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: 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…
The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 22. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Tencent (HKEx: 700) Buys ‘Clash of Clans’ Maker Supercell for $8.6 Bln (English article)
Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Invests in LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) Super Car Business – Report (Chinese article)
Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA) Eyes Shanghai as Front-Runner for China Production (English article)
China Will Allow Foreign Firms to Issue Shares on Mainland: Central Bank (English article)
CDB Leasing Attracts Three Gorges, China Re to $978 Mln IPO (English article)
Bottom line: JD.com will quietly close Yihaodian after acquiring the online store from Walmart, and Amazon is the most likely next large player to withdraw from China’s e-commerce market in the next few years.
In what can only be described as a major surrender, Walmart (NYSE: WMT) is selling its struggling online flagship Yihaodian in exchange for about $1.5 billion worth of shares in JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), China’s second largest e-commerce player. The development isn’t a complete surprise, since Yihaodian has struggled to compete with JD and industry titan Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) since Walmart purchased the company 4 years ago. The withdrawal also shines a spotlight on the very real fact that foreign companies often can’t compete on China’s Internet, and raises the question of whether Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) might be the next to abandon the complex market. 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: Reuters decision to put its Chinese-language website on hold is partly a surrender to Beijing, but also acknowledges that new approaches are needed to succeed in the nation’s restrictive media space.
No one else is writing about the latest strategic shift at Reuters’ (NYSE: TRI) Chinese language news site in Beijing, probably because the actual number of headcount reductions is quite small, at less than 10. But the move has huge symbolic significance, since it looks like an admission of defeat to Beijing censors who blocked the site in China more than a year ago. At the same time, the move also represents a certain realism, and the fact that Chinese consumers increasingly get their news via other channels anyhow, most notably social media. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Chinese companies need to demonstrate they are trustworthy and won’t steal their business partners’ IP, or risk seeing continued resistance to cross-border deals like Midea’s planned investment in Kuka.
As European opposition rapidly grows towards China’s latest attempt at major global M&A, many are missing the point when they blame cross-border politics for threatening a proposed deal that would see Chinese appliance maker Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) buy 30 percent of German robotics firm Kuka (Frankfurt: KