT and lifestyle products segment surged 86.9% year-on-year to RMB 43.8 billion ($6.5 billion). It shipped 8.4 million smart TVs, representing growth of 225.5% compared with a year earlier. As of the end of 2018, approximately 150.9 million IoT devices (excluding smartphones and laptops) were connected on Xiaomi’s IoT platform, a quarter-over-quarter increase of 14.7% and a year-on-year increase of 193.2%.
While the smartphone segment comprises the lions share of its revenue, Xiaomi aims to be known as an internet company, rather than a hardware manufacturer. It will invest more than RMB 10 billion (around $1.5 billion) into the development of the “artificial intelligence of things,” or AIoT, over the next five years. AIoT refers to embedding AI applications into infrastructure components which are linked by IoT networks, such as an air conditioning unit that adjusts its thermostat based on preferences learned from past use. The company launched its “smartphone + AIoT” dual-engine strategy in January.
“Over the last eight years, our focus was always around smartphones, but this year we have started our smartphones + AIoT as a dual engine,” Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun told analysts on a call Tuesday, according to Nikkei Asian Review. “AIoT is a historic opportunity for us, we can be a pioneer in this very big market segment.”
]]>U.S. warns Brazil about Huawei and 5G in talks: senior U.S. official – Reuters
What happened: US officials warned their Brazilian counterparts on Monday about security concerns about using Huawei Technologies equipment during talks in Washington, Reuters reported, citing a senior American official. Brazilian officials took part in several meetings with US security experts on how Huawei equipment could undermine their country’s security, the US official told reporters. A Brazilian official said that Brazil did not want to get in between the United States and China on the Huawei dispute, and that there are no barriers for Huawei in Brazil at the moment.
Why it’s important: Brazil’s new president, Jair Bolsonaro, will meet US President Donald Trump on Tuesday. Known as the “Trump of the Tropics,” Bolsonaro embraces the US leader’s turbulent, Twitter-based style of governing. However, the new Brazilian administration is unlikely to back US efforts to ban Huawei completely from building the country’s 5G networks, echoing sentiments from other US allies including the UK, Germany, India, New Zealand, and the United Arab Emirates.
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