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Remaining Google units exposed to whims
of an angry Beijing
Beijing¡¦s initial reaction has been chilly, leaving
Google¡¦s advertising operations at risk ¡X meanwhile, competitors stand ready to
reap the dividends
Thursday, Mar 25, 2010, Page 9
By Doug Young REUTERS, HONG KONG Google¡¦s gambit in pulling the plug on its
flagship search engine in China leaves its remaining operations there exposed to
the whimsy of Beijing, whose initial reaction is far from reassuring.
Google plans to maintain an advertising sales force as well as its large
research and development operations in China, but risks losing market share,
revenue and staff to rivals including market leader Baidu, up-and-comer Tencent
and US heavyweight Microsoft.
Opportunities to develop and market its Android and Chrome operating systems for
cellphones and PCs in China could also be threatened, a potential setback for
partners such as handset makers Dell and Lenovo.
¡§There¡¦s no doubt the Chinese might make life difficult for Google,¡¨ said Vivek
Couto, an analyst at Media Partners Asia. ¡§But they don¡¦t want to go directly
after them. China also has to be a bit cautious.¡¨
Google¡¦s decision to shut its Chinese portal and reroute searches to its Hong
Kong-based site to avoid the self-censorship Beijing demands was seen more as an
escalation than a compromise in the two-month old dispute.
Though tensions could ease after an initial round of finger-pointing, the
uncertainty and need for Beijing¡¦s tolerance, if not support, threaten Google¡¦s
prospects in the world¡¦s largest Internet market.
Initial indications that Google¡¦s gambit was getting a chilly reception came
from the official Xinhua news agency, which cited an unnamed official calling
the move ¡§totally wrong¡¨ and in violation of Google¡¦s written promises.
In direct terms, Google may have to give up some or all of its revenue derived
from China¡¦s search market, depending on whether its advertisers follow it to
its redirected China site at google.com.hk.
Analyst estimates of Google¡¦s annual revenue in China range from US$300 million
to roughly US$600 million, a small portion of its US$24 billion in annual
revenue.
Other stakeholders exposed to Google¡¦s actions include cellphone makers like
Dell and Lenovo, which are both developing Android-based phones for China, as
well as the hundreds of people who independently sell ads and develop software
for Google¡¦s products.
Spokeswomen at Lenovo and China Mobile, which is planning to offer the Dell
Android phones on its network, had no immediate comment.
Meanwhile, other search sites operators stand ready to benefit most form
Google¡¦s withdrawal, most notably Baidu ¡X which has 60 percent of China¡¦s search
market ¡X and others such as fast-growing Tencent, analysts said.
¡§It will benefit everybody in China, but the obvious immediate beneficiary will
be Baidu,¡¨ said CLSA analyst Elinor Leung (±ç¦V«³). Microsoft, which has launched a
beta version of its Bing search site in China, could also pick up market share,
she added.
Other Web players could benefit as well if Google decides to use them as a
back-door strategy to invest in China¡¦s Internet market. Yahoo used a similar
strategy after abandoning its own efforts in China in favor of buying 40 percent
of leading China e-commerce operator Alibaba Group.
Despite the potential for collateral damage, observers and those who work for
Google were cautiously optimistic that the current conflict wouldn¡¦t spiral out
of control, saying such escalation was in no one¡¦s interest.
Google¡¦s interest in the market is already clear.
But China also has an interest in placating Western governments that have been
critical of its heavy-handed approach to media control and civil rights. China
also needs major global tech firms like Google to develop its own domestic
industries so they can someday compete on the global stage.
¡§If Google leaves its R&D unit in its current headquarters in Beijing ... the
staff will remain, so I think our activities will continue,¡¨ said Arthur Wang
(¤ý¶}·½), chairman of Beijing Google Technology User Group, one of Google¡¦s largest
software development groups.
Advertisers could take a more cautious approach until they see if traffic to
Google¡¦s Hong Kong site catering to mainland Chinese Web surfers gets the same
traffic as its shuttered China site, said Kaiser Kuo (³¢©É¼s), a China-based
technology commentator.
¡§Buying on a redirected site that could be at any moment blocked is a risky
strategy,¡¨ he said. ¡§So I think people are going to read the tea leaves and see
what the government is going to do in this situation before making any
commitments.¡¨
Edward Yu (¤_´), an analyst at China research firm Analysys, was confident Google
could continue to operate effectively in China.
¡§In the short term, some officials may be upset about Google rerouting its
operations,¡¨ he said. ¡§But when things cool down, I think the other part of
their operations are not affected as long as they comply with the regulations,¡¨
he said.
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