Chinese Tech Stocks Tumble, Finally
6/30/2007 17:44  Resource:China Tech News  Author£ºPerry Wu

     Black Tuesday turned bloody for Chinese technology stocks, as the market moved towards a major correction this week and Web and mobile companies saw their value sink.

     What started out as downward trend in Shanghai with a loss of US$108 billion in value on Tuesday filtered through the world's markets, causing all major indices to drop like cold dumplings in a hot bowl. It also turned into a journalist's dilemma as unique synonyms for "drop" became hard to find to describe all the falling companies.

     PacificNet (PACT), whose CFO's abrupt departure two weeks ago caused the stock to sink 10%, sank another 11.6% yesterday on word of hard times for Chinese companies. Chinese search engine Baidu.com (BIDU) dove 6.2% and Netease.com (NTES), which just a day before posted decent profits for its Q4 2006, shaved almost 8% off its stock price.

     One of the biggest losers was Chinese online game and entertainment operator The9 (NCTY), whose stock lost US$5.45, or 14%. Rival online gaming firm Shanda (SNDA) only saw 9% butchered from its nose-bleed price, and it ended the day at a more reasonable, though still ridiculous, US$22.62.

     For China's dubious mobile-value added service companies, Linktone (LTON) lost 8%, Kongzhong (KONG) dwindled by 6%, and Hurray (HRAY) investors decreased their MVAS dreams by 5%.

     Having worked with many Chinese technology companies over the years, I am a bear when it comes to their stocks, and I refuse to buy into their investor marketing babble. Investors deserved to lose money, because it is investor ignorance that is propping up many of these bubble Chinese technology companies.

     Armchair investors outside of China first believed that China's mobile value-added services sector was a hot investment vehicle, and they failed to see the fine-print describing how very little MVAS companies earn from their services via China Mobile (CHL) and China Unicom (CHU). Now we have investors riding the online gaming rage in China, which is also very much a bubble, with many listed companies diverting funds into GAAP-friendly coffers to bloat their gaming revenues. You can take a company out of China, but you can't take China out of a company.

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