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Tencent, Alibaba among world’s most valued firms
POWERED by Chinese smartphone users splurging billions on mobile games and online shopping, tech giants Tencent and Alibaba are racing up the elite league of the world’s most valuable companies.
Hong Kong-listed Tencent, famous for its games and WeChat messaging service, became the first Asian firm to break into the US$500 billion league last week — briefly overtaking Facebook as the world’s fifth biggest company by market value.
Alibaba is just a few billion shy of joining its Chinese competitor at the top table of public listings — and is already there when taking into account its private affiliates.
While the top five — Apple, Google’s parent company Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook — thrive across the world, the two Chinese firms have made their fortunes by cornering China’s own vast market of 750 million Internet users.
Tencent and Alibaba do have a major advantage over American rivals because China severely restricts access to its Internet, with Facebook and Google kept outside the “Great Firewall.”
But they have also deftly tapped into smartphone technology to woo China’s large, adaptable population.
“Chinese consumers’ acceptance of new technology is faster than nearly anywhere,” said Zhao Chen, a managing partner at the China office of tech accelerator Plug and Play.
“Even my grandpa, who is 88 years old, uses WeChat and WeChat payment.”
Tencent boasts nearly one billion monthly active users of WeChat, known as a “super app” for its combination of instant messaging, social media, mobile payment options, games and publishing.
Half of WeChat users spend more than 90 minutes a day on the app.
In smartphone games alone, the company's revenues surged by 84 percent in the third quarter, driven by the success of the “Honour of Kings” title.
Alibaba, meanwhile, has dominated the e-commerce market, with Chinese consumers flocking to its shopping platforms to buy everything from laundry detergent to Boeing 747s.
The firm created an annual sales promotion held during China’s “Singles Day,” with consumers spending a record US$25 billion on November 11 — 40 percent up from last year.
Both firms have benefited from China’s rapid smartphone adoption, with cheap phones flooding the market and bringing millions online for the first time.
“This is basically a story of the mobile Internet,” said Shameen Prashantham, an associate professor at China Europe International Business School, of the tech giants’ growth.
“This country leapfrogged the (personal computer) stage straight onto the smartphone stage.”
Today, there are more than one billion smartphones running in China, according to iResearch. Both Tencent and Alibaba earn most of their revenue from mobile.
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