Google says no plan to up stake in Baidu (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-20 14:53
Web search leader Google Inc. said on Monday it may not raise its small stake
in China's top search engine Baidu.com, even as competition rises in the fast
growing sector.
An ad for Baidu.com is seen in Shanghai,
August 4, 2005. Web search leader Google said on Monday it may not raise
its small stake in China's top search engine Baidu.com, even as
competition rises in the fast growing sector.
[newsphoto] |
"We have a very small stake in the company, which is a strategic investment
that was made a while back, but as far as I know there aren't any plans beyond
that," Daniel Alegre, the director of international Websearch & Syndication,
told reporters on the sidelines of a conference.
Google owns 2.6 percent of Baidu, and was believed to be seeking to boost its
stake prior to the Chinese company's hugely successful initial public offering
in August.
The comments come after Baidu's chief executive said last month that the
company planned to remain independent, and was not interested in finding a major
foreign investor.
In contrast, rival Yahoo Inc. paid $1 billion for 40 percent of Chinese Web
auctioneer Alibaba.com earlier this year, taking on eBay and Baidu.com as it
extends its reach in the world's second-biggest Internet market.
Google for its part hired former Microsoft Inc. executive Li Kaifu and Johnny
Chou, an executive at former local telecoms heavyweight UTStarcom, to spearhead
its China operations.
"We are focused on building products that are very tailored to the Chinese
market and tapping into the tremendous engineering pool that China has," said
Google's Alegre.
Google also has partnerships with local Internet companies like NetEase.com
Inc..
With Internet users expected to hit 120 million by the end of this year,
China could surpass the United States in five years.
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