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    Baidu.com - NASDAQ: BIDU crashed - dieses Jahr noch unter 30 US Dollar? (Seite 125)

    eröffnet am 10.03.06 10:23:51 von
    neuester Beitrag 26.03.24 10:24:03 von
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      Avatar
      schrieb am 24.03.11 19:40:35
      Beitrag Nr. 721 ()
      hallo jungs und Mädels könnt Ihr mich mal kurz informieren warum für euch baidu ein kauf ist ?

      für mich nur angesichts der zahlen ein klarer verkauf, KGV von 50 und schon 32 MRD marktkapitalisierung bei nur ca 1 MRD umsatz das ist echt wie am neuen Markt !!!

      Warum sollten die in zuukunft mehr verdienen ?

      Was ist daran so besonders es gibt doch tausende suchmaschienen.

      habe die noch ein anderes Geschäft ?

      Die sind mehr wert als daimler ist das Gerechtfertigt ?

      steckt da substanz dahinter ?

      Wäre euch dankbar für ein paar antworten, ich bin bei 132 USD Short in Baidu Kursziel 30 USD

      MFG
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.11 22:48:00
      Beitrag Nr. 720 ()
      Is Baidu Phoning It In?
      http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2011/03/23/is-baidu-ph…
      Rick Aristotle Munarriz
      March 23, 2011


      Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU ) is becoming the Ke$ha to Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG ) Lady Gaga.

      Just as Baidu has followed Google with its own tweaked versions of search, Adwords, and Adsense, China's leading search engine is now apparently setting its sites on rolling out a mobile operating system.

      In a Financial Times interview published yesterday, Baidu CEO Robin Li discusses a stripped-down platform that would open to a single Baidu search box. Li's vision of "box computing" may seem ludicrous at first. Who wants a dumbed-down smartphone? Who wants a tablet that doesn't open up to shiny icons promising multimedia goodness with a single tap?

      However, Li's vision is an operating system that boots up in a second, unlike the nearly 45 seconds he claims that it takes some Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL ) iPhones to load up.

      Will this be enough to differentiate Baidu in a sea of mobile operating systems? It probably isn't going to help that the Financial Times claims that it will be another three to five years before Baidu's platform is released. It promises to be an entirely different landscape by then, and that's not necessarily a good thing.

      It also bears pointing out that a Baidu spokesman told Bloomberg this morning that Li never revealed that Baidu was actually working on a light operating system. The spokesman couldn't confirm or deny the report. It may simply be Li dreaming out loud -- though we all know how easy it is for these publicly voiced dreams to ultimately come true.

      It's easy to see why the dot-com darling is likely following Google into this niche. Just as Google has a hit with Android and another potential winner with Chrome, a search company can't resist the vertical integration. Baidu may command all but roughly a quarter of China's search market, but mobile search promises to be an entirely different market. Every device where Baidu can serve up its eventual operating system on assures it of being the box computing's box.

      Baidu obviously has a branding advantage in the world's most populous nation, but it still needs to cultivate the hardware relationships to make this happen.

      Google had it easy. Handset and tablet makers flocked to Android because it was a free open source solution. Instead of negotiating with Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT ) or dealing with the closed ecosystems of Apple and Research in Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM ) , Android has become the operating system of choice in entry-level gadgetry. Waiting a few years will make both the global and Chinese marketplaces that much more competitive.

      Li's allowed the luxury of dreaming out loud, though. Unlike other Chinese tech stocks that have been slammed lately, Baidu's stock is within pocket change of its all-time high.
      The failure of Microsoft's Kin may seem to indicate that consumers don't want a simplified platform, but who are we to tell Li to think outside of the box given his amazing track record?

      Tik Tok, Li.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.11 22:19:44
      Beitrag Nr. 719 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.256.051 von mann337 am 23.03.11 20:27:38wie ein Schweizer Uhrwerk :)

      So ist die Sache !!!
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.11 20:27:38
      Beitrag Nr. 718 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.255.637 von Karlll am 23.03.11 19:38:34wie ein Schweizer Uhrwerk :)
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.11 19:38:34
      Beitrag Nr. 717 ()
      Na, das geht ja seinen Gang heute. Aktuell + 4,5% und neues Hoch ausgebildet.

      Das Teil läuft wie ein Uhrwerk.
      2 Antworten

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      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.03.11 09:33:55
      Beitrag Nr. 716 ()
      23.03.2011 08:58
      Chinesische Baidu imitiert Google bei Handybetriebssystem

      Das größte chinesische Internetunternehmen Baidu plant laut einem Zeitungsbericht die Entwicklung einer einfachen und schnellen Software für Mobilfunkgeräte, ähnlich wie der Internetkonzern Google . In den kommenden drei bis fünf Jahren solle eine Software entwickelt werden, die es den Nutzern erlaube, nur wenige Sekunden nach Start ihres Smartphones oder ihres Tablet-PC Suchabfragen im Internet durchzuführen, sagte Baidu-Chef Robin Li der "Financial Times" (Mittwochausgabe).

      "Damit ein Betriebssystem funktioniert, ist viel Rechenleistung notwendig. Aber wenn es nur um eine Maske mit einer Suchabfrage geht, wird die Aufgabe viel leichter", sagte Li."Wenn man jetzt sein iPhone startet, dauert es 45 Sekunden, bevor man etwas tun kann." In der Zukunft werde es nur eine Sekunde dauern. "Das ist unsere Mission für die Zukunft des Internets".

