Bottom line: Fosun is prepared to up its latest bid for Club Med by another 20-30 percent, while Anbang needs to be careful in its investments to avoid ending up with a portfolio of overvalued, underperforming assets.
Two of China’s most active institutional investors are in the headlines today, led by a new sweetened bid from private equity giant Fosun International (HKEx: 656) as it competes with an Italian group to buy French vacation resort operator Club Med (Paris: CU). Meantime, another recently acquisitive investor Anbang Insurance is back in the headlines, with word that it’s boosted its stake in Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988 Shanghai: 600016), China’s oldest and largest privately owned lender. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Fosun should drop out of the bidding war for Club Med to avoid overpaying for the resort operator, despite big potential from a possible Asia expansion.
Chinese investors aren’t the only companies with big money to spend on global M&A for undervalued western assets. That’s the lesson that high-flying private equity firm Fosun International (HKEx: 656) is quickly learning, as it gets sucked into a bidding war for French holiday resort operator Club Med (Paris: CU). This particular bidding war is one of the first I’ve seen for a major western asset involving Chinese bidders, and could presage more competition from local western investors who want to take advantage of the many assets now now being sold at bargain prices. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Haitong’s purchase of a Portuguese investment bank marks the start of a new wave of cross-border tie-ups in the financial services sector, which could fuel a rally in stocks of Chinese brokerages.
A new wave of Sino-foreign tie-ups in the financial services arena could be taking shape, with word that China’s Haitong Securities (HKEx: 6837; Shanghai: 600837) is in talks to buy a Portuguese investment bank. I predicted just a couple of weeks ago that such a wave of tie-ups could be coming, following the launch of a historic Hong Kong-Shanghai financial link that will give average western and Chinese investors access to each other’s stock markets for the first time. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The latest M&A in China’s brokerage sector involving Essence Securities could presage a new wave of tie-ups between Chinese and foreign brokerages, boosted by the Hong Kong-Shanghai stock exchange link.
A new reverse takeover involving a major Chinese brokerage is shining a spotlight on the potential for new deals in the sector following this week’s launch of a ground-breaking program linking the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock exchanges. This particular deal involves Essence Securities, which is becoming a publicly traded company following its purchase by Shanghai-listed textile firm Sinotex Investment (Shanghai: 600061). But more intriguing is the very real possibility that major foreign brokerages may start to look for tie-up opportunities with Chinese peers in anticipation of synergistic partnerships to take advantage of the new Hong Kong-Shanghai Connect program. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple’s new UnionPay tie-up is aimed at an eventual roll-out of its Apple Pay in China, while Baidu’s reported purchase of 99Pay marks a late but needed bid to boost its electronic payments capabilities.
A couple of electronic payments stories reflect the rapid changes taking place in China’s banking market, where such payments are quickly making cash and even traditional credit cards obsolete. The higher-profile of the 2 deals has global gadget leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) in a deal to accept payments for its China app store in partnership with leading electronic payments firm UnionPay. The second deal has leading Internet search Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) reportedly looking to boost its presence in the space with plans to buy existing player 99Bill for 2 billion yuan ($325 million). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Minsheng Bank’s new stock incentive plan and ICBC’s Mexico expansion reflect moves to make China’s banking sector more market-oriented, providing potential upside for the lenders’ undervalued stocks.
Two big stories on the banking front are reflecting the big potential in depressed Chinese bank stocks, even as the sector faces a major bad debt crisis brought on by several years of state-ordered binge lending during the global financial crisis. The first of those will see Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), China’s first private lender, launch a program that rewards top performing employees with stock at discounted prices. The second has leading state-run lender ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) getting final regulatory approval to open a subsidiary in Mexico, one of the world’s largest developing economies. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qatar’s new $10 billion China-focused investment fund and PICC’s new rights offer spotlight growing distress at Chinese companies, presenting a buying opportunity for opportunistic investors.
Two big finance stories are highlighting an interesting divergence in the China market, which has some investors bullish on new opportunities even as actual financial institutions and many other companies brace for a major downturn. The former instance has the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) in a major new initiative to set up a $10 billion China investment fund with local financial giant Citic Group. At the same time, the growing distress in China’s financial sector is also apparent in a new plan to raise $1.2 billion by PICC (HKEx: 2328), China’s largest non-life insurance company. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Shares of China’s big 4 banks could see some upside in the next year, as they work with Beijing to keep their bad loans and slowing profit growth within government-set limits.
A major sell-down by one of Agricultural Bank of China’s (HKEx: 1288; Shanghai: 601288) largest foreign shareholders looks a bit ominous for the lender, coming just after all of the nation’s big 4 banks reported rapidly declining profit growth and swelling bad loans. That raises the bigger question of whether we could see a broader exodus from Chinese banking shares by investors in the months ahead, and whether the stocks are looking at a longer term downturn while they work out the billions of dollars in non-performing loans on their books. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China’s acceptance of applications for bank card clearing services from foreign firms marks a positive step for Visa and MasterCard, but it could still be years before such services become reality.
By Lu Jin
Many people traveling to China may have experienced an embarrassing moment as they got stuck at the cashier in a local shop after having their foreign bank-issued credit card rejected. Anyone who has experienced such embarrassment knows that what happened next is they need to run around in desperate search for an ATM machine or simply forget about the purchase.
That situation is expected to change, or at least there is real hope now. Read Full Post…
What previously looked like an exciting Hong Kong IPO by CICC, China’s earliest homegrown investment bank, is rapidly losing its luster, with word that the company’s Chairman Jin Liqun is leaving the company. His departure, which was first rumored earlier this month, comes just a week after Levin Zhu, CEO of the company formally known as China International Capital Corp, also resigned to reportedly pursue a start-up in the hot area of Internet finance. Read Full Post…
After a year of mostly hype, Shanghai’s new Free Trade Zone (FTZ) has finally begun showing the world some substance in the last 2 months with a recent string of high-profile announcements by major companies that plan to set up in its borders. Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) were among the first to announce plans, and were joined last week by US retail giant Costco (Nasdaq: COST) and top Chinese oil refiner Sinopec (HKEx: 386; Shanghai: 600028; NYSE: SNP). Read Full Post…