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China's Unigroup says wins bid to buy 51 percent stake in HP unit

Does China squeezing US to dead means China buys US HP stake? China is a big market, without China, most US companies will have negative growth

You want to live in your frog well, go ahead :D

We rule the world through new technological breakthroughs. We create FADS. You guys follow it. As long as that's the case, we need not worry :D
 
We rule the world through new technological breakthroughs. We create FADS. You guys follow it. As long as that's the case, we need not worry :D

We sell it at half price and every bodies loves it.

Consumer loves value for money product.


The American are just having sourgrape that Chinese has no innovation. Never mind, you can continue living in denial. Trend do not lie.


Innovation drives angel investment growth in China - China.org.cn

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We sell it at half price and every bodies loves it.

Consumer loves value for money product.

Yeah ? Tell that to the record breaking iphone sales numbers quarter on quarter ... Only those like it who cannot afford.
 
Do you know the biggest market for iPhone 6 besides US is from where?

And iPhone is made in where?

You really have comprehension issues or you simply need to improve english. Anyway ciao !
 
You really have comprehension issues or you simply need to improve english. Anyway ciao !
Looks like you run out of excuse? :D

It must be like a slow torture to watch China grow every year and US going the reverse? If I am an American , I too will feel the future is bleak. Ask your kid to learn mandarin. Best advice from American investing guru Jim roger :D
 
It is done!

Tsinghua Unigroup buys HP unit stake

By Zhang Ye and Li Qiaoyi Source:Global Times Published: 2015-5-22

Obtains part of new data networking entity for $2.3b
c3bff495-bfa9-49dc-8971-4f6ee7c64290.jpeg

Employees work on server boards in H3C Technologies Co's factory in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province. Photo: CFP


Unisplendour Corporation, the listed arm of Tsinghua Holdings, announced late on Thursday its purchase of a majority stake in Hewlett-Packard Co (HP)'s data networking business in China.

Unisplendour Corp will purchase a 51 percent stake "in a new business called H3C, comprising H3C Technologies and HP's China-based server, storage and technology services businesses, for approximately $2.3 billion, valuing the total business at $4.5 billion," according to a joint statement released on late Thursday.

The deal is expected to close near the end of the year, "subject to Unisplendour shareholder vote, regulatory approvals and other closing conditions," said the statement.

The two sides will hold a news conference in Beijing on Friday to reveal more details about the deal, a source familiar with the matter told the Global Times on Thursday.

Unisplendour Corp, the listed arm of Tsinghua Holdings, halted trading since May 14 on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, pending important information disclosure.

Analysts attributed HP's majority stake sales to headwinds facing Western companies in China after Edward Snowden's disclosure of cyber spying involving US tech companies in 2013.

"Overseas technology companies are struggling for consumers, as Chinese authorities have called for less dependence on foreign networking gear over national security concerns," Xiang Ligang, CEO of telecom information portal cctime.com, told the Global Times Thursday.

HP is not the only one seeking Chinese counterparts to help reach consumers in China.

Intel Corp in September 2014 announced on its website that it had agreed to invest up to 9 billion yuan ($1.45 billion) for a 20 percent stake in the semiconductor business under Tsinghua Unigroup, whose parent company is Tsinghua Holdings.

In October 2014, French telecommunications equipment company Alcatel-Lucent closed the sale of 85 percent of its enterprise computing subsidiary to State-run China Huaxin Post and Telecommunication Economy Development Center, according to a joint press release.

With State-backed companies as its partner, foreign tech enterprises such as HP will likely continue getting their slice of Chinese government contracts, said Xiang.

"In the past, the R&D, manufacturing and marketing of H3C are in China, but they had a foreign parent company," Xiang said.

This caused challenges for H3C for implementing large networking equipment projects, especially those driven by the Chinese government," Steven Hu, research manager of IDC networking research, said in a statement e-mailed to the Global Times on late Thursday.

When this deal is done, "H3C will become a local vendor and will pose a serious threat to Huawei and Cisco, significantly heating up the competition," Hu believes.

The stake sale also indicates that HP, which has been struggling to remake its businesses in China, has failed to succeed in integrating the assets of H3C Technologies, Fu Liang, a Beijing-based independent IT analyst, told the Global Times on Thursday.

