首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Emerging Online Giants They may not have the name recognition of a Google or a Yahoo!. but they can claim to belong in t
The Emerging Online Giants They may not have the name recognition of a Google or a Yahoo!. but they can claim to belong in t
admin
2013-02-17
23
问题
The Emerging Online Giants
They may not have the name recognition of a Google or a Yahoo!. but they can claim to belong in the same league. The websites of Digital Sky Technologies (DST) account for more than 70% of page-views on the Russian-language Internet. Naspers is Africa’s biggest media group, both offline and online. And Tencent is China’s largest Internet company by market capitalization—and the third-largest in the world.
Now these firms are increasingly making their presence felt beyond their home markets. Between them they have invested in dozens of Internet firms around the globe. The most adventurous of the three, DST, has already moved west—and paid top dollar for stakes in fast-growing American companies, notably Facebook, the world’s biggest social network.
At first glance the three firms could not look more different. DST was created in 2005 when two Russian Internet investors, Yuri Milner and Gregory Finger, pooled their interests in mail. ru, a Russian web portal (门户网站) .Today the firm controls many of the country’s leading websites and boasts an interesting mix of owners, including Goldman Sachs and Alisher Usmanov, a Russian billionaire, who holds 27% .
Based in Cape Town, Naspers is nearly 100 years old and is the publisher of the Daily Sun, South Africa’s biggest newspaper. But it is one of the most ambitious old-media companies anywhere in its move online. It still makes most of its sales—28 billion rand ( $ 3. 6 billion) in the year to March—from print and pay-television, but it uses the cash to buy online firms.
Tencent hails from Shenzhen, near Hong Kong. Founded in 1998, it had revenues of $ 1. 8 billion in 2009. Although best known for QQ, a popular instant-messaging service with 567 million users, much of its profits come from online games and a virtual currency, called Q coins. Users purchase this with real money and use it to buy digital wares, such as virtual weapons to increase the powers of their avatars.
Despite their differences, the three firms can be seen as a block. For one thing, they are financially intertwined. Naspers owns part of mail, ru and was an early investor in Tencent, of which it now holds 35%. In April Tencent invested $ 300m in DST, giving it a stake of more than 10% and DST a valuation of about $3 billion. Tencent also has an interest in the Indian arm of MIH, Naspers’s Internet division.
What is more, the firms are on the same mission: finding promising Internet companies in countries where Western investors rarely dare to go. DST’s territories are Russia and its neighbours, most of which are home to one of its collection of companies; these include social networks such as VKontakte. ru and Nasza-Klasa. pl. Naspers has the largest part of Internet firms in developing countries, for instance in Brazil (BuscaPe, a comparison-shopping site), India (ibibo, a social network) and at home in South Africa (24. com, a portal). Tencent has so far been the most cautious of the three. Besides its recent investment in DST it has some minority stakes in games companies, such as VinaGame in Vietnam.
This international presence allows the firms to apply lessons they have learned in one country to another. "We spend an enormous amount of time on sharing knowledge," says Antoine Roux, the boss of MIH. For its part, DST knows which web businesses work and how much room for growth they still have, given a country’s GDP and Internet penetration. Alexander Tamas, a partner at DST, calls this "geographical arbitrage".
In Russia DST has seen how quickly social networks can grow: latecomers to the Internet, many Russians skipped e-mail and went right to social networks to communicate online. With advertising roubles (卢布) in short supply, DST’s companies also experimented early with other ways of making money from social networks and online games, such as charging for services and selling virtual goods. In December it merged mail, ru with Astrum Online, a gaming firm in effect forming a Russian Tencent. Free communication tools such as instant messaging create the audience that then pays for other services and virtual goods, Mr. Tamas explains.
It was only a question of time before one of the three firms tried to apply these emerging-market lessons in the West. DST has been the pioneer, for several reasons. Its partners learned their trade in America. It intends to go public one day. And it saw an opportunity: after the financial crisis, conventional investors were cautious and did not fully realise how fast social networks, for instance, would grow.
One further factor was essential in helping DST to burst into the party of the handful of private-equity funds, such as Elevation Partners, TCV and Silver Lake Partners, which typically provide successful American Internet firms with additional cash. DST’s corporate structure allows it to act quickly, and to make offers that are hard to refuse. In the case of Facebook, it agreed to what at the time seemed a high valuation, waived any right to special treatment should things go wrong and was willing to buy stock from employees. That is especially popular with young Internet firms. It allows founders and key employees to make money without having to sell the company or go public prematurely. "This is an IPO substitute," explains Mr. Milner, adding that DST’s investments give firms more time to focus on their product rather than thinking about a flotation.
Will DST’s strategy work? Buying into Facebook certainly looks like a smart move. DST has spent an estimated $ 800m for a stake of about 10%. When Elevation Partners recently invested $ 120m in Facebook, that deal put the company’s value at $ 23 billion, implying that DST’s investment has almost trebled.
In contrast, analysts say, DST may have overpaid for Zynga, the world’s largest online-gaming service, and for Groupon, a website that aggregates buyers and gets them special deals. Yet sceptics may again underestimate how quickly both can grow and what Zynga, for instance, is worth in combination with Facebook: taken together they look much like Tencent. In May, after lengthy negotiations, both firms agreed that Facebook Credits, the social network’s currency, would be accepted in Zynga’s games.
