Banking/Finance

YoungChinabiz – Top news about Banking in China & Finance from Reuter reporter based in China

IPOs: Guotai Zooms, Legend Lumbers, Toncheng Eyes China

Bottom line: A probable correction in China’s stock markets could cause Tongcheng to abandon its decision to list at home, and lead to a weak debut for Legend Holdings’ Hong Kong IPO.

Toncheng eyes China IPO

When the history books are written, the latest batch of IPO news could well mark the end of a brief but unusually buoyant period that has seen many Chinese companies eschew overseas stock markets for listings at home. Leading off the news was a sizzling performance by securities brokerage Guotai Junan (Shanghai: 601211) on its trading debut in Shanghai, as it become China’s biggest domestic IPO since 2010.

Another piece of IPO news also cast a spotlight on the hot Chinese stock markets, as online travel site Tongcheng said it was eying a listing at home in the next year, in a snub to New York where most of its peers are traded. Last but not least, the lukewarm reception for Chinese listings abroad was reinforced by Legend Holdings, parent of PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992), which failed to attract any major international investors as it priced its Hong Kong IPO. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Foreigners Get E-Payment Green Light

Bottom line: China’s opening of the electronic payment services market could see PayPal and other foreign providers finally receive long-awaited licenses to operate in the market by year-end.

PayPal may finally get China green light

Foreign financial companies came a step closer to realizing a long-awaited goal last week, when Beijing announced it would allow them to open fully-owned electronic transaction processing ventures for e-commerce services in the year-old Shanghai free trade zone. The move comes after years of lobbying by foreign companies like PayPal, MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and Visa (NYSE: V), which have watched enviously at the rapid growth of a domestic financial system that China committed to open when it joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Bubble Crests With Guotai IPO, Zhubajie Mega-Funding

Bottom line: A record IPO by Guotai Junan and massive private fund raising by a relatively unknown website reflect the overheated state of China’s capital markets, and could reflect a cresting of the current stock market rallies.

Guotai Junan eyes mega-IPO

With China’s stock market posting 2 consecutive days of large losses, everyone is starting to guess whether the current stock market rally may have finally crested and a period of correction begun. Two of the latest fund-raising headlines show just how frothy and ambitious activity has become, led by a plan for China’s biggest IPO in 5 years from securities brokerage Guotai Junan. The other headline comes in the venture funding space, where Zhubajie, a relatively unknown company in the hot crowdsourcing sector, has just landed an impressive 2.6 billion yuan ($420 million) in new funding. Read Full Post…

CELLPHONES: Technology Issue Gives Xiaomi New Headache

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s newest technology headache, if true, could delay the launch of its fifth-generation phone, further sapping its momentum and making it difficult to reach its 2015 sales target.

Xiaomi reportedly hits technology glitch

The once invincible Xiaomi is starting to look increasingly mortal, with reports that the smartphone high-flyer may have to delay the launch of its newest model due to technical reasons. I’m not too knowledgeable on the technical issues in this instance, but the potential new delays for the release of the Xiaomi 5 appear to be related to fingerprint recognition technology that the company plans to build into the new models.

If these latest reports are true, the delays could put a big crimp in the Xiaomi’s ambitious sales plans this year as it attempts to maintain its breakneck growth. Maintaining that kind of growth looks increasingly difficult due to all the technical issues, combined with intensifying competition in Xiaomi’s core China market. That competition is causing the company to abandon the online-only sales model that helps it keep costs down, which will ultimately undermine its profit margins. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Shanda Tries Finance With Russell Investments Bid

Bottom line: Shanda’s participation in a bid for a US financial firm marks the start of the company’s move into finance, and reflects the broader rise of a new group of major private equity investors in Shanghai.

Shanda joins bid for US investment firm

Following its failed bid to become a major online entertainment company, the Shanghai-based Shanda is trying its hand at deal-making, with word that it’s part of a group making a bid for major US financial firm Russell Investments. Shanda’s entry to the private equity realm marks a growing trend that is seeing Shanghai-based companies emerge as some of China’s most aggressive homegrown private equity investors.

That trend is being led by Fosun International (HKEx: 656), which has been one of China’s biggest international buyers these last 2 years with a number of high-profile investments in Europe and North America. More recently Fosun has been joined by the aggressive China Media Group, which is connected to Shanghai’s leading media company SMG, and whose name is also showing up on a growing number of high profile investments. And then there’s the recently formed China Minsheng Investment Corp, an offshoot of the entrepreneurial China Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), which is also being quite aggressive. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Citic Securities Weds Social Fund, CCB Eyes Indonesia

Bottom line: Citic Securities’ new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund should bring it major new business, while CCB’s Indonesian tie-up talks reflect its approach of moving slowly into emerging markets for its nascent global expansion.