      Auch das Betriebssystem Chrome OS des Suchmaschinenspezialisten Google soll die Wartezeiten beim Hochfahren minimieren. Hierzu setzt der Konzern auf das sogenannte Cloud Computing. Lediglich ein paar Anwendungen und Programme müssten dann auf dem PC oder Handy direkt installiert werden. Der Rest stehe im Internet zur Verfügung./hossps/stb/tw
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.03.11 11:12:07
      Beitrag Nr. 715 ()
      Hallo, anbei ein link zu einer charttechnischen Analyse von BIDU im Vergleich zum S&P 500 Index:

      http://www.facebook.com/pages/LRT-Finanz-Research/1419127697…

      Gruß,
      Randolff :cool:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 17.03.11 05:48:37
      Beitrag Nr. 714 ()
      Baidu Bides Its Time By Forming A New Base
      By DONALD H. GOLD, INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
      Posted 05:33 PM ET



      What do the best stocks do during a correction? They build bases. Baidu (BIDU), China's No. 1 search engine, is doing just that.

      The stock has been consolidating for almost five weeks with support at its 10-week moving average.

      Baidu's shares have corrected just 14% so far within this pattern. Such a shallow retreat in the face of some withering sell-offs in the broad market makes this pattern all the more impressive.

      Baidu's chart appears to be shaping a flat base. While the market storm rages elsewhere, Baidu's sideways action shows low volume — perfect behavior for a stock building a base.

      Demand for searches and other Web-based content are booming in China. The youths of that huge emerging market are especially avid about embracing the Web.

      The need for communications, gaming and news in the sprawling nation of 1.3 billion people is creating a host of Internet-related market leaders, past and present — and probably future as well.

      With nearly 80% of the search market under its belt, one may ask where Baidu will find its growth.

      The answer is from China's still-growing Internet market. True, the country's 450 million Internet users makes China the most-wired nation on Earth. But with only 30% of China's population on the Web, the growth potential is still huge, some analysts say.

      Above all, Baidu's model relies not on subscription payments, but on online advertising. That market has been booming, and most analysts see more explosive growth in the years ahead.

      In a March 1 research note, Kaufman Bros. said it expects a 50% compound annual growth rate from China's online ad market this year.

      Kaufman analyst Mayuresh Masurekar expected fresh growth from China's e-commerce advertisers, although this outlook was published before Japan's devastating earthquake and tsunami.

      The devastation and nuclear crisis from that disaster have roiled stocks around the globe. Some of the best stocks have gotten pounded.

      But, by holding relatively stable, Baidu is proving itself. That's how Baidu wins a Relative Price Strength Rating of 93, and a Relative Strength line that's near new highs. By moving sideways, Baidu is relatively strong amid weakening markets.

      Baidu's awesome full-year 2010 results — EPS surged 143%, sales climbed 81% — were helped by Google's (GOOG) withdrawal from the mainland in a dispute with Beijing over privacy and censorship.

      Baidu's Q4 results, released on Jan. 31, showed a 174% earnings increase as sales surged 101%.

      The report marked Baidu's fourth straight, quarterly triple-digit EPS gain, and its fourth straight quarter of sales acceleration.

      The company's latest results triggered a breakout from a cup-with-handle base on Feb. 1. The stock climbed 20% until it started making its current base. It is a late-stage pattern, however.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.03.11 07:12:46
      Beitrag Nr. 713 ()
      Chinese writers accuse Baidu of stealing
      16.03.2011



      BEIJING (AFP) – Dozens of popular Chinese writers have accused search engine giant Baidu of infringing their copyright and branded it a "thief" in the latest claims of piracy against the company.

      More than 40 writers, including controversial blogger Han Han, have signed a letter claiming Baidu provided their works for free to download on its online library Baidu Wenku without their permission.

      "Baidu has become a totally corrupt thief company," the authors said in the letter posted Tuesday on the website of government-linked China Written Works Copyright Society.

      "It stole our works, our rights, our property and has turned Baidu Wenku into a marketplace of stolen goods," it said.

      Baidu Wenku was launched in 2009 and allows users to read, share or download files and books, or their excerpts, for free. Readers can also purchase books from the online library -- at a much lower cost than the cover price.

      All documents are uploaded by Internet users and as of November Baidu Wenku had stockpiled more than 10 million files and books, accounting for 70 percent of China's online file sharing market, according to the company's figures.

      Baidu spokesman Kaiser Kuo said the search engine "attaches great importance to intellectual property rights protection" and had deleted "tens of thousands of infringing items" uploaded by web users.

      "We promised that authors or copyright holders can report problematic content found on Baidu Library to the complaint centre ... and we will delete infringing content within 48 hours," Kuo said in a statement Wednesday.

      In a disclaimer on its website, Baidu said users who uploaded the files must take on all liabilities and be responsible for compensation in any copyright disputes.

      However, the writers insisted Baidu should bear responsibility, claiming the company took advantage of the uploads to "enhance its own influence, boost its stock price and increase its profits".

      "We do not blame the friends who uploaded (the documents). We only blame the evil platform of Baidu," they said.

      Baidu has long been criticised for flouting intellectual property rights and its MP3 search service, which provides links to free but often pirated music downloads, has drawn fire from the recording industry.

      The US Trade Representative's office last month named Baidu as one of the world's top marketplaces for pirated and counterfeit goods, saying the company was enabling piracy with "deep linking" searches.

      Baidu has around 75 percent of the Chinese search market, compared with the 19.6 percent held by Google, which has been losing ground since a public spat with Beijing last year over censorship, according to analysts.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 11.03.11 16:24:39
      Beitrag Nr. 712 ()
      Kleiner Lichtblick in ansonsten rotem Umfeld



      11.03.2011 15:29
      BRIEF-RESEARCH ALERT-Susquehanna raises Baidu price target


      March 11 (Reuters) - Baidu Inc:

      * Susquehanna raises Baidu price target to $150 from $135; rating

      positive
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      Baidu.com - NASDAQ: BIDU crashed - dieses Jahr noch unter 30 US Dollar?