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Is Baidu Inc (ADR) a Buy?

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Chinese search giant Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU) went public in 2005. After stumbling out of the IPO gate, it experienced the type of run-up that can create dynastic wealth for patient investors. Between early 2006 and mid-2011, shares of the company advanced 3,000%. In other words, in just five years, you could have turned a $10,000 investment into $300,000!

But since then, the stock has been a chronic underperformer. Since 2011, shares of Baidu have returned 66%. That's not bad, but the broader market has spanked it, returning over 100% during the same time frame.

Shanghai at sunset
Shanghai at sunset

Is the sun setting, or rising on Baidu's opportunities in China and beyond? Image source: Getty Images.

First, it was upstart Qihoo gaining search market share from Baidu. Then, it was an expensive foray into an online-to-offline (O2O) business model that has had modest results. After that, the Chinese government cracked down hard on advertising practices after the death of a student using the services of a Baidu advertiser.

But -- finally -- things seemed to be looking up for investors. Baidu successfully spun out its iQiyi (NASDAQ: IQ) streaming video subsidiary, and a focus on artificial intelligence (AI) has captured investor attention. Shares of the company had doubled since early 2016. Then, the stock dropped again last week, this time by 10% on the news of AI specialist and COO Qi Lu's departure from that role.

It's all enough to make a long-term investor -- I've held shares for over six years -- wonder: Is Baidu even a buy anymore?

Taking the long view

Before even diving into that question, though, it's important to calibrate ourselves. While I briefly went over the company's stumbles of the past five years, an investment is only important insomuch as how it performs moving forward.

Of course, since we have yet to discover a fully functional crystal ball, we can't predict the future with any level of certainty. That being said, there are lots of ways to evaluate the competitive landscape in China, where Baidu is positioned in that landscape, how well-prepared the company is to take on adversity, and how expensive the stock is.

Where does Baidu sit in the Chinese technology landscape?

Baidu is hardly the big kid on the block in China anymore. While it is valued at about $90 billion, Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (NASDAQOTH: TCEHY) both clock in at roughly $500 billion. They have different core businesses, with Baidu focused on search, Alibaba operating the largest e-commerce platform, and Tencent home to the most popular social media app (WeChat) and video games.