Citic Securities ties with Social Security Fund

Two big finance stories are casting a spotlight on different trends in China’s rapidly transforming financial services sector as Beijing tries to create an industry that can compete with the big global players. The larger news is domestically focused, with leading stock brokerage Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030; Shanghai: 600030) in a major new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund that will see the pair cooperate in a wide array of financial services areas. The other news is outward looking, and has China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939; Shanghai: 601939) in talks to form a relatively modest new tie-up with a local bank in Indonesia. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Alibaba Finance Advances At Private Bank, Stumbles At Alipay

Bottom line: Alibaba’s technical glitch at Alipay, the launch of its new bank and use of its Taobao platform to auction of bad loans reflect its growing clout in financial services, as it attempts to build up its Ant Financial unit for a future IPO.

Technical glitch interrupts Alipay

E-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is in a trio of finance-related headlines, spotlighting its growing bet on financial services that could be a huge growth area as Beijing opens the sector to private investment. One headline has seen Alibaba get official permission from its home province to open a bank, after it became one of the first 3 entities to receive private banking licenses under a pilot program by Beijing.

The second headline has seen the company’s popular Alipay electronic payments service experience technical problems that cut off access for 2 hours earlier this week, prompting it to quickly say that no accounts were compromised. The final news bit comes in a larger story about China’s growing bad asset crisis, which will see the nation’s top bad asset management company use Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace to auction off some of those assets. Read Full Post…

BANKING: Bank Of China Creates SE Asia Play

Bottom line: Bank of China’s plan to create a Southeast Asian unit around its Hong Kong-based BOCHK looks like a smart move that will give investors a chance to buy shares of its more commercially-focused global operations.

Bank of China to create separate SE Asia unit

Chinese banks have always been a difficult investment option for westerners due to their heavy reliance on China, where they take orders from Beijing leaders that use them as an economic policy tool rather than letting them act like real commercial lenders. The banks’ international operations are more interesting from an investor’s perspective, as they tend to behave more commercially because they have to competite in markets where they don’t enjoy any special government-granted advantages.

The problem is that international operations are usually just a tiny business for most of the big Chinese banks, even as industry leaders ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) and Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601988) spend billions of dollars on offshore acquisitions and other overseas expansion. That’s why a new plan by Bank of China looks particularly exciting, as it will finally give stock buyers an option to invest exclusively in the company’s offshore operations, in this case in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia.  Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Alibaba On M&A Steroids With New Series Of Deals

Bottom line: The accelerating pace of deals by Alibaba and its founder Jack Ma could be cause for concern, potentially overwhelming the company and Ma and creating headaches as they work to integrate so many new tie-ups.

Alibaba in new deal frenzy

It’s no secret that e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) has been on a buying binge over the last 2 years, snapping up billions of dollars worth of smaller companies and forging new alliances as it tries to get into just about any Internet and media business it can find. But even a veteran industry watcher like myself is getting dizzy this week by the accelerating series of deals, which has seen the company and its charismatic founder Jack Ma in at least 4 headlines involving major new tie-ups in a wide variety of spaces.

One of those is coming in the logistics space, with Alibaba announcing its purchase of a stake in a major Chinese parcel delivery service. Another comes in entertainment, where the company is reportedly in talks for a smart TV joint venture with PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992). Yet another deal is in finance, with Jack Ma reportedly buying a stake in the Hong Kong-listed Reorient Group (HKEx: 376). And all of those deals are coming a day after media reported that Ma has become a new investor in the sports entertainment unit of online video services high-flyer LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104). Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Buyers Beware, China Stock Names Aim To Mislead

Bottom line: A new wave of traditional Chinese firms are taking new high-tech names to fool local investors who often buy stocks with little or no knowledge of the companies, and should serve as a warning to foreigners interested in Chinese shares.

Real estate firm renames itself as Pi Tu Pi

An entertaining local media report is poking fun at the latest trend among Chinese companies, which is seeing many adopt high-tech sounding names in a bid to convince unsavvy investors that they are engaged in high-growth industries. But all joking aside, the report also casts a very real spotlight on the dangers of buying Chinese stocks for average international investors, who have been ramping up their purchasing via Hong Kong following the launch last year of the landmark Hong Kong-Shanghai connect program. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Citic, Fosun Shop In US For Sensors, Insurance

Bottom line: Citic Capital and Fosun are expanding their tastes beyond the traditional Chinese preference for distressed assets, reflecting growing sophistication and diverging strategies of China’s emerging private equity buyers.

Citic Capital in group buying OmniVision

Chinese private equity is in a few major headlines this week, picking up assets in the technology, insurance and retail sectors in the US and Japan. The wide range of deals and geographies reflects the diverging strategies of some of China’s emerging private equity giants, which are rapidly developing their own individual personalities on the global stage. Citic Capital is behind 2 of the latest deals, picking up a retail asset in Japan and a US company that specializes in imaging technology. Meantime, Fosun International (HKEx: 656) has made a major new purchase in the US, offering to buy the remaining stake in an insurer that it first invested in last year. Read Full Post…