LINE

    Text:AAAPrint
    Economy

    Study finds Chinese unicorns are galloping ahead of U.S. rivals

    1
    2017-09-21 11:19CGTN Editor: Mo Hong'e ECNS App Download

    China could soon overtake the U.S. as the tech unicorn capital of the world, according to a recent report by a leading consultancy group, coming on the back of successive reforms and policies aimed at boosting innovation and startups in the country.

    Boston Consulting Group's (BCG) report, released last week, found Chinese tech start ups are reaching the one billion U.S. dollar valuation barrier – the valuation they officially need in order to qualify as a unicorn – three years faster than their U.S. counterparts, taking an average of four years, compared to seven for American companies.

    The report, compiled with the support of Alibaba's AliResearch, Baidu's Development Research Center and Didi's Strategic Research Institute, also revealed that 46 percent of Chinese unicorns reached valuations of one billion U.S. dollars in less than two years, compared to only nine percent in the U.S..

    Following BCG's study, China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) released its own report on Monday, showing that 5.5 million new companies were registered in 2016, a 24.5-percent increase on the previous year and a sign that entrepreneurship is booming.

    So what is giving Chinese startups an edge over their U.S. rivals? Is China's tech boom a bubble, or is Silicon Valley destined to fall behind Shenzhen, Hangzhou and Zhongguancun?

    Advantage One: A bigger market

    The most obvious edge Chinese unicorns have over U.S. startups is the size of their domestic market. Xinhua reported in August that there are now 751 million people surfing the web in the country, 724 million of whom use their mobiles to get online. 2016 saw 26.1 trillion yuan-worth of e-commerce transactions (3.8 trillion U.S. dollars), representing a year-on-year growth of 19.8 percent.

    China's embrace of mobile tech has been one of the main engines of unicorn growth. /VCG Photo

    Advantage Two: Brave new digital world

    China's tech boom came at the right time for companies that were already relatively new players in their respective industries, lacking market maturity and suffering from gaps and flaws that tech was ready to quickly fill.

    For example, China's personal finance industry has been able to embrace tech in a way that mature, established U.S. banks were slow or reluctant to do so. Alibaba's Yu'e Bao controlled assets of 165.5 billion U.S. dollars as of April this year, overtaking JPMorgan to become the world's biggest money market fund.

    BCG's report found that in 2016, China spent 8.5 trillion U.S. dollars through mobile payments – 70 times more than the amount spent in the U.S., and more than double the entire nominal GDP of Germany. Lin Guangyu, head of the digital payments for Ant Financial, told NPR that Alipay was set up "to resolve the issue of trust between people. And by resolving the issue of trust, we've also resolved the issue of payment."

    Advantage Three: Tech subsectors booming in China

    While Yu'e Bao represents a leap ahead for traditional financial sectors, China is also embracing entirely new concepts like live streaming and P2P lending to the extent that the rest of the world is being left behind. There are some 300 live streaming companies competing with each other in China, compared to just 50 in the U.S., according to BCG's report.

    Likewise with P2P lending, there are already some 3,000 companies in China in this new sector, controlling 850 billion yuan (129.5 billion U.S. dollars) of outstanding loans. The U.S. by comparison has only 100 online P2P companies, according to BCG.

    Can the unicorn boom last?

    As long as there are entrepreneurs, there will be new ideas – and entrepreneurship is very much on the rise in China. A Renmin University of China's study this year found half of more than 300,000 students were considering setting up their own businesses, while new policies to encourage graduates to fund startups are being rolled out across the country. By the end of 2016, China had set up 901 government guide funds, which have attracted 1.1 trillion yuan (167.5 million U.S. dollars).

    However, funding still remains a problem – Xiaomi founder Lei Jun has warned that while Chinese tech investment is huge, it is unevenly spread and concentrated on latter-stage funding rounds. At the Tianjin Summer Davos in 2016, Lei said that "the angel round is the hardest for Chinese startups… and it's not easy for them to get bank loans."

    Lei went on to cite the risks or slow rate of return on angel round investments as reasons why venture capitalists are reluctant to fund new tech startups in China, as well as blaming China's tax structure.

    Despite Lei Jun's complaints, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang's mass entrepreneurship and innovation program, initiated at the 2014 Summer Davos, has clearly played a big role in China's unicorn phenomenon. This week's report by the NDRC showed that there are currently 71 Chinese unicorns valued at over one billion U.S. dollars, and that 41.7 percent of the country's entrepreneurs are "young people."

      

    Related news

    MorePhoto

    Most popular in 24h

    MoreTop news

    MoreVideo

    News
    Politics
    Business
    Society
    Culture
    Military
    Sci-tech
    Entertainment
    Sports
    Odd
    Features
    Biz
    Economy
    Travel
    Travel News
    Travel Types
    Events
    Food
    Hotel
    Bar & Club
    Architecture
    Gallery
    Photo
    CNS Photo
    Video
    Video
    Learning Chinese
    Learn About China
    Social Chinese
    Business Chinese
    Buzz Words
    Bilingual
    Resources
    ECNS Wire
    Special Coverage
    Infographics
    Voices
    LINE
    Back to top Links | About Us | Jobs | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
    Copyright ©1999-2018 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 白水县| 项城市| 承德市| 德庆县| 仁寿县| 聊城市| 奉化市| 定兴县| 黎川县| 德庆县| 嘉禾县| 开江县| 巴中市| 攀枝花市| 平山县| 无极县| 赞皇县| 皮山县| 江川县| 绥宁县| 呼玛县| 明溪县| 方正县| 白河县| 贵州省| 富锦市| 静乐县| 米易县| 郓城县| 秀山| 丰都县| 慈溪市| 阳东县| 刚察县| 芜湖市| 孝昌县| 太保市| 新和县| 兴隆县| 信丰县| 济宁市|