The BN Village  
Home Register FAQ Members Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Welcome to the African and Caribbean Social network.

You are currently are in guest mode which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access other features. By joining this free African Caribbean Social utility you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), upload images, add videos, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, join the African and Caribbean community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Go Back   The BN Village > Welcome to The Black Forum - The Black net Village > Games & IT Village
Reload this Page And IBM has been bought by...

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
imported post
(#1 (permalink))
Old
COLTRANE is Offline
Villager Leader
COLTRANE
 
Posts: 5,749
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: virtualcity, ,
Send a message via ICQ to COLTRANE Send a message via AIM to COLTRANE Send a message via MSN to COLTRANE Send a message via Yahoo to COLTRANE
Post imported post - 09-12-04, 09:58 PM

... LENOVO - a Chinese computer company which has become the world's third largest computer company almost solely on the back of internal sales...
www.bbc.co.uk/news



Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
Remove advertisements
Advertisement
Advertisement Sponsored links

imported post
(#2 (permalink))
Old
COLTRANE is Offline
Villager Leader
COLTRANE
 
Posts: 5,749
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: virtualcity, ,
Send a message via ICQ to COLTRANE Send a message via AIM to COLTRANE Send a message via MSN to COLTRANE Send a message via Yahoo to COLTRANE
Post imported post - 09-12-04, 10:06 PM


Global Cachet Comes With Chinese Deal for IBM UnitBy Don Lee
Times Staff Writer

December 9, 2004

SHANGHAI — As a graduate student in Japan in the mid-1980s, Wenran Jiang marveled at how Sony, Panasonic, Toshiba and others proudly marched into the U.S., establishing well-respected brand names and buying landmarks like Rockefeller Center in New York and Columbia Pictures in Hollywood.

Jiang, a native of the industrial city of Harbin in northeast China, never imagined that companies in his motherland would undertake such global expansion.

Now, it appears, that moment has come.

China's Lenovo Group said it was buying the personal computer business of IBM Corp., an American icon that had pioneered the PC market. The $1.25-billion purchase would catapult Lenovo — virtually unknown outside of China — into the world's third-largest seller of PCs, giving it an internationally recognized brand and access to IBM's technical and management capabilities.

More than that, in the eyes of many Chinese and others around the globe, the Lenovo-IBM deal represents a watershed in the Asian nation's rise as a global economic power, moving beyond just churning out cheap goods from low-wage factories.

"This is a new Chinese business model emerging," said Jiang, an associate professor at the University of Alberta in Canada. "It shows there is an integrated strategy that in order to break into the world markets, you have to be brand conscious, build up domestic production and dare to buy and expand."

The Chinese want to possess quality brands in a host of products, including consumer electronics, home appliances, software and automobiles. And flush with U.S. dollars from their booming exports to America, the Chinese are looking to buy their way to world-class economic status.

Early this year, China's TCL Group combined its television and DVD operations with French company Thomson to create the world's leading maker of televisions, built around the RCA brand.

Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp., China's top automaker and a partner of General Motors Corp., agreed in October to buy a controlling stake in South Korea's Ssangyong Motor Co. and is in talks with Britain's MG Rover Group Ltd. The goal: to gain footholds in overseas markets and produce at least 50,000 vehicles with its own distinctive moniker by 2007.

Appliance makers Haier Group and Kelong Corp. are seeking entrance into the U.S. market by building their own sales networks or buying well-known brand names. Haier has a refrigerator plant in Camden, S.C., and a New York sales office in midtown Manhattan.

Said Gao Yingjun, a manager at medicine exporter Tong Ren Tang: "Previously our slogan was 'Where there is Chinese, there is Tong Ren Tang.' Now it's: 'Where there are Westerners, there is Tong Ren Tang.' "

Lenovo's plan to purchase IBM's PC business carries huge symbolism and potential ramifications. Unlike the expansion of Japanese electronic firms, which painstakingly built up their own brands, Lenovo is looking to seize foreign markets and close the technical and business gap with rivals in developed countries much more quickly.

"It's a very big opportunity for China," said Yoshitaka Okada, a professor at Sophia University in Tokyo and an expert in Japan's electronics industry.

The strategy is fraught with risk, he noted. About half of all mergers and acquisitions fail, Okada said, and it's unclear how well Lenovo, which is partly owned by the Chinese government, can maintain brand quality.

Some IBM dealers in China said the marriage would dilute the IBM brand and hurt its sales in the Asian nation. "Customers might hesitate to buy an IBM in the short term, worried that the quality of the computers might decrease," said Liu Qinhua, a salesman at an IBM ThinkPad shop in Shanghai.