H3C was established in 2003 as a joint venture between US computer network infrastructure company 3Com Corp and Huawei Technologies Co and inherited by HP in 2010 via a purchase of 3Com.

As for the Chinese side, the deal officially announced on late Thursday is also regarded as a good bargain by some analysts.

With 5,000 employees worldwide, Hangzhou-based H3C is now a major networking gear supplier in China.

By the end of 2014, the company owned 2,800 authorized patents, among which 2,300 were patents of invention, according to a statement issued by Zhejiang Provincial Intellectual Property Office in March.

The H3C purchase may also help strengthen Tsinghua Unigroup's competition in the handset chip manufacturing industry globally, said Xiang.

"In comparison with overseas brands, domestically designed mobile phone chips are lagging far behind in terms of technology and mainly adopted by lesser-known middle- and low-end smartphones," he noted.

Tsinghua Unigroup acquired Shanghai-based Spreadtrum Communications Inc and another Shanghai semiconductor maker RDA Microelectronics in December 2013 and July 2014 respectively to further its presence in the country's mobile chip industry, which analysts said is mainly controlled by US-based mobile chip giant Qualcomm Inc.
 
It is done!

Tsinghua Unigroup buys HP unit stake

By Zhang Ye and Li Qiaoyi Source:Global Times Published: 2015-5-22

Obtains part of new data networking entity for $2.3b
c3bff495-bfa9-49dc-8971-4f6ee7c64290.jpeg

Employees work on server boards in H3C Technologies Co's factory in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province. Photo: CFP


Unisplendour Corporation, the listed arm of Tsinghua Holdings, announced late on Thursday its purchase of a majority stake in Hewlett-Packard Co (HP)'s data networking business in China.

Unisplendour Corp will purchase a 51 percent stake "in a new business called H3C, comprising H3C Technologies and HP's China-based server, storage and technology services businesses, for approximately $2.3 billion, valuing the total business at $4.5 billion," according to a joint statement released on late Thursday.

The deal is expected to close near the end of the year, "subject to Unisplendour shareholder vote, regulatory approvals and other closing conditions," said the statement.

The two sides will hold a news conference in Beijing on Friday to reveal more details about the deal, a source familiar with the matter told the Global Times on Thursday.

Unisplendour Corp, the listed arm of Tsinghua Holdings, halted trading since May 14 on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, pending important information disclosure.

Analysts attributed HP's majority stake sales to headwinds facing Western companies in China after Edward Snowden's disclosure of cyber spying involving US tech companies in 2013.

"Overseas technology companies are struggling for consumers, as Chinese authorities have called for less dependence on foreign networking gear over national security concerns," Xiang Ligang, CEO of telecom information portal cctime.com, told the Global Times Thursday.

HP is not the only one seeking Chinese counterparts to help reach consumers in China.

Intel Corp in September 2014 announced on its website that it had agreed to invest up to 9 billion yuan ($1.45 billion) for a 20 percent stake in the semiconductor business under Tsinghua Unigroup, whose parent company is Tsinghua Holdings.

In October 2014, French telecommunications equipment company Alcatel-Lucent closed the sale of 85 percent of its enterprise computing subsidiary to State-run China Huaxin Post and Telecommunication Economy Development Center, according to a joint press release.

With State-backed companies as its partner, foreign tech enterprises such as HP will likely continue getting their slice of Chinese government contracts, said Xiang.

"In the past, the R&D, manufacturing and marketing of H3C are in China, but they had a foreign parent company," Xiang said.

This caused challenges for H3C for implementing large networking equipment projects, especially those driven by the Chinese government," Steven Hu, research manager of IDC networking research, said in a statement e-mailed to the Global Times on late Thursday.

When this deal is done, "H3C will become a local vendor and will pose a serious threat to Huawei and Cisco, significantly heating up the competition," Hu believes.

The stake sale also indicates that HP, which has been struggling to remake its businesses in China, has failed to succeed in integrating the assets of H3C Technologies, Fu Liang, a Beijing-based independent IT analyst, told the Global Times on Thursday.

H3C was established in 2003 as a joint venture between US computer network infrastructure company 3Com Corp and Huawei Technologies Co and inherited by HP in 2010 via a purchase of 3Com.

As for the Chinese side, the deal officially announced on late Thursday is also regarded as a good bargain by some analysts.

With 5,000 employees worldwide, Hangzhou-based H3C is now a major networking gear supplier in China.

By the end of 2014, the company owned 2,800 authorized patents, among which 2,300 were patents of invention, according to a statement issued by Zhejiang Provincial Intellectual Property Office in March.

The H3C purchase may also help strengthen Tsinghua Unigroup's competition in the handset chip manufacturing industry globally, said Xiang.

"In comparison with overseas brands, domestically designed mobile phone chips are lagging far behind in terms of technology and mainly adopted by lesser-known middle- and low-end smartphones," he noted.

Tsinghua Unigroup acquired Shanghai-based Spreadtrum Communications Inc and another Shanghai semiconductor maker RDA Microelectronics in December 2013 and July 2014 respectively to further its presence in the country's mobile chip industry, which analysts said is mainly controlled by US-based mobile chip giant Qualcomm Inc.

Not a bad deal。:D

In the meantime,HP is going down a slippery road。

HP strikes China deal, sales slump

By: Rick Merritt | eetimes | Posted: 22 May 2015, 08:58

Hewlett-Packard reported declining revenues and profits amid a slumping PC market in which it is gaining some share. The news came the same day it announced a deal to roll its server and networking business in China into a joint venture aiming to take on China’s Lenovo.

Servers were one of the few bright spots in HP’s dismal second fiscal quarter. Overall revenues were down seven percent from the same quarter last year to $25.45 billion, and profits slid to $1.01 billion from $1.27 billion a year ago.

“The PC market is weaker than I expected at the beginning of the year,” said Meg Whitman, HP’s chief executive in a call with analysts.

The company’s PC revenues were down five percent year-over-year, and carved out a razor thin 3.0% operating margin despite a two percent rise in unit sales. The market continues to swing toward notebooks which were up 19% in units as desktops fell 14%.

f99687dd719c4e8bc6a39e946c3d9ef7(27).jpg


(HP's businesses were down across the line with the exception of x86 servers which grew 11%, not enough to lift the entire enterprise division.)

HP believes it is gaining share in a PC market that continues to consolidate. It hopes for a small boost in consumer sales from the launch of Windows 10 late this summer, but does not expect to see the new operating system get much uptake in businesses this year.

By contrast, the cloud business is doing relatively well for HP -- at least in terms of x86 servers which were up 11% in sales. Server selling process are on the rise and the business could expand in the second half of the year -- something HP doesn’t expect for most of its overall business which it said would be flat to slightly down in the current fiscal year.

2de40e0d504f583cda7465979f958a98(24).jpg


(HP's printers and enterprise gear remain its two main sources of profits.)

In an effort to ride the server wave, HP announced today it will combine into a joint venture its China server, networking and storage businesses with that of Hangzhou-based H3C Technologies, a networking company with 5,000 employees and 5,500 patents.

The new joint venture will retain the H3C name, have about 8,000 employees, $3.1 billion in annual revenue, and will be China’s largest networking company, HP said. Tsinghua Holdings subsidiary, Unisplendour Corp., will purchase a 51% stake in the joint venture for $2.3 billion, in a deal that values the new company at $4.5 billion.

The new H3C will become a subsidiary of Unisplendour, itself a publicly traded subsidiary of Tsinghua Holdings Co., Ltd., the asset management arm of China’s Tsinghua University. The transaction is expected to close near the end of 2015, subject to Unisplendour shareholder vote and regulatory approvals.

“Tsinghua University is the equivalent of Harvard and MIT rolled into one with incredible R&D capability,” Whitman said of the education arm of her new partner. “This will unleash a whole host of business in the China market,” she added, noting HP is already gaining share in servers from Lenovo which recently acquired IBM’s x86 server business.

The JV will develop products for the China market which it can sell outside China through HP that will act as its global distributor. HP retains its PC and printing business in China.

Separately, HP reported it is on track to split into a PC/printer company (HP Inc.) and a server and networking company (HP Enterprise) by the end of its fiscal year.

The company has yet to lay off 7,000 of the total 55,000 employees it plans to let go as part of its restructuring program. In addition it announced plans for corporate charges of up to $3 billion to shed a total of $3 billion in costs over the next three years, two-thirds of it from its services business.
 

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