A bigger problem for DST may be that some see it as Russian—and thus "gloomy". To counter this, the firm has gone to great lengths to be open, inviting executives from firms in which it wanted to invest to Moscow to look at its books. The success of this strategy is demonstrated by the quality of its recent deals and its co-investors, which include such noted venture-capital firms as Accel Partners and Andreessen Horowitz. Even so, DST’s national origin could still matter as the firm makes further investments. Authorities in Washington, dc, are reportedly worried about DST’s latest acquisition: ICQ, an instant-messaging service previously owned by AOL.
However DST fares, it seems to attract copycats. Before Elevation Partners invested in Facebook, it had already cut what is now called a "DST deal" with Yelp, a fast-growing user-review site for local businesses. And although Naspers does not intend to make any investments in Western countries, Tencent may follow DST in doing so. Martin Lau, Tencent’s president, recently said it would step up its attacks abroad—which has led to talk that it may be interested in buying Yahoo!
Conversely, the apparent success of the three emerging-market Internet pioneers may prompt Western venture firms to take more interest in developing countries. Tiger Global Management, a New York hedge fund that is also a shareholder in DST, has already specialised in investing in start-ups beyond the West’s well-known technology clusters. Clearly, Internet investing is going global and the West is losing its monopoly, not just in thinking up clever ideas for web businesses but in financing them.
We can see the success of DST’s opening strategy is shown by the quality of its______.
选项
答案
recent deals and its co-investors
解析
定位句提及,DST开放性政策的成功可以从其最近的交易和共同投资人的品质上得以体现,同时题干中We can see the success of DST’s openingstrategy by the quality of its与定位句中The success of this strategy is demonstrated by the quality of相对应。题干缺少的是品质的主体,故可推知空格处答案为recent deals and its co—investors。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ifI7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Thedebateoverspanking(打屁股)goesbackmanyyears,buttheessentialquestionoftenescapesdiscussion:Doesspankingactually
TheFutureofTelevision:What’sonNext?BossesinthetelevisionindustryhavebeenkeepinganervouseyeontwoScandinav
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayonthetopicofChildrenObesity.Youshouldwriteatleast150
A、Amurdermystery.B、Afootballgame.C、Apoliticaldebate.D、Adocumentary.A短文开头提到,“我”一边往客厅里走,一边给室友讲看电视的危害。室友示意他安静(Shh),并告诉他“
A、Celebrityworship.B、Obsessionwithpsychology.C、Aworldofjustice.D、Favoritenailpolishcolour.A综合理解题。女士说Jane崇拜明星,她用几个小时
Advertisementsappeareverywhereinmodernsociety.Therearemanywaystoadvertiseandadscomeindifferentforms.Newspapers
A、Youngsuperstars.B、Establishedscholars.C、Successfulacademics.D、Mastersofacertainfield.A事实细节题。本文开头指出.研究发现,要想成功不应师从泰斗,
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledAPackageTouroraSelf-guidedTour7Youshouldwrite
Publicworksprojectshavenotsignificantly______theunemploymentsituation.
Ourfootballteamis______withonefromthenexttownforthechampionship.
随机试题
因为期末考试没考好,小明同学整整一个暑假,天天呆在家里,愁眉不展,干什么都没劲。这种情绪状态属于心境。()
近年来,某城市火车站周围出现了很多乞讨者。这些乞讨者中,一些是因为贫困而成为乞讨者,一些是“职业”乞讨者。“职业”乞讨者的主要目的是骗钱。这些人聚集在火车站周围,影响了整个城市的形象。问题:请根据上述情况拟订一份社会服务方案。
为了避免齿轮自动脱挡,在变速器操纵机构中设置了()装置。
患者男,57岁。反复便血4个月。患者4个月前,排便时发现粪便表面附着少量鲜血,未予理会,以后常常发现粪便表面带血,无黏液及脓,无腹痛,无里急后重,大便每日一次。发病以来无发热,食欲好,体重无明显变化。查体:一般状态好,皮肤黏膜未见出血点,心肺查体未见异常,
路基施工基本方法有以下几种,其中错误的是()。
叠层铺贴的各种卷材,在天沟与屋面的交接处,应采用(),搭接缝应错开。
A公司是一个制造企业,拟添置一台设备,有关资料如下:(1)如果自行购置该设备,预计购置成本630万元,税法折旧年限为7年,预计7年后净残值为零。预计该设备5年后的变现价值为180万元。(2)B租赁公司表示可以为此项目提供融资,并提供了以下租赁方案:每年
以下关于选择排列法进行考评的表述,不正确的是()。
二位抱小孩的女顾客来买糖,还没轮到她买,孩子就哭闹起来,嚷着要吃糖,只见张秉贵从货柜里拿起一块糖,放到孩子手里,孩子顿时止住了哭声。张秉贵说:“这块糖等会儿一块算账”,她感激地点点头,过了一会儿,轮到她买糖时,张秉贵从称好的糖果中拿出一块,放回货柜里,又拿
Aperson’shomeisasmuchareflectionofhispersonalityastheclotheshewears,thefoodheeatsandthefriendswithwhomh
最新回复
(
0
)