IPO/Fund Raising

IPO & Fund Raising lastest financial news from China

FUND RAISING: Slowing Economy Undermines BOC, Great Wall Motor Deals

Bottom line: Muted interest in Great Wall Motor’s fund-raising plan and Bank of China’s sale of a major asset reflect weakening investor interest in such deals due to the slowing Chinese economy.

Weak sentiment pressures, BOC, Great Wall Motor deals

Funding for Chinese Internet companies is showing no signs of slowing just yet, but reports of weak demand for 2 other deals reflects fading investor interest in more traditional sectors as China’s economy slows. The first of those has car maker Great Wall Motor (HKEx: 2333; Shanghai: 601633) sharply reducing plans for a new issue of A-shares on China’s domestic stock markets. The second has Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) attracting scant interest for the sale of a major asset in Hong Kong.

Neither of these developments comes as a huge surprise due to growing worries over China’s rapidly slowing economy. Great Wall was never one of China’s top auto makers to start with, and the big reduction in its 16.8 billion yuan ($2.6 billion) fund-raising plan comes as the domestic auto market slows and investors pile out of China’s crumbling stock markets. Meantime, Bank of China has been trying to sell its Hong Kong-based Nanyang Commercial Bank for a while now, and the latest reports say only 1 interested party has emerged. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Qihoo Buyout Unraveling, China Mobile Games Wraps

Qihoo buyout in danger of sinking

Following last week’s wild ride for Chinese stocks, now seems like a good opportunity to revisit the flurry of privatization bids for US-listed China Internet companies and how they’re faring. The list of headlines is led by reports that the biggest of the buyout bids for software security maker Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is showing signs of unraveling, as investors balk at the widening gap between their original buyout offer and the company’s latest share price following last week’s sharp declines.

Meantime, another much smaller deal first announced at the height of the buyout wave in June has been quietly completed, resulting in the delisting of shares for China Mobile Games. Completion of this second deal just a couple of months after it was originally announced shows that such buyouts can still be done despite the big sell-offs in both China and New York that are making it hard to value such deals. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Citic Funds Uber, Lufax Eyes IPO

Bottom line: New fund-raising signals indicate car services giant Uber could spin off its China unit within a year, and that Ping An-backed P2P lending platform Lufax could make a major IPO in the same time frame.

Uber, Lufax send new fund-raising signals

Two big new fund-raising stories are in the headlines, led by a modest new funding commitment that hints at a spin-off soon for the China unit of hired car services leader Uber. Meantime, the rush to see which of China’s fast-growing peer-to-peer (P2P) lending sites will be first to market has officially begun, with separate reports saying an IPO is in the planning stages for Lufax, a Shanghai based company that is backed by one of China’s top traditional financial services firms.

Both of these deals are in the mid-range in terms of size, probably worth the $100-$500 million, contrasting with a spate of deals earlier this year that were worth much more when China’s stock market was booming. It’s still possible we could see one or two more mega-fundings worth $1 billion or more by the end of the year, though such large deals could quickly disappear if China’s stock markets and economy remain in the doldrums. Read Full Post…

TRAVEL: Airbnb Imitator Tujia Gets Hot with New Funding

Bottom line: Tujia’s new fund raising reflects strong investor confidence in its business model and market positioning, which could help the company to post strong growth before an IPO in the next 1-3 years.

Tujia raises $300 mln

It seems like hot Internet sites only need to say they’re looking for new money these days, and they can automatically attract big investor interest that allows them to raise huge funds and get lofty valuations. The latest company to follow the pattern is Tujia, a site that allows homeowners to rent out their vacant properties to travelers, using a similar model to popular US site Airbnb. Just a month after media reported that Tujia was finalizing a new funding round worth $250 million (previous post), the latest reports say demand was so strong that it ended up raising $300 million. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Focus Media Changes Course, Renaissance Eyes Buyouts

Bottom line: Focus Media will re-list with a high valuation on a new enterprise-style board set to launch in Shanghai next year, while China Renaissance’s new fund to help US-listed firms privatize will attract strong investor interest.

Focus Media changes IPO re-listing plan

A couple of items are in the news involving the recent buyout wave for US-listed Chinese companies, which are rapidly abandoning New York in search of higher valuations in their home market. In an abrupt and somewhat surprising shift, Focus Media, one of the first companies in this homecoming wave, is reportedly abandoning its original plan for Shanghai.

The second item has China Renaissance, a well-respected domestic private equity firm, preparing to raise a major new fund that will help to finance privatizations of Chinese firms from New York. This particular deal looks significant, since many of the nearly 3 dozens firms to announce privatization plans this year could soon need new funding if previous commitments collapse due to recent volatility in China’s domestic stock markets. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Wine Seller Jiuxian Dilutes, Baidu Buys Back

Bottom line: Jiuxian’s raising of a seventh funding round reflects fading investor interest in online wine sellers due to a luxury slowdown, while Baidu’s share buyback plan looks like a good use of cash to support its sagging stock.

Investors lose taste for online wine sellers

I’ve been a financial news reporter for quite some time now, but even I was surprised to read that online wine seller Jiuxian has just raised funds in a new round of G-series funding. This marks the first time I’ve seen the letter “G” in such a context, and I had to do some counting on my fingers to finally figure out the 500 million yuan ($80 million) funding round represents the seventh for this company that apparently has yet to make a profit despite so much private investment.

