China Daily Global Edition (USA)

The unquestion­able 2015-16 Chinese corporate hero is…

- By SIVA SANKAR Contact the writer at siva@chinadaily.com.cn

It’s been a year since I’ve relocated from India to work in China. I’ve an old habit of mentally tracking business groups and their bosses, and figuring who’s the tallest of them all.

Every year, inmymind’s eye, the clear winner of the fantasy competitio­n receives the “Businessma­n/Corporate of the Year” award.

The methodolog­y used is utterly unscientif­ic, arbitrary and downright mad — notmy words but a summary of what others, particular­ly fellow journalist­s, say on WeChat and WhatsApp.

But, the one-and-only judge’s decision is final. Too bad if you disagree (but you may well agree). Read on only if you must. Any injury to your sense of justice and fair play would be entirely self-inflicted.

And the 2015-16 award goes too… But first, the contenders:

1) Alibaba / JackMa: Online sales festivals like Singles Day are crazy, fun. Digital payment systems, startup funding, cross-border e-commerce, overseas investment­s, buyout of SCMP, initiative for a world digital platform for cross-border e-commerce by small businesses… have all made headlines. But share price woes on the NYSE, early believer SoftBank’s sale of part of its Alibaba stake, and a US SEC probe into possible violation of securities laws have dented the behemoth’s image.

2) Didi Chuxing: Swift nationwide expansion, Apple’s $1 billion investment, followed by capitulati­on by its bitter, dollar-bleeding rival Uber have made Didi a worthy contender, but not a winner. For, when confusion over the legality of ride-hailing arose, Didi didn’t exactly display proactive leadership of a fledgling industry.

3) Gree, Midea, Haier, Hisense, TCL and DJI: These appliance and gadget makers showed remarkable capacity for innovation and panache in warding off competitio­n from Japanese/foreign firms. Be it intelligen­t products, web-connected factories, customized production, multipurpo­se drones or cookers for specific varieties of rice, they have done it all. But branding at a global level isn’t still their strength.

4) Huawei: Clearly gave both Apple and Samsung some sleepless nights, and overtookXi­aomi in China. Not a world-beater yet.

5) Xiaomi: Seems to have lost its plot. Smartphone shipments are down. Diversific­ation into appliances, PCs and support for new startups aren’t exactly reaping rich dividends yet.

6) Lenovo: After the IBM deal and foray into smartphone­s, hasn’t really done anything earth-shattering.

7) LeEco: Gadgets, devices, content, apps, electric driverless vehicles — it’s into too many things, but is yet to gain the critical mass of a conglomera­te.

8) Baidu: Talk of Google’s return to China hasn’t energized China’s internet search giant. Its Uber investment lost its sheen as Didi prospered. But Baidu bestrides web search like a colossus.

9) Tencent: The all-inclusive WeChat is the envy of WhatsApp, Line and SnapChat. Alibaba’s share woes made Tencent Asia’s biggest tech firm. Big-ticket investment­s in gaming, music and autonomous­electric cars have reflected an appetite for corporate glory.

10) SOEs (power, steel, coal, auto, railway and aircraft companies): They cut huge deals globally, or sewed up expansion or joint venture plans; started making things locally; valiantly fought the overcapaci­ty demons; some even returned to profitabil­ity, with steel firms upgrading products to supply to the auto industry that saw joint ventures with global giants on one side and advent of e-vehicles on the other.

11) Fosun, Vanke, Anbang: Hit headlines, but not always for the right reasons. Alsorans.

12) Disney Shanghai: Opened in June, madea media splash and a positive impact on Shanghai realty. Deserves more time before being judged.

By the way, telecom firms and banks didn’t qualify this year. So, the winner is… Wang Jianlin/Dalian Wanda Group: Wang-led Wanda has hit the global headlines throughout the last 12 months. Consider: buyout of Hollywood film studio Legendary, overseas cinema chains and European football clubs; creation of infrastruc­ture like soccer academies; sponsorshi­p of coaching camps; partnershi­p with FIFA; setting up of theme parks to rival Disney and Universal; clever delisting of property arm from the Hong Kong bourse to relist in Shanghai; gaming forays; and amid all this, finding time for an English book, luxury home shopping in London, philanthro­py and sparking an online buzz with comments on how to make billions (by making small millions over and over again).

The world recognizes Wang and Wanda. You’ll agree and see there’s method inmy madness, won’t you?

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Wanda CEO Wang Jianlin at a conference in Beijing.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY Wanda CEO Wang Jianlin at a conference in Beijing.

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