China Daily

Chinese investors favor S. California

Young talent pool, geographic­al and transporta­tion advantage help nurture startups

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles, California teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

When it comes to high-tech developmen­t and opportunit­ies for innovative collaborat­ions between the United States and China, the first thing that might come to one’s mind is Silicon Valley, the world’s leading technology ecosystem.

But as the number of new startups across various business sectors in Southern California and Los Angeles increases, that is all about to change.

“I think people from Los Angeles are very interested to see what’s happening in China in technology, innovation and in venture capital. These areas are very strong interests in Los Angeles now, not just in Silicon Valley,” said Rebecca Fannin, founder of Silicon Dragon Ventures, a news, events and research group that focuses on covering the world’s leading startup hubs.

With its proximity to Hollywood and its diverse industries, Los Angeles has attracted numerous Chinese companies, including Baidu, Tencent, Alibaba and Wanda Group, all of which have invested or acquired companies in the city’s maturing technology, media and finance sectors.

Los Angeles’ new technology hub is an area called Silicon Beach, a stretch of land west of Los Angeles encompassi­ng regions such as Santa Monica, Venice and Marina del Rey.

Silicon Beach is home to social media app Snapchat and video platform Hulu. It also hosts Riot Games, a game developer acquired by Tencent in 2011, as well as the US office of Musical.ly, a Shanghai-based social media service that allows people to create and share short videos.

Several factors played a role in Chinese investors’ decision to come to Southern California, according to Liu Yuting, president of PlusYoou, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to bridging business resources and enhancing cross-border investment­s between the US and China.

The area is home to schools such as California Institute of Technology, University of Southern California and University of California in Los Angeles, which results in a talent pool of young engineers and entreprene­urs. Furthermor­e, Los Angeles’ proximity to Hollywood and its status as a transporta­tion hub enhances diversity and opportunit­ies for businesses.

“Although there are some restrictio­ns, I think there will be more US-China collaborat­ion in the future,” Liu said.

“There are a growing number of young Chinese talents. In fact, you will find that the national borders will become increasing­ly blurred in the future,” she said. “If there are people, skills and production force, then there is a market.”

But Fannin said the venture capital market in Los Angeles is still small compared to Silicon Valley, which focuses more on core technology, such as hardware and software. Los Angeles is more about content, made possible by its powerful Hollywood community.

Alibaba and Wanda Group have been the forerunner­s on the film front. Wanda acquired a majority stake in US movie theater chain AMC Entertainm­ent Holdings Inc in 2012. It also acquired production company Legendary Entertainm­ent in 2016.

Alibaba acquired a minority stake in director Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners in 2016 and has also invested in streaming video startup NewTV.

ObEN, an artificial intelligen­ce company co-founded in 2014 by Nikhil Jain and Adam Zheng, the co-founder of the Chinese dating site baihe.com, is another example of a startup that fuses entertainm­ent content with new technology.

The company, headquarte­red in Pasadena, uses AI techniques to create personaliz­ed artificial intelligen­ce, an avatar secured on the blockchain, which can run on users’ smartphone­s.

According to ObEN’s marketing manager Zheng Weijin, one of the company’s key focuses is creating personal artificial intelligen­ce for celebritie­s. ObEN has partnered with South Korea’s SM Entertainm­ent, Tencent and Shanghai Star48 Culture and Media to launch celebritie­s’ avatars that create new interactiv­e experience­s for fans.

Outside of the entertainm­ent realm, other sectors such as finance have also seen collaborat­ion between the two countries.

ZestFinanc­e, a big data company that specialize­s in providing credit scores, announced a partnershi­p with Baidu and JD in 2016 and 2015, respective­ly, to provide more accurate credit scores and credit risk evaluation services for users in China.

“Things change very rapidly in China. It continues to be a very entreprene­urial market that is setting new standards and innovation, and it’s giving the US, and Silicon Valley, some challenges,” Fannin said

“These are very powerful trends, very impactful trends that Silicon Valley, and other Silicon Valleys around the world, need to pay attention to.”

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Panelists talk about Sino-US cooperatio­n in Southern California at the 2018 SoCal Innovation Forum on Oct 6.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Panelists talk about Sino-US cooperatio­n in Southern California at the 2018 SoCal Innovation Forum on Oct 6.
 ??  ?? Artificial intelligen­ce company ObEN employees gather for a photo.
Artificial intelligen­ce company ObEN employees gather for a photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong