TechCentralTechCentral
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    WhatsApp Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
    TechCentralTechCentral
    • News

      Dimension Data to be renamed NTT Data

      27 October 2023

      DStv makes RWC final stream available for R19.95

      27 October 2023

      Karpowership gets green light for Richards Bay plant

      27 October 2023

      Why people wave on Zoom

      27 October 2023

      Microsoft gaining ground in cloud race with AWS, Google

      27 October 2023
    • World

      Intel beats expectations; manufacturing momentum builds

      27 October 2023

      Google CEO to testify on Monday in antitrust trial

      27 October 2023

      Huawei sees growth in cloud, digital power segments

      27 October 2023

      China rushes to swap Western tech for domestic options

      26 October 2023

      Alphabet, Meta deliver solid financial performances

      26 October 2023
    • In-depth

      Quantum computers in 2023: what they do and where they’re heading

      22 October 2023

      How did Stephen van Coller really do as EOH CEO?

      19 October 2023

      Risc-V emerges as new front in US-China tech war

      6 October 2023

      Get ready for a tidal wave of software M&A

      26 September 2023

      Watch | A tour of Vumatel’s Alexandra fibre roll-out

      19 September 2023
    • TCS

      TCS | Mesh.trade’s Connie Bloem on the future of finance

      26 October 2023

      TCS | Rahul Jain on Peach Payments’ big funding round

      23 October 2023

      TCS+ | How MiWay uses conversation analytics

      16 October 2023

      TCS+ | The story behind MTN SuperFlex

      13 October 2023

      TCS | The Information Regulator bares its teeth – an interview with Pansy Tlakula

      6 October 2023
    • Opinion

      Big banks, take note: PayShap should be free

      20 October 2023

      Eskom rolling out virtual wheeling – here’s how it works

      4 October 2023

      How blockchain can help defeat the scourge of counterfeit goods

      29 September 2023

      There’s more to the skills crisis than emigration

      29 September 2023

      The role of banks in Africa’s digital future

      22 August 2023
    • Company Hubs
      • 4IRI
      • Africa Data Centres
      • Altron Document Solutions
      • Altron Systems Integration
      • Arctic Wolf
      • AvertITD
      • CoCre8
      • CYBER1 Solutions
      • Digicloud Africa
      • Digimune
      • E4
      • Entelect
      • ESET
      • Euphoria Telecom
      • iKhokha
      • Incredible Business
      • iONLINE
      • LSD Open
      • Maxtec
      • MiRO
      • NEC XON
      • Next DLP
      • Ricoh
      • Skybox Security
      • SkyWire
      • Velocity Group
      • Videri Digital
    • Sections
      • AI and machine learning
      • Banking
      • Broadcasting and Media
      • Cloud computing
      • Consumer electronics
      • Cryptocurrencies
      • E-commerce
      • Education and skills
      • Energy
      • Fintech
      • Information security
      • Internet and connectivity
      • Internet of Things
      • Investment
      • IT services
      • Metaverse and gaming
      • Motoring and transport
      • Open-source software
      • Public sector
      • Science
      • Social media
      • Talent and leadership
      • Telecoms
    • Events
    • Advertise
    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home » Sections » Investment » Tencent disappoints in warning for Chinese tech sector

    Tencent disappoints in warning for Chinese tech sector

    Tencent Holdings’ revenue missed estimates, signalling an uneven recovery for the world’s biggest internet arena.
    By Agency Staff17 August 2023
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email

    Tencent Holdings’ revenue missed estimates, signalling an uneven recovery for the world’s biggest internet arena as it grapples with rising Chinese economic turbulence and anaemic consumer sentiment.

    The country’s largest company reported a less-than-expected 11% rise in revenue after sales from major divisions including gaming and cloud services fell well short of projections. Online advertising surged 34% — the fastest in almost five years — in part because of algorithmic tweaks and a favourable comparison with last year’s Covid trough.

    Its shares slid as much as 2.5% in Hong Kong, their biggest fall in about two weeks. The lacklustre results cast doubt over a long-awaited comeback for an embattled sector whose leaders from Tencent to Alibaba Group barely grew in 2022.

    Signs are mounting that the Chinese economy is faltering, a potent risk for tech leaders…

    Signs are mounting that the Chinese economy is faltering, a potent risk for tech leaders that traditionally rely heavily on the domestic market. Executives played down the potential fallout from stubbornly weak consumption, arguing that improvements in advertising technology targeting as well as Tencent’s breadth of data and services will help it grow faster than rivals. The WeChat operator, a barometer for the economy and industry through a business portfolio that spans entertainment and social media to finance, sustained double-digit sales growth for the second straight quarter.

    “Yes the economy is uncertain, but it’s been uncertain for the past couple of years,” chief strategy officer James Mitchell told analysts on a conference call. “It was uncertain in the first half of this year, and we’ve been able to grow through that and we believe we will keep growing and going forward as we enhance the return on investment to advertisers.”

