Bottom line: NetEase is likely to complete a spin-off of its news division, possibly through a sale to Sina, while Postal Savings Bank’s massive IPO will meet with tepid reception due to limited growth prospects.
Two significant but very different IPOs are in the headlines as we get set for the Mid-Autumn holiday break, one from China’s vibrant private sector and the other from a big state-run behemoth. In the former category is NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES), one of China’s oldest Internet companies, which is reportedly mulling an IPO for its news portal, one of its original businesses with a history dating back to the 1990s. In the other news, China Postal Savings Bank has reportedly placed most of the shares for its massive $8 billion listing with a group of 6 cornerstone investors. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Ctrip’s massive new bond and share offer could raise up to $2.2 billion, and portends a major offshore acquisition in the next 6 months.
Online travel agent Ctrip(Nasdaq: CTRP) has just announced a complex plan to raise up to $2.2 billion in cash, in one of the biggest fund-raising exercises I’ve seen by a Chinese Internet company. The huge sum, combined with Ctrip’s existing large cash reserves, raises the obvious question of what this fast-growing company might be planning to do with all that money. One obvious answer is that Ctrip is planning a major offshore acquisition, reflecting its new global aspirations after quietly eliminating most of its local competition to dominate the lucrative China market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Yum’s selection of Primavera and Ant Financial to anchor its China unit spin-off look like reasonable choices, as it tries to put the business back on solid footing before a New York IPO that should enjoy modest success.
After months of talks and speculation, fast food giant Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) has announced that two firms with distinctly financial backgrounds will anchor its plan to spin off its China business. The larger of the investors, private equity firm Primavera, doesn’t look extremely exciting strategically, as it’s mostly a private equity investor with little experience in the tough retail sector. The second investor, Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) Ant Financial affiliate, looks a little more interesting since its core Alipay electronic payments service could help to propel Yum’s aging KFC and Pizza Hut brands into the modern era. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Weakening sentiment towards Postal Bank’s IPO reflects concerns about China’s economic slowdown, while Lufax’s choice of Hong Kong for its IPO should help to attract more international investors.
What’s likely to be this year’s biggest IPO by Postal Savings Bank of China is limping ahead, with word the ultra-conservative lender is set to sign up $6 billion in commitments for its Hong Kong offering. But western investors are reportedly staying away from the deal, worried over high valuations and China’s sputtering economy.
Meantime, another financial IPO by leading P2P lender Lufax is back in the headlines, with word the listing probably won’t happen until next year and will occur in Hong Kong. That news marks a flip-flop from reports earlier this week, when media cited Lufax’s largest backer saying plans were still on track for an IPO this year, with Shanghai as the preferred listing location.Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lufax’s reiteration of plans for an IPO by year-end indicate China’s regulator may increase new listing approvals as the market stabilizes, while progress in Yunda’s backdoor listing also may reflect a relaxing attitude by the regulator.
After an anemic flow of domestic IPOs so far this year, building pressure and a stabilizing stock market may finally be prompting the regulator to step up the pace as we head into fall. That appears to be the thinking at Lufax, China’s leading P2P lender, which says it is still targeting an IPO by the end of this year, after previously indicating China would be its first choice for such a listing. Meantime, an easing of the IPO climate won’t come soon enough for parcel delivery firm Yunda, which has joined many of its peers in moving ahead with a backdoor listing plan in Shenzhen. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The scrapping of a buyout offer for Momo could reflect growing obstacles to re-listing in China, and could presage the abandoning of more similar buyout bids for US-listed Chinese companies.
In a relatively surprising development in the wave of privatization bids for US-listed Chinese companies, social networking app operator Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO) has just announced a group proposing to buy out the company has withdrawn its offer. No reason was given for the reversal, and instead Momo used the official announcement to focus on its latest financial results and outlook. The move came as a surprise because the buyout deal had very strong financial backing from a group that included e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and venture capital giant Sequoia Capital. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qihoo’s reorganization is part of its hurried bid to re-list in China to pay off backers of its privatization, while shareholders of Trina and Dangdang are likely to approve final management-led buyout offers for the 2 companies.
The homeward migration of US-listed Chinese companies is in a trio of new headlines, showing that financiers are still willing to back de-listings for stronger companies. The largest of the headlines has security software specialist Qihoo 360 undergoing a major overhaul as it seeks to re-list in China, following its record-breaking privatization from New York last month. Meantime, solar panel maker Trina (NYSE: TSL) and e-commerce site Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) have also announced major advances in their own plans to privatize. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda may need to raise its offer price again to buy Carmike, while a plan to privatize its property unit stands a good chance of winning shareholder approval.
Conglomerate Wanda Group is in a couple of a major headlines, one involving its traditional real estate business and the other for the newer entertainment unit it’s building up as part of a diversification drive. The real estate headline centers on Hong Kong-listed property developer Dalian Wanda (HKEx: 3699), which has just received an endorsement from a major shareholder in its bid to go private. The second item centers on Wanda’s fast-growing cinema business, and has the company boosting its offer for US theater operator Carmike (Nasdaq: CKEC) after minority stakeholders complained a previous bid was too low. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The CSRC needs to implement IPO reform, even though it may cause short-term stock market volatility, or risk more market distortions like the recent surge in New Third Board and backdoor listings.
China’s over-the-counter (OTC) stock exchange notched a notable milestone last week, when a private car services provider with just a year of history made its trading debut with a hefty valuation of more than 40 billion yuan ($6 billion). The impressive valuation for Ucar extended a trend that has seen new listings and valuations explode this year on the Beijing-based National Equities Exchange Quotation (NEEQ) system, often called the New Third Board.
The explosion owes to a number of factors, most a by-product of a sharp slowdown for traditional IPOs on China’s more mature stock markets in Shanghai and Shenzhen due to the regulator’s concerns about market volatility. That same conservatism has prompted a growing number of companies to seek public listings by injecting their assets into existing traded shell companies, again creating distortions and chaos in the market through a process known as backdoor listings. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: IPOs by China Lending, China Film and Babytree should all do relatively well, and their diverse listing destinations reflect the growing choices available to Chinese companies for public offerings.
A trio of mid-sized entrepreneurial companies are in the IPO headlines, including one headed for New York, another opting for Shanghai and a third eyeing a possible listing on Hong Kong’s underutilized board for high-growth companies. The first of the trio, which will make its trading debut this week in New York, comes from micro lender China Lending Corp (Nasdaq: CLDC). The second comes from China Film Co, the nation’s largest movie distributor; and the third comes from baby products seller and online community operator Babytree, which has just raised a nifty 3 billion yuan in pre-IPO funding. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: New data from 2 separate reports show the number of smaller venture deals is steadily declining in China, creating a cash crunch for startups as private sector investment slows sharply.
In a coincidence of timing, 2 separate consultants that track venture capital spending have just released second-quarter data that show very differing trends for China. China boosters will inevitably like the new figures from Venture Pulse, which showed that venture capital spending in China jumped 26 percent in the second quarter. Meantime, China bears will undoubtedly point to separate data from a Prequin Ltd report that show venture funding in the country plummeted by more than half in the quarter to its lowest level in almost 3 years. Read Full Post…