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Media/Entertainment
youngchinabiz.com : latest Business news about Media – Entertainment in China by expert / journalist Doug Young : more than two decades of experience in writting about Chinese Companies
Bottom line: Wanda will use AMC as its flagship for building a global entertainment empire, which will include its newly purchased European Odeon theater chain and could also include a revised higher bid for US operator Carmike.
The acquisitive Wanda Group is in a couple of major headlines in its quest to build a global movie theaters empire, led by a new blockbuster acquisition that will see it buy Britain’s Odeon and UCI CinemasGroup for about $1.2 billion. But while it advances in Europe, the company is hitting more resistance in the US, where Wanda already owns top player AMC Entertainment (NYSE: AMC). Wanda is trying to expand its US base by buying smaller operator Carmike Cinemas (Nasdaq: CKEC), but now new reports are saying the company is unlikely to raise its bid to a level that investors are demanding. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Autohome’s shares will come under pressure after a mass defection of its middle management, most likely to start a rival company, while Ku6 is likely to close shop within the next 2 years following its de-listing from New York.
A couple of new twists are bubbling through the headlines in a wave of buyout offers for US-listed Chinese companies, led by the latest signs that a privatization for online car site Autohome (NYSE: ATHM) is effectively dead. Those signs are coming in reports of a wave of resignations by mid-level company executives, following a failed management-led buyout bid. Meantime, online media site Ku6 Media (Nasdaq: KUTV) has formally completed its own buyout offer, meaning this insignificant player that was once a leader in China’s new media space will probably de-list very soon and could disappear completely within the next 2 years. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda’s first half report shows that entertainment continues to be the company’s focus going forward, and could hint at an eventual IPO for the entire group similar to Alibaba’s record offering 2 years ago.
The fast-rising but privately held Wanda Group has just released first-half results in English for the first time that I can recall, in a report that has plenty of room for improvement due to its highly selective disclosure. But the report does provide some color on Wanda’s overall makeup, including the fact that its original real estate business now accounts for just half of overall revenue. One intriguing footnote to this new reporting trend is the company’s growing efforts to reach an international audience, which could hint at plans for an eventual IPO by one of China’s largest privately owned groups. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Skepticism by Nevada’s treasurer could kill LeEco’s plans for a $1 billion car plant in the state, and such doubts are justified due to the company’s lack of transparency and reliance on an inflated stock price to raise money.
Plans by online video superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) for a new energy car plant in Nevada have hit a speed bump, with word that the state’s treasurer is skeptical of using loans backed by the company’s stock to finance the $1 billion project. The fact that LeEco is hitting this resistance in Nevada is somewhat ironic, since the state is famous for its embrace of gambling. But in this case I do have to applaud Nevada treasures Dan Schwartz for his skepticism, since I personally think LeEco has built its sudden entertainment empire on a hugely speculative pile of debt and hype about China’s Internet. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Kingsoft’s write-down in the value of its investments in 21Vianet and Xunlei could auger a sale of its stakes in both companies, following a failed privatization bid for 21Vianet and little hope for a Xunlei recovery.
A week after data center operator 21Vianet (Nasdaq: VNET) became the second US-listed Chinese company to abandon its privatization bid, one of the financial backers that was leading that bid is providing some hints at what led to its actions. That’s my interpretation of the new disclosure from software maker Kingsoft (HKEx: 3888) saying it has written down $125 million related to slumps in the values of its investments in 21Vianet and also in struggling online video downloading site Xunlei (Nasdaq: XNET). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A rumored Chinese purchase of 80 percent of AC Milan, together with a new Chinese soccer buy in Australia and NBA purchase in the US, show a recent Chinese buying spree of western sports teams continues to gain momentum.
China’s roll into western sports teams continues, led by word that a Chinese group including Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) chief Robin Li is on the cusp of a deal to buy 80 percent of soccer club AC Milan for 750 million euros. But that group isn’t the only one making soccer headlines, as a Shenzhen businessman has also reportedly bought Australia’s Newcastle United Jets club. And my prediction that someone in China would make a bid for an NBA club in the US is also in the news, with word that a businessman from southern Fujian province has purchased a small stake in the Minnesota Timberwolves. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: AMC is likely to raise its offer for Carmike Cinemas to the $33-$35 range to placate investors who say the original bid price is too low.
Just days after meeting resistance in a bid to privatize his Hong Kong-listed real estate company, billionaire Wang Jianlin is running into similar difficulties in his plans for a similar buyout of US-listed movie theater operator Carmike Cinemas (Nasdaq: CKEC). Wang first bid for Carmike earlier this year, hoping to combine it with his previously purchased AMC Entertainment (NYSE: AMC), the second largest US movie chain operator. But shareholders quickly said the offer price was too low, and now it appears that Wanda and Wang are reconsidering the bid. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qunar looks like the latest Chinese buyout candidate to become involved in a contested bidding war, while Autohome is unlikely to succeed in efforts to stop the sale of a stake in the company by its largest shareholder.
A flurry of headlines from the wave of privatizations by US-listed Chinese companies are in the news as the week winds down, led by word that online travel site Qunar (Nasdaq: QUNR) has become the latest to get a buyout offer. Qunar wasn’t the only one lining up to leave New York, as game specialist Sky-mobi (Nasdaq: MOBI) also announced its own plan to go private. Meantime, a hotly contested privatization by online car specialist Autohome (NYSE: ATHM) has taken a few new twists, and wind power equipment maker Ming Yang (NYSE: MY) says it has just completed its own previously announced privatization. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lenovo’s investment in the smart car business looks like a necessary step for an important new growth area, but its choice of LeEco as partner looks more dubious.
I’ve been quite bearish on stumbling PC giant Lenovo (HKEx: 992) these days, but at least I have to commend the company for trying something new to jump-start its fading fortunes. That’s my initial assessment, on reading reports that Lenovo has invested in the smart car business of online video superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104), formerly known as LeTV. But that said, even if the reports are true, Lenovo seems to be coming to the smart car story slightly late, and I also have serious doubts about the suitability of LeEco as its choice of partner. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Tencent’s Supercell purchase looks like a relatively smart use of its big cash pile, and will give it access to leading-edge games and let it focus on the more important task of developing an ecosystem of products and services around WeChat and QQ.
Internet giant Tencent(HKEx: 700) has been a victim of its own success, accumulating one of China’s largest cash pots even as it remained quite conservative as an acquirer. But now the company has taken some pressure off of itself to invest that cash, with the announcement of its purchase of a controlling stake in Finnish game maker Supercell for a hefty $8.6 billion. I haven’t done any detailed research on the purchase, but this does appear to be the largest acquisition of all time by a Chinese Internet company, and is probably worth as much as or even more than all of Tencent’s other acquisitions to date combined. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The new Shanghai Disneyland may ultimately need to lower prices and control admittance to avoid negative publicity that could hurt its image, forcing analysts to lower some earlier bullish forecasts for the resort.
I do feel like I’ve written just a tad too much about the new Disney (NYSE: DIS) Resort here in Shanghai, which has just held its carefully scripted grand opening with surprisingly few glitches or negative publicity. But then again, the $5.5 billion investment is likely to be the largest for China this year, and Disney has averaged less than one new park per decade since opening its first Disneyland in Los Angeles in 1955. And based on previous experience, the new Shanghai Disney resort may also land at the center of at least a few minor scandals before it finally finds a more stable long-term footing, which could include a tempering of initial bullish profit forecasts. Read Full Post…