But the potential reward is huge. Success at Lenovo could elevate it, and other Chinese companies that follow its lead, into the next stage of development. Many in China's high-tech industry, sharing such hopes, were exuberant Wednesday.

"It's a very proud thing," said Li Kan, general manager of ISoftStone Technologies Ltd. in Shanghai, which was buzzing when news spread through the office about Lenovo's acquisition. The software company, based in Beijing, has a sales office in Boston and is looking to expand in the U.S. and Asian markets through partnerships.

"One day," Li said, "many, many more Chinese companies will play an important role in the world. This is the first big one."

At the same time, with the aid of massive foreign investment, the Chinese are also trying to hatch their own brands and develop capabilities to produce such high-tech goods as semiconductors and telecommunications equipment. One factor in China's favor: It has a huge bankroll to finance purchases.

Thanks to its trade surplus with the U.S., largely due to sales of low-tech products such as toys, bags and shoes, China has amassed foreign reserves of $540 billion. And instead of just spending the money on U.S. Treasury bills, the Chinese are scouring for productive assets around the world.

The international push comes after 25 years of market reform, which has vastly improved people's living standards and created some of the most dynamic cities and companies anywhere. But there are questions about whether the Chinese have developed the sophisticated management know-how needed to compete globally.

The recent scandal involving Chinese-owned China Aviation Oil (Singapore) Corp., which is reeling from losses of as much as $550 million from trading in derivatives related to oil investments, has heightened concerns about China's corporate governance practices.

Others have derided China's role in the world as a "carrier economy," merely a producer and handler of goods for foreign multinationals. For example, by some measures, the Chinese are already the world's leading exporter of computers. But they are cheap models and command little if any premium.

Just as the Japanese expansion in the 1970s and '80s drew criticism abroad, the Chinese are almost certain to stir resentment as they go on a shopping spree and exert new economic power.

In Canada, China's state-owned Minimetals' proposal to pay about $5 billion for Canada's largest mining company, Noranda Inc., has generated vigorous debate about what a takeover by the Chinese would mean for miners' jobs.

In September, in the shoe-producing town of Elche, Spain, some 500 demonstrators set fire to Chinese-owned warehouses and demanded that the Spanish government restrict imports of shoes.

But China may not feel the intensity of emotion that the Japanese engendered two decades ago in America. For one thing, China is making its global foray while also opening its own markets wider to foreigners. Chinese companies also appear more interested in gaining access and learning rather than imposing their management techniques or way of doing business in other lands.

Nor is the purchase a pure capitalistic move to enhance profit immediately; IBM's PC division was losing money. Moreover, Lenovo agreed to keep the business based in the United States and run by the current management team, with IBM holding a 19% stake in Lenovo.

"That's important because it's a clear indication that one of the things China is buying is expertise," said Donald Straszheim, chairman of Los Angeles-based Straszheim Global Advisors, which has offices in Beijing and Shenzhen, China. "China knows that they don't know how to run a company like this and how to navigate an American economy."

Straszheim said he expected many more Chinese companies, high- and low-tech, to be swooping up established names. "They want to buy brands, not build them."


Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
imported post
(#3 (permalink))
Old
Nick is Offline
Villager
Nick
 
Posts: 331
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Surrey, , United Kingdom
Post imported post - 09-12-04, 11:02 PM

And here it goes. Hope your watching carefully folks. 1.1 billion hard working people are knocking on your doorsteps. Me thinks new super power on its way.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
imported post
(#4 (permalink))
Old
COLTRANE is Offline
Villager Leader
COLTRANE
 
Posts: 5,749
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: virtualcity, ,
Send a message via ICQ to COLTRANE Send a message via AIM to COLTRANE Send a message via MSN to COLTRANE Send a message via Yahoo to COLTRANE
Post imported post - 09-12-04, 11:20 PM

you dont need to think but its inevitable




Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
Remove advertisements
Advertisement
Advertisement Sponsored links

Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Lebron has totally bought into the system DtotheJ Sports Village 3 17-04-07 03:40 AM
Last DVD You Bought milesdavis Film Village 8 04-01-07 07:46 PM
MTN-telecommunications-AFRICANS HAVE BOUGHT IRANIANS COLTRANE News and Politics Village 1 21-10-05 10:02 AM
What was the last magazine you bought? COLTRANE The Village Square. 56 28-08-05 11:19 PM
white music you have bought? COLTRANE Entertainment Village 71 08-08-05 01:33 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:09 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.1.0
Internet Marketing by: Firm SEO
Ad Management by RedTyger