Here's a story about corporate reinvention that feels very 2025: A struggling Chinese advertising company decides its future lies in trading used smartphones and settling payments with cryptocurrency. Welcome to the world of Qian Xun Technology Ltd. (1640.HK).
Last Friday, Qian Xun unveiled PayKet, a new payment service designed primarily for cross-border settlements in the second-hand mobile phone market. The twist? It uses stablecoins, those cryptocurrencies pegged to real-world assets like the U.S. dollar. The platform also throws in some supply chain finance features and digital wallet functions for good measure.
Now, before you ask: Yes, cryptocurrencies are banned in mainland China, where Qian Xun is based. But Hong Kong has taken a different approach, especially with stablecoins. The city launched a stablecoin regulatory framework in August, and that's almost certainly where PayKet is setting up shop. Stablecoins are less speculative than your typical crypto, and as the name suggests, they're meant to maintain stable value rather than swinging wildly like Bitcoin on a Tuesday afternoon.
From Ad Sales to Used Phones
The PayKet launch represents the latest chapter in Qian Xun's dramatic transformation. The company is ditching its legacy advertising services business for e-commerce, specifically focused on trading used electronics. Earlier this year, it even changed its name from Ruicheng (China) Media Group Ltd. to signal the shift.
Why the pivot? China's prolonged economic slowdown has customers cutting marketing budgets, which squeezed Qian Xun's advertising revenue hard enough that the company lost money for three straight years through 2024. Meanwhile, that same economic weakness is making consumers more interested in buying used gadgets instead of shiny new ones. If you can't beat the economic headwinds, ride them to a different business.
The transformation is already showing results. In the first half of this year, Qian Xun's revenue soared 10-fold year-over-year to 647 million yuan ($92 million), driven entirely by its new e-commerce operations while advertising revenue continued to shrink. Net profit growth matched that revenue surge, though that was partly thanks to gains from selling off a subsidiary. Still, the company appears on track to record its first annual net profit in years, which is a nice change of pace.
Why Stablecoins Matter
The big advantage of using stablecoins for cross-border payments is speed and cost. Transaction settlements happen almost instantly and typically cost less than moving traditional currencies like dollars or yuan across borders. According to an October report from a16z crypto, a venture capital fund focused on crypto investments, stablecoins were used for $46 trillion worth of transactions in the past year. That's real adoption.
Qian Xun handles overseas sales of more than 1 million mobile devices annually, so there's a built-in user base for PayKet. And the company isn't stopping at phones. It plans to expand to cover all "3Cs," which in industry speak means computers, communications devices, and consumer electronics.
Beyond Payments
PayKet isn't just a payment processor. Qian Xun is also positioning it as a supply chain finance tool, which is where things get interesting. The company has integrated its own Internet of Things (IoT) smart warehousing technology and an AI model for price predictions. This combination lets PayKet provide credit intermediary services for supply chain finance.
The platform digitizes inventory goods and combines them with smart contracts stored on blockchain networks. Customers can even use idle funds on the platform for wealth management. It's an ambitious feature set that tries to address multiple pain points in cross-border electronics trading at once.
In announcing PayKet, Qian Xun described the rollout as an upgrade to becoming a fintech services provider for digital currencies. The company also positioned it as a step toward becoming a "Caifutong for cross-border trade," referencing Tencent's cross-border payment service. That's not a small ambition.
Building the Infrastructure
Qian Xun has been preparing for this moment. Just three months ago, in September, the company agreed to buy Punkcode Technology, a Web3 fintech company founded by Tencent alumni, for HK$25 million ($3.2 million). The goal was to develop new products and services based on blockchain technology, and PayKet appears to be one of the first fruits of that acquisition.
The company also raised about HK$300 million through convertible bonds in February specifically to develop new services for second-hand device trading, both domestically and overseas. This isn't a side project; it's a full-scale strategic pivot backed by real capital.
Market Context
Qian Xun's move comes at an interesting time for the used electronics market. Weak economic conditions globally mean more consumers are considering pre-owned devices instead of splurging on new ones. Advances in standardization and refurbishment capabilities have made used gadgets more appealing and reliable. This trend has lifted a new generation of Chinese electronics recycling specialists like U.S.-listed ATRenew (RERE.US) and ShanH, which has filed to list in Hong Kong.
Investors seem to approve of Qian Xun's direction. The company's shares are up about 25% this year. They trade at a price-to-sales ratio of 2, which seems modest until you compare it to Hong Kong-listed shares of e-commerce giant JD.com (JD.US; 9618.HK) at 0.2, or ATRenew at 0.5. Qian Xun's valuation is also ahead of Cango (CANG.US) at 0.8, another company that recently transformed itself from a car trader into a bitcoin miner and high performance computing center operator.
That valuation premium suggests investors believe Qian Xun's focus on affordable used electronics can work in the current economic environment. They also seem to appreciate the company's move into cutting-edge financial services using blockchain and AI. If PayKet can attract more users through the convenience of cryptocurrency settlements and actually deliver on its supply chain finance ambitions, it could justify even more upside for the stock.
The real test will be execution. Building a fintech platform is one thing; getting merchants and consumers to actually use it is another. But for a company that was losing money in advertising just a year ago, Qian Xun has at least found a narrative that resonates with both customers and investors. Now it just needs to deliver.




