This is a BLOG from Mark Cochrane of Business Strategies Group in Hong Kong. We've been keeping a close watch on B2B media and business information in Asia since 2000 and look forward to sharing insights with you.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
The action's in Mumbai
Today, we read that Infomedia and Alibaba are tying up. That has the makings of something really interesting. Alibaba's CEO David Wei is quoted in the Livemint piece saying "“We believe this alliance media will help us become the dominant online B2B marketplace in India by the end of 2008". We will be interested to see how Indiamart.com (#12 in our Online B2B Top 50) and Tradeindia.com (#11) respond to this serious step forward by the #1. Who wants to play with them?
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
IRS woes
Exchange4media.com reports that "The story is not too happy for English business publications ... Most players have registered a decline in readership, as was seen in the previous rounds of IRS". The Economic Times maintains its lead among the business newspapers while Business Today is the magazine with the highest readership.
The Economic Times saw a 4% decline to 743,000 the report says while Business Today fell 14% to 416,000. The number two magazine, Business India, was down a similar amount (13%) at 291,000.
It's not all bad news though and the article reports that "Outlook Money and Business & Economy are the only two business magazines among the top 10 that have managed to buck the decline trend. Outlook Money’s readership has gone up to 122,000 from 111,000, while Business & Economy has a readership of 93,000, up from 90,000".
Monday, April 28, 2008
CMP O'Asia?
Following the rebranding of CMP in the US where the name was dropped in favour of four, separate divisions, let us be the first to predict a more Irish flavour for the United Business Media's Asia subsidiary CMP Asia. The London Times reports that the company is planning to move its domicile away from the UK to escape the all too sticky fingers of Gordon Brown's Treasury.We imagine that management hopes of compulsory Guiness at all Board meetings may be a little far-fetched. Basic business tax rates in Ireland are 12.5%. In the UK, they're 28%. Game over.
Friday, April 25, 2008
PE analysis
The 14 which do rank line up as follows:
| | Company | P/E Ratio |
| 1 | Info Communication | 137.3 |
| 2 | Baidu | 116.6 |
| 3 | SEEC Media Group | 94.9 |
| 4 | | 92.2 |
| 5 | Alibaba.com | 66.3 |
| 6 | Infomedia | 35.1 |
| 7 | Global Sources | 25.9 |
| | NASDAQ 100 | 19.3 |
| 8 | CCID Consulting | 17.4 |
| 9 | BOL | 16.3 |
| 10 | Cybermedia | 15.3 |
| | Hang | 14.0 |
| 11 | Impress Holdings, Inc. | 11.9 |
| 12 | Pico | 8.6 |
| 13 | Pico | 7.0 |
| 14 | Xinhua Finance | 3.1 |
Of course, our subscribers get a better analysis than that....and they'll get it every week.
Reading the tea leaves
We wrote a week ago about reports from the Canton Fair that it had a slow start. We said we'd keep a close eye on the tea leaves to see what messages we could divine about the impact of US economic slowdown on B2B businesses in Asia.Two different cups of tea here:
- A China Knowledge report on the HKTDC web site says that Hong Kong's "total goods exports [in February] posted a 5.5% increase year on year, while its imports volume jumped 9.8% compared with the same month of last year". That may include some Chinese New Year timing factors (January and February are always a bit dangerous for stats in this part of the world), but overall, it suggests that things are moving forward, albeit at a somewhat slower pace in previous years.
- Meanwhile, Andy So at Seeking Alpha notes that China's two leading listed web companies, Baidu and Alibaba.com are trading in opposite directions: "Alibaba faces a weaker international trade environment that is causing investor uneasiness over future earnings", he notes.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
No Virgin in Macau
A key factor in the decision has been the strain on Macau's infrastructure imposed by the extraordinary boom in gambling activity which has seen the tiny Special Administrative Region reporting gaming revenues bigger than both Las Vegas and Atlantic City combined in the first quarter of this year.
Everybody trying to run an events business there speaks of the massive pressure on staffing. One of the government's goals is, apparently, to allow other businesses, and the South China Morning Post today speaks specifically of exhibitions and conventions, to have a more reasonable chance to get staff for their Macau operations.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Thomson Reuters in Asia
Thanks to the South China Morning Post (don't count on too many of those in the course of a year) for saving me the bother. The link, as ever, is behind their increasingly old-fashioned looking paywall, but there are two points of interest to those in Asia:
Thomson Reuters, ... , expects double-digit revenue growth in the region this year on strong demand, managing director for Asia Michael Peace said.
The company has more than 600 staff in its BeijingWe probably need to be paying a bit more attention to this, Bloomberg and how they fit in with local players like Xinhua Finance.office alone.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Where do the staff go when print dies?
