Bottom line: Baidu could suffer more lost business after purging stealth advertisers engaged in gambling and sex services, while its new credit-scoring tie-up looks like a smart way to take advantage of its huge volumes of user data.
A day after appearing in 2 major global entertainment stories, online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) is back in the headlines at home in a new scandal involving online gambling sites that used stealth methods to promote themselves on Baidu’s search service. Normally I would say this particular scandal looks relatively minor and wouldn’t have a major impact on Baidu. But such scandals have suddenly become much bigger news following one back in May, which was centered on Baidu’s longtime practice of combining paid search results with organic ones without disclosing that mixture. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China Logistics’ IPO could rise 5-10 percent in its trading debut, while AirAsia could list in Hong Kong by year end and online lender Qufenqi could follow with an IPO in the first half of 2017.
Hong Kong IPOs continue to heat up as we head into the heart of summer, with word of a major new listing from China Logistics Property and reports that budget carrier AirAsia may also be eyeing an offering in the market. Meantime, Qufenqi, the hot online lender that targets students, has just raised a hefty 3 billion yuan ($450 million) in new funding, in a prelude to what could become one of next year’s hottest IPOs. All of this comes against the backdrop of a looming mega offering by China’s Postal Savings Bank, whose $8 billion fund-raising target would make it the world’s biggest IPO since Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) blockbuster $25 billion offering 2 years ago. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Fosun’s New York IPO plan for US insurer Ironshore could draw strong interest due to Fosun’s China and global connections, and may ultimately raise up to $1 billion later this year.
China’s recent global buying spree has created some interesting investment opportunities, as Chinese acquirers increasingly look to western investors to help pay for their purchases. One such new opportunity is in the headlines this week, with word that Chinese private equity giant Fosun (HKEx: 656) is aiming to launch a New York IPO for its recently acquired US insurer Ironshore. In this growing trend, the Chinese investors are hoping to generate some buzz for this kind of IPO by taking regionally-focused assets and repositioning them as global plays, often with a big China focus. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A potential merger between CICC and China Investment Securities could mark the start of a resurgence for CICC, as it seeks to regain its former glory as China’s premier investment bank.
Former leading investment bank CICC (HKEx: 3908) is making a rare appearance in the headlines, with word that it’s discussing a possible merger with second-tier brokerage China Investment Securities. I haven’t written about CICC for nearly a year since it made a relatively respectable IPO in Hong Kong after several delays and a downsizing. I and others have mostly forgotten about CICC these days, following a period of turmoil that saw most of its top executives leave after it rapidly lost its position as China’s preeminent investment bank. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Postal Savings Bank’s IPO is likely to get a moderately strong reception and come close to the upper end of its $10 billion target, while Yum China’s IPO is unlikely to come until the end of this year at earliest.
What’s likely to become the world’s biggest IPO in 2 years has just officially launched in Hong Kong, with word that China’s Postal Savings Bank has made its first filing for an offering that could raise up to $10 billion. Meantime, another high-profile IPO by the Chinese unit of fast-food giant Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) is getting hit by delays, as operator of the KFC chain seeks key local backers in the run-up to a listing that could also come in Hong Kong. The Yum offering could also be quite large at around $2 billion, though it appears the deal may not come now until the end of this year or may even get pushed back to 2017. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Orient Securities IPO shares will debut flat due to weakness in China’s stock markets, CR Pharma will price stronger on good prospects for drug makers, and Wanda Commercial will have to raise its privatization buyout price.
After a quiet first half of the year, big IPOs for Chinese companies are suddenly coming to life in Hong Kong, though the outlook isn’t particularly strong. The latest headlines have China Resources Pharmaceutical filing for a $1 billion offering that was first mooted back in February, while the second has Oriental Securities pricing its own $1 billion offering near the bottom of its range. Meantime, a privatization bid for the Hong Kong-listed Wanda Commercial Properties (HKEx: 3699) has hit a stumbling block, with word that a major investor has objected that the buyout price is too low. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Goldman’s bet on Minsheng Bank could auger a new wave of foreign investment in depressed Chinese bank shares, on belief that Beijing will rescue the group before their bad debt becomes too heavy.
After dumping shares of major Chinese lenders in droves after the global financial crisis, at least one major foreign investor is testing the waters again, with word that Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) has quietly built up a large stake in Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016). But this time Goldman’s move, which has seen it quietly buy 11 percent of Minsheng’s Hong Kong-listed shares, looks likely a pure investment play rather than a strategic tie-up. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new IPO from Postal Savings Bank will price and debut strongly thanks to its conservative stance, while another offering from Orient Securities could also do moderately well due to its small size.
Two financial institutions are lining up to launch IPOs in Hong Kong this week, led by what’s likely to be the biggest offering this year by China’s stodgy Postal Savings Bank, whose listing could raise up to $8 billion. In a far smaller deal, brokerage Orient Securities is also set to announce a HK$1.15 billion ($174 million) IPO deal as soon as today, in what looks like a slightly desperate bid for cash following its much larger Shanghai listing last year at the height of China’s stock market boom. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Jack Ma’s newly stated preference for an Ant Financial IPO in Hong Kong could touch off a new clash that would challenge the local securities regulator to grant an unusual listing exception or risk losing the blockbuster deal to New York.
Just a couple of years after a high-profile tussle that saw e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) ditch Hong Kong to make its record-breaking IPO in New York, talkative founder Jack Ma is gearing up for a similar game of chicken for an upcoming IPO by his company’s affiliated Ant Financial unit. That’s my initial assessment, following media reports that Ma has said his first preference would be a Hong Kong IPO for Ant Financial, China’s leading private financial services company whose prize asset is its Alipay electronic payments service. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Baidu’s new tie-up with a US-based stock broker reflects growing access to global stocks by Chinese investors, and could help to stem the recent privatization wave of overseas-listed Chinese companies.
In a move that has highly symbolic overtones, online search giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) has just formed a new alliance with a US company that will finally make its own New York-listed stock available to investors in its home China market. That deal will see US stock trading startup Robinhood offer its services over Baidu’s own brokerage platform, in a tie-up that reflects the growing access that Chinese investors are gaining to overseas stock markets. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: HNA’s Virgin Australia investment reflects its aspirations to build a global travel empire, while ICBC’s new European infrastructure fund reflects its attempts to be commercial while also supporting central government initiatives.
A couple of headlines are spotlighting the different approaches of 2 of China’s leading global investors, led by a big new investment in airline Virgin Australia (Sydney: VBA) by HNA Group. On the other side of the globe, ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) is establishing a major new European infrastructure fund, in what looks like a far more politically-motivated move by China’s leading lender. Both investments reflect China’s growing role on the global investing stage, though each represents the rapidly diverging priorities between the state-run and private sectors. Read Full Post…