Banking/Finance

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

Spring, Alibaba Finance Arm Move Towards IPOs

Spring Airlines IPO flies forward

I don’t usually write about IPOs in China’s domestic A-share market, mostly because most such offerings are for stodgy state-run firms with low growth potential and whose shares aren’t available to most foreigners. But the market is changing as the regulator slowly warms up to more interesting private firms, which is reflected in an upcoming listing plan by entrepreneurial budget carrier Spring Airlines. At the same time, separate reports are shining a spotlight on another potentially exciting domestic IPO that would still be a year or two in the future, with word that e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) has set up Ant Financial, a separate company to officially own its financial service assets. Read Full Post…

Execs Jump On China Tech Train From Google, CICC

Former Google exec joins Xiaomi in India

Two high-profile executive moves are highlighting the recent attraction of China’s tech story to both domestic Chinese and foreigners, lured by breakneck growth that produced the world’s biggest-ever IPO last month with the $24 billion IPO of e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). The first move has seen former Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) executive Jai Mani leave his position in a California-based start-up to take an India-based job at fast-rising Chinese smartphone sensation Xiaomi. The other has seen well-known Chinese financier Levin Zhu jump ship from the top post at CICC, China’s oldest investment bank, reportedly to start his own company involved with Internet-based finance. Read Full Post…

ICBC Attracts Temasek Dollars, Gazprom Business

Temasek boosts ICBC stake

ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) is in a couple of separate headlines today, spotlighting 2 very different phenomena taking place at China’s largest and most aggressive bank. The first has Singaporean sovereign wealth fund Temasek increasing its stake in ICBC by a small amount, in a largely symbolic move that reflects the recent lack of interest in Chinese bank stocks by global investors. The second has ICBC in talks to underwrite a yuan-denominated bond sale by Russian energy giant Gazprom, reflecting the bank’s rising stature on the global stage as China seeks to internationalize its local currency. Read Full Post…

Anbang Eyes Korea And Europe, Hits Waldorf Headwind

Anbang in sudden global buying binge

After spending most of its life in relative obscurity, Chinese insurer Anbang is suddenly making steady headlines on the global stage with word of 2 major new deals in Europe and Asia, following its landmark agreement last week to buy New York’s storied Waldorf Astoria hotel for nearly $2 billion. The larger of the latest deals has Anbang in talks to buy a major stake in South Korea’s Woori Bank, while the smaller has it buying Belgian insurer Fidea. Meantime, Anbang’s earlier landmark Waldorf deal is showing early trouble signs, with word that some US diplomats are expressing concerns about the sale over the potential for spying. Read Full Post…

Investors Ignore Big Internet M&A, Eye Alibaba Bank

Alibaba to open small business bank

In a sign of just how overheated M&A in China’s tech sector has become, 2 major purchases by e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and online travel leader Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) are receiving scant attention from investors, even though they are worth nearly $1 billion combined. Instead, the big news grabber is another headline involving Alibaba, with word that the world’s second largest Internet firm has just become one of a handful of private Chinese companies to win new private sector banking licenses being awarded by Beijing. That development will see Alibaba and several partners open an Internet-based bank that will cater to smaller savers and borrowers, an area often neglected by the current field of big state-run lenders. Read Full Post…

Adobe, Visa Snub China As R&D Dud

Adobe to shutter China R&D lab

Product development centers aren’t extremely expensive as investments, but they carry a much higher level of prestige for developing countries due to their status as cutting-edge centers for innovation. Against that backdrop, major new R&D moves by global corporate giants Adobe Systems (Nasdaq: ADBE) and Visa (NYSE: V) certainly don’t look too good for China. In the former case, software giant Adobe has announced it will shutter its China R&D facility, resulting in the loss of hundreds of jobs. In the latter, financial services giant Visa has also snubbed China by announcing a major new global technology development strategy that includes a new center in neighboring India but not in China. Read Full Post…

Xiaomi Eyes Finance, Phoenix Tries News Feeds

Xiaomi invests in Jimu Box

A couple of smaller deals are in the headlines today, with smartphone sensation Xiaomi dipping its toe into the financial services market and online news portal Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) eying the news feed business. Both deals are relatively small in terms of size, but each provides some interesting insight on the thinking at these 2 different companies in the tech and new media space. The first deal has Xiaomi joining a group of investors betting on a peer-to-peer (P2P) online lending platform called Jimu Box. The second has Phoenix investing in Particle Inc, maker of an app that lets users design personalized feeds to receive news over their mobile phones. Read Full Post…

Bad Assets Sweet For Huarong, Sour For Saab Buyer

Huarong finds gold in bad assets

Domestic and overseas investors have been feasting on a flood of sour loans being churned out by China’s economic slowdown, mostly by buying shares in big state-run firms that try to recover money from those bad assets. In the latest wrinkle of that story, 8 major institutional buyers have spent a hefty $2.4 billion to purchase 21 percent of China Huarong Asset Management, one of the leading bad asset managers.

But bad asset management isn’t always such an easy game to play, as another group of China-backed investors is learning after their ill-advised purchase 2 years ago of insolvent Swedish car maker Saab. That group, called National Electric Vehicle Sweden AB (NEV) has declared bankruptcy, signaling an end may finally be near for the Swedish car maker that probably should have died several years ago. Read Full Post…

Private Equity In Focus With New Firm, Fosun Bank

CMIC opens for business

An exciting trend is building momentum on China’s private equity scene, with a new generation of more entrepreneurial firms taking shape to compete on the global stage with traditional giants like Carlyle (Nasdaq: CG), KKR and TPG. One of the most active of those firms is the privately owned Fosun, which has become a regular headline maker due to its recent string of global acquisitions. Now the company is in the news once more, with word that it may soon become one of only a handful of companies in China to get a license to operate a private bank. In other private equity news, the highly anticipated launch of a major new player with strong ties to Shanghai’s financial community has finally come with the formal debut of China Minsheng Investment Corp (CMIC). Read Full Post…

Big 4 Banks Soak Up Billions With Shares, Notes

China banks to raise up to $63 bln

I’ve largely ignored a steady stream of announcements by China’s big 4 state-run banks these past few weeks, but the latest plans released on the same day from 2 of those seemed like a good opportunity to finally focus on this exercise that could soak as much as 400 billion yuan ($63 billion) from the market. My main reason for ignoring the announcements was mostly because they were too numerous to write about individually, and also because much of the fund raising was expected. But the sheer size of this exercise, plus the broader implications for investors, seems like a good reason for writing now. Read Full Post…

Fosun, Tencent Eye Gas Stations

Fosun chases US Aurora, Sinopec unit

Gas stations were never that attractive to me as an investment, but a group of major firms seem to think differently as oil refining giant Sinopec (HKEx: 386; Shanghai: 600028) gets set to sell up to 30 percent of its retail arm. That’s my conclusion, following reports that domestic investment giant Fosun (HKEx: 656) and Internet leader Tencent (HKEx: 700), and Canadian retailer Alimentation Couche-Tard (Toronto: ATDb) are among the finalists bidding for a stake in the Sinopec unit. In separate headlines, the acquisitive Fosun is also reportedly in talks for another mega deal that would see it purchase the US unit of global insurance giant Swiss Re (Switzerland: SREX). Read Full Post…