In these potentially straitened economic times, there is much wringing of hands about job security particularly in the media industry's equivalent of the buggy whip business, print publishing. Two of my favourite bloggers touch on this today: Paul Conley in the US talks of the difficulties of making the transition from print to the online world, the obvious route:I said that much of the industry had become "weighed down by the twin albatrosses of junk bonds and rising print costs." And I suggested that the "editors, salespeople and designers of B2B... walk away from print."
Meanwhile, Tom Crampton proposes the more radical solution of Singapore, although he does admit that its reputation for caning and censorship (not always in that order) may make it a less than obvious choice to the proud Pullitzer-wannabes of the New York Times.
Tom's post does, though, raise the interesting issue that print does not, yet at least, appear to be dying in Asia. If anything it's on a roll. I was told in Australia this week by one old friend who publishes a number of traditional trade magazines that they're all doing pretty well. We see B2B magazines in China growing at 20% a year and numerous new newspaper launches in India. There's no space in a blog post of this length to debate why or whether this is just the lull before the digital tsunami storms through the magazine and newspaper offices of Asia too.
Worth watching though...
P.S. Can anybody tell me why the URL thebuggywhip.com links through to the LA Times? A cruel observation by a laid of editor?
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Meetings in Australia


The events business down in Australia does appear to be moving forward reasonably solidly without too much sign of impact from economic slowdown elsewhere in the world. There is much talk of new venues along with controversy around the recommendations of former rugby player John O'Neal to the New South Wales government that exhibitions be moved out of the Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre to the under-utilised facilities on the 2000 Olympics site.
Here, Trevor is discussing the finer points of polo with Mark Baker, former EEAA Executive Director and now with the gifts association and the organiser of the Sydney boat show.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Canton Fair reports slow start
However, as I had suspected might be the case, the Canton Fair is reporting a soft start (sorry, not clever enough to link to this SCMP piece via e-mail):
Canton Fair kicks off with slow first day
April 16, 2008
Denise Tsang in Guangzhou
The slowing global economy has hit attendances and orders at the mainland's biggest trade fair, considered a barometer for the health of the nation's vital export sector.
----
We'll be watching very closely what Global Sources says about its China Sourcing Fairs, now underway in Hong Kong. And, the next sets of results from all the Asia B2B players will make interesting reading.
Now, back to watching the boats in the harbour. Altogether more uplifting!
Sent via BlackBerry.
Monday, April 14, 2008
India on my mind
For now, I have India on my mind. As I look at what I've been bookmarking over the last week or so, there's a lot on India. Two seemingly unrelated items highlight how important it is for those wishing to succeed in B2B there to devise strategies which draw in the tens of thousands of SMEs,
Tradeindia.com is probably the most important B2B 'portal' in the country. It's the top-ranked according to our calculations (based on the ever-unloved Alexa, the least dodgy of the ranking sites). Bhupesh Trivedi reports that they have launched a sub-site, SME Times. Bhupesh quotes Tradeindia CEO Bikky Khosla, saying that "SME Times would be a one-stop information library for the EXIM sector...[and]...that with Tradeindia’s wide reach, the news they provide would expose SMEs to new information, ideas, and values, and would help them take the right decisions for their businesses".
Meanwhile, the ever-active Cybermedia is also targeting the SME sector with a new initiative announced with ICICI Bank. As with TradeIndia, this new service is also focused on providing knowledge but will take the form of a forum rolled out across 26 cities. When he spoke at our UFI Asia Seminar in Macau back in February, Cybermedia CEO Pradeep Gupta talked of the need to develop multi-layered strategies in India, targeting big companies in big cities as always but also smaller companies in the next level of second tier cities. Here he is, then, putting those words into action.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
The great bento box?
We were interested, then to pick up on the almost unnoticed developments in Japan where the government is moving substantially to step up it regulation of the Internet. A piece in last Saturday's Age newspaper from Melbourne is headlined "Japan's garrulous bloggers go strangely silent". It goes on to note "the government's proposal to regulate Internet content, including forcible correction or deletion of material on blogs, personal websites and bulletin boards, passes with little uproar".
Even in polite and law-abiding Japan, this seems a little odd. As the article points out, "Japan's technophile population has created one of the world's most vibrant internet cultures and arguably its biggest blogosphere". As we reported a year ago (albeit with some scepticism), Japanese is the most prevalent language of blogging worldwide, accounting for 37% of all blog posts.
Some of the reaction in Japan has been predictably vigorous according to the article:
The Japanese government, of course, is having none of that: "The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication says this is a silly overreaction. Its proposal to regulate online content, it says, is merely an attempt to bring order to Japan's enormous and chaotic web community, where members often use message boards to launch character assassinations and make defamatory claims".Kazuo Hizumi, a journalist-turned-lawyer who blogs prolifically on media issues, has been particularly scathing. "If you look at the fascist movement in prewar Japan, the dangers in the regulation of information by the Government are obvious.