    Read: TikTok parent now makes us much revenue as Tencent

    Tencent’s net income rose 41% to C¥26.2-billion (US$3.6-billion) in the second quarter, lagging the C¥32.3-billion average estimate in part because of a C¥3-billion fine levied on its fintech business by regulators. Revenue rose to C¥149.2-billion for the three months ended June, also missing projections.

    Tencent and Alibaba: twin stars

    Tencent and Alibaba, the twin stars of a once-freewheeling industry, have gained some $50-billion of market value since May’s end, propelled by expectations of a gradual return to the consistent growth they enjoyed before Beijing clamped down on its biggest private corporations and richest entrepreneurs from 2020.

    Keen to rejuvenate the world’s second largest economy, the government has in recent months signalled it’s ready to unfetter the sector and conclusively end an era of unpredictable diktats. That’s yet to translate into major policies, while Chinese consumer spending remains muted because of cloudy prospects for growth and employment.

    Alibaba last week reported a better-than-expected 14% revenue rise for the June quarter as all its main divisions returned to growth, but warned of economic volatility ahead. JD.com on Wednesday also reported faster-than-anticipated growth after a successful “6.18” summer shopping festival. But retail margins slid, reflecting intensifying competition. Its shares fell more than 4% in early trading in New York.

    Read: Tencent in big push to build its own TikTok

    Like Alibaba and JD, Tencent faces foes on multiple fronts: old-time rivals like Baidu and Meituan are vying for dominance of the Chinese internet thanks to the emergence of generative AI. Baidu has so far stolen much of the limelight of the post-ChatGPT race, debuting Ernie Bot in March. Tencent’s testing its own large language model among employees and said on Wednesday it plans to unveil a proprietary artificial intelligence model later this year that it believes will be among the country’s best.

    “It’s among the top leading foundation models produced in China,” said Martin Lau, the company’s president, on the second-quarter earnings call. “We are very relentlessly working on the upgrade and iteration to prepare it for launch at some point of time in the latter part of this year.”

    Abroad, ByteDance and PDD Holdings continue to make strides, building on expansions that began when Alibaba and Tencent were forced to show restraint. Despite rising geopolitical tensions, apps like TikTok and Temu offer a template for older peers seeking to regain pre-crackdown heights.

    At home, the Chinese economy is worsening as Beijing grapples with property sector turmoil, rising debt and flagging domestic consumption.

    To tide it over, Tencent is intent on reviving mainstay businesses like gaming and advertising, while continuing to push cost cuts. This year, the world’s biggest game publisher debuted blockbusters Valorant and Lost Ark in its home market, filling a long-empty pipeline after censors resumed licensing approvals last year. Executives have declared Valorant its most important game of the year, as Tencent set aside more than $100-million for content and e-sports for the Riot Games shooter over the next three years.

    Read: Prosus sells another chunk of Tencent

    Such new launches will test a rapidly saturating market, where younger players are increasingly drawn to anime games created by up-and-comers like Mihoyo. The maker of Genshin Impact just scored another hit with its April release of Honkai: Star Rail, which topped download charts in countries from China to Japan and the US.

    Tencent’s international gaming revenue rose in the quarter while domestic sales plateaued, reflecting healthier spending abroad. Beijing this year moved to further limit time spent online by minors, adding to already strict gaming curbs.

    Read: Tencent’s video transcoding chip enters mass production

    “For the first quarter, Honour of Kings offered a load of in-game items to players, a momentum that was hard to keep up in the second quarter,” said Shawn Yang, MD at Blue Lotus Capital Advisors, speaking of Tencent’s mainstay mobile title. “New releases, in the meantime, are not as competitive as those from NetEase and Mihoyo.”  — Zheping Huang, with Jane Zhang, Sarah Zheng, Henry Ren, Mayumi Negishi and Peter Elstrom, (c) 2023 Bloomberg LP

    Get TechCentral’s daily newsletter

    Alibaba ByteDance Tencent TikTok
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleRand expected to strengthen, provided Eskom behaves
    Next Article South Africa seeks deal with China on solar panels

    Related Posts

    Dimension Data to be renamed NTT Data

    27 October 2023

    DStv makes RWC final stream available for R19.95

    27 October 2023

    Karpowership gets green light for Richards Bay plant

    27 October 2023
    Promoted

    Acsa aims for carbon neutrality by 2050

    27 October 2023

    iKhokha, Shopstar pave the way for simpler e-commerce

    27 October 2023

    Flutter vs React Native: a comprehensive comparison

    27 October 2023
    Opinion

    Big banks, take note: PayShap should be free

    20 October 2023

    Eskom rolling out virtual wheeling – here’s how it works

    4 October 2023

    How blockchain can help defeat the scourge of counterfeit goods

    29 September 2023

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    © 2009 - 2023 NewsCentral Media

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.