China Daily (Hong Kong)

Baidu to further tap livestream­ing

Internet giant set to acquire Joyy Inc’s live businesses in China for $3.6b

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Baidu Inc announced on Tuesday it will acquire Joyy Inc’s videobased entertainm­ent livestream­ing business in China for $3.6 billion in cash, a move that will mark the search engine giant’s latest foray into the fast-growing online video and livestream­ing segment, and diversify its revenue sources beyond its core search business, experts said.

The deal involves YY mobile app, YY.com website and YY PC, among others. The closing of the transactio­n is subject to certain conditions and is expected to take place in the first half of 2021, Baidu said.

“This transactio­n will catapult Baidu into a leading platform for livestream­ing and diversify our revenue source,” said Robin Li, co-founder and CEO of Baidu.

“YY Live stands to benefit from Baidu’s large traffic and thriving mobile ecosystem, while Baidu will receive immediate operationa­l experience and know-how for large-scale video-based social media developmen­t, as well as an enviable creator network that will further strengthen Baidu’s massive content provider network,” Li added.

He said that together with the team from YY Live, Baidu hopes to explore the next-generation livestream­ing and video-based social media that can expand beyond entertainm­ent into the diversifie­d verticals on the company’s platform.

Li Xueling, chairman and CEO of Joyy, a leading social media platform, said the company has been deeply engaged in the livestream­ing business for many years.

“YY Live is a leading pan-entertainm­ent livestream­ing platform in China and possesses a comprehens­ive system of operationa­l procedures, and a full range of domain expertise related to the developmen­t of livestream­ing ecosystems, innovation of livestream­ing technologi­es, content operation, monetizati­on features and systems for host incubation and host developmen­t,” Li from Joyy said.

“This transactio­n will allow YY Live to access Baidu’s massive user traffic, boost its business growth and enhance its ecosystem’s monetizati­on capabiliti­es to unleash greater value in a larger ecosystem,” he added.

In addition, Baidu unveiled its third quarter financial results that beat analysts’ estimates. Its total revenue reached 28.2 billion yuan ($4.16 billion), an increase of 1 percent on a yearly basis, while revenue from Baidu’s core search engine business amounted to 21.4 billion yuan.

The Beijing-based tech giant is betting big on the informatio­n and knowledge-centered livestream­ing business in an attempt to grab a bigger slice of the lucrative market currently dominated by short-video platforms such as Douyin and Kuaishou.

“We intend to be more active in promoting livestream­ing in 2020. We have capabiliti­es to organize very targeted livestream­s to attract users and provide correspond­ing services that meet users’ unique demands,” said Shen Dou, executive vice-president of Baidu, in an earlier interview.

Zhang Yi, CEO of consultanc­y iiMedia Research, said the deal could help Baidu improve its revenue structure in the short term, and foray into the relatively new sphere of livestream­ing.

“It is noteworthy that Baidu could diversify its monetizati­on channels through such an acquisitio­n, from heavily relying on its core search engine business in the past to venturing into new business,” Zhang said.

Zhang estimated that Baidu will make lots of similar investment­s and acquisitio­ns in the future, which serves as an important strategy and direction for its upgrading and transforma­tion in the digital economy era.

Last month, Douyu and Huya, the country’s two major gaming livestream­ing platforms, said that they have agreed to merge. Tencent would have almost 68 percent of the new behemoth’s voting power via its affiliates.

As an early entrant in the livestream­ing sector, Joyy is now lagging behind its competitor, videostrea­ming platform Bilibili Inc, said Yu Yandi, an analyst at Beijingbas­ed internet consultanc­y Analysys.

However, Joyy owns a mature livestream­ing system, and by taking over Joyy’s YY streaming network, Baidu could get hold of new users and expand its business landscape in the new field, said Yu, adding that the deal will help Baidu catch up in the heated arena of online entertainm­ent and further intensify competitio­n in the burgeoning livestream­ing sector.

Founded in 2005, Joyy enables users to interact with each other in real time through online live media and offers users a uniquely engaging and immersive entertainm­ent experience.

The Nasdaq-listed company owns livestream­ing social media platform YY Live, Bigo Live and short video platform Likee. It has amassed more than 4 million paying users who purchase virtual gifts to tip their favorite performers.

 ?? LIU JIALIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Performers sing at a celebratio­n held by Joyy Inc in Guangzhou.
LIU JIALIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Performers sing at a celebratio­n held by Joyy Inc in Guangzhou.

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