"That the Government is going to get involved in selecting, by means of filtering software, what information should be blocked -- this is completely outrageous. This absolutely cannot be allowed."
Bringing order is the excuse most commonly trotted out for Beijing's more egregious impositions on personal freedom. Let's hope that the Japanese are not looking across the East China Sea for guidance on the subject of Internet regulation.
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
A sense of perspective please gents...
A Google search of the terms "Cybermedia United Business Media" throws up a list of any number of headlines which imply that Pradeep Gupta's company has acquired the whole of CMP's parent company. We were only joking when we said that on Saturday. This post on the India Broadband Forum is typical of many and even more misleading than most:
United Business Media acquired by Cyber MediaUnited Business Media acquired by Cyber MediaCyber Media has announced that they have now acquired 100 per cent stake in United Business Media.The financial aspects of the deal have not been disclosed to the media.United Business Media would now work as a subsidiary of the company and would continue to provide services to support and [...]
You can watch Jack's speech in London on YouTube. We wrote a couple of weeks ago about David Wei's announcement during the same trip of a new site designed to help UK exporters sell to China.
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Up, down, shake it all around?
I was interested, then, to see a piece on the China Stock Blog summarising Dr. Enzio von Pfeil's interview with CNBC. Key highlights of this piece are:
The key is that "de-coupling" is a myth. The key link is psychological. When US markets fall, everyone gets scared globally, so the sell-off continues. This will dampen consumption in Asia as discretionary consumption is very much driven by the feminine "feel-good" factor.
We are bulls of Taiwan, particularly of their tourism and transport sectors.
Food distributors should prosper, particularly if they distribute specialist foods like a certain type of rice or other grains.
See also this piece on inflation in China if you were comforting yourself that the Chinese domestic economy would save our bacon.
See you on the window ledge....it's looking very dodgy out there.
Update: more on decoupling here today. Highlights:
But decoupling has legs, and maybe for a good reason: it could actually be true. Last month, for example, Standard & Poors reported that despite the global economic turmoil, Asian economies should continue to grow at a solid pace this year. And new research from I.M.F. economists offers a more nuanced view of the decoupling-convergence divide.
Sunday, April 06, 2008
Alibaba and the Albatross
Alibaba's 2005 deal with Yahoo! is increasingly looking like an albatross shooting spree. It's a dodgy business, not doing very well in China, and has now raised the spectre of substantial ownership by Microsoft. It also has brought the company several times into the spotlight of the human rights lobby.Back in October 2005, not too long after the Yahoo! billion was accepted, the company was roundly criticised for its role in the Shi Tao affair. Now, an interesting article in the Far Eastern Economic Review has once again links Alibaba's Yahoo! division to Beijing's control and abuse of information and Internet freedom. The article focuses on the role played by the Beijing Association of Online Media which, it claims is more an arm of State control than industry association.
The article quotes Alibaba's Porter Erisman and I have to say that the way in which the writer has tried to turn what is basically a "no comment" into something very sinister may suggest that molehills were made to look very mountainous in this article.
Overall, Alibaba is a fine business. The Yahoo! China arm it inherited in 2005 is quite obviously it's least interesting or useful division. How easily can they ditch it?
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Cybermedia buys out UBM
Pradeep Gupta, Cybermedia's CEO is quoted in the Economic Times "Acquiring the entire equity in this joint venture is a part of this larger plan to ensure that CyberMedia's global footprint in the specialty media space".
The deal also highlights the challenges of operating partnerships in India where Reuters, also recently ended is venture with Times of India publisher Bennett Coleman.
Friday, April 04, 2008
FT Chinese hits 1 million
What caught my eye today, though was the news that Angela Mackay, the FT's Executive Director Asia/Pacific reported that ftchinese.com are now up to 1 million unique users. Overall, the FT's launch in Asia appears to have been pretty successful and the web-focused Chinese language strategy is an obvious way to build up the franchise while avoiding China's prohibitively restrictive regulatory environment.
The video of Tom's interview with Angela is available on You Tube as well as his blog.
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Learning to love the Great Firewall
I was catching up on a backlog of news yesterday on my Blackberry and came across this odd piece on China Venture News. It quotes a new survey which says, "Many Americans assume that China's internet users are unhappy about their government's control of the internet, but a new survey finds most Chinese say they approve of internet regulation, especially by the government".This seems to launch us into the beyond the looking glass world of Donald Rumsfeld's known and unknown unknowns. If you don't know what you're missing, why would you mind?