Baidu

Meantime, online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) was in a spending mode with its announcement that it would dole out up to $1 billion over the next year to support its sagging stock that plunged to a 1-year low this week on a weak earnings report. This particular use of money looks reasonable for a cash-rich company like Baidu. I do find the timing just slightly ironic, since Baidu raised $1.25 billion through a bond offer just a month ago, meaning this latest buyback will be funded by the same investors who have recently been dumping the company’s stock.  more information here Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Perfect World Wraps, Investors Wary on Others

Bottom line: Investors are regaining confidence that some of the bigger, recently announced buyouts for US-listed China companies could be completed, but believe many smaller deals will ultimately collapse.

Perfect World completes buyout

Online game operator Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) has formally completed its management-led buyout, offering us a good opportunity to check the status of dozens of other pending offers that look shaky due to recent turbulence in China’s stock markets. Perfect World was one of a handful of companies that launched their privatization drives before May, when a wave of new bids fueled by speculative money from China’s frothy stock markets suddenly began.

I’ve previously said that many of the earlier bids like Perfect World’s are likely to succeed, as their funding sources seemed more solid. But some of the other bids may run into trouble due shaky money sources that may rapidly disappear as China’s stock markets show signs of heading into another tailspin. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Irrelevant Mecox Lane Limps Into Buyout Queue

Bottom line: Mecox Lane’s privatization plan should succeed, but the company is likely to continue its decline even if it re-lists in China under its current lackluster management.

Mecox Lane gets buyout offer

The current privatization wave is giving me a chance to revisit some companies that I haven’t written about in quite a while such as former e-commerce superstar Mecox Lane (Nasdaq: MCOX), which has just become the latest name to receive a buyout offer. In a slightly surprising twist, Mecox Lane’s shares tanked after it made the announcement, losing more than 8 percent to close around 20 percent below the buyout offer price.

Mecox’s announcement is one of the smallest so far in terms of deal value, since the company only has a market value of about $40 million. That’s even less than the $63 million education specialist New Oriental (NYSE: EDU) will need to pay an unusual special dividend announced just a day earlier, in a move I interpreted as a signal that the company had no plans to join the exodus of Chinese companies from New York. (previous post) Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: New Oriental Commits to US, Qihoo to China

Bottom line: New Oriental’s special dividend sends a signal that it has no plans to de-list from New York, even as short-sighted companies like Qihoo continue buyout plans in pursuit of higher valuations in China.

New Oriental awards special dividend

Nearly 2 weeks after the last US-listed Chinese companies announced plans to privatize, education specialist New Oriental (NYSE: EDU) is sending a different signal that indicates it has no plans to abandon its New York listing anytime soon. That signal comes in a footnote to New Oriental’s newly announced quarterly earnings, in which it declares a rare special dividend — something you wouldn’t expect a company to do if it was planning to soon de-list.

At the same time, software security specialist Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) is reaffirming its previous plans to push ahead with its privatization scheme, even as investors remain skeptical that this particular deal could fall apart. Qihoo is easily the largest of China’s companies looking to privatize so far, and clearly investors are worried that the company won’t be able to complete its buyout worth nearly $10 billion due to the recent market volatility in China. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Jiayuan Committed to Buyout, As Investor Doubts Persist

Bottom line: Earlier announcers of privatization plans like Jiayuan are likely to succeed due to their more reliable funding sources, but many of the deals announced by Chinese firms in the second half of June could ultimately collapse.

De-listing bells keep ringing for Jiayuan

China’s sudden stock market rally isn’t reassuring US investors who believe that many of the most recent buy-out offers for New York-listed Chinese firms may collapse due to questionable funding. That has prompted at least 1 firm, online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE), to come out and openly say it is still committed to the privatization process that could ultimately end with its departure from New York and re-listing of its shares in its home China market.

The rationale for this kind of a move hasn’t changed throughout China’s massive stock market gyrations, which saw the main Shanghai index more than double over the past year at its early June peak, before crashing in a major sell-off. The crash has subsided in the last few days thanks to major intervention by Beijing, though it’s far from clear whether the selling binge is over. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Dangdang, YY, Baixing Line Up for China Listings

Bottom line: New buyout bids for Dangdang and YY look opportunistic due to a recent sell-off in their shares, while Baixing.com could lead a new wave of domestic IPOs for Chinese Internet firms next year.

Dangdang gets buyout offer

A few lingering buyout offers for US-listed Chinese firms are trickling in after Thursday’s market rally in China, with e-commerce stalwart Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) and the newer social networking site YY (Nasdaq: YY) both announcing new privatization plans. These 2 announcements look quite opportunistic, as they come after a sell-off that has seen Dangdang and YY’s shares plunge over the last 2 weeks, but right after a major one-day China rally that spilled over into the US.

At the same time, online classifieds site Baixing.com is charting a path for the future, with word that it’s scrapping its variable interest entity (VIE) structure that is typically used for Chinese firms looking to list in New York. The company is reportedly making the move as it eyes a domestic Chinese listing instead, and also as it receives new funding from online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Read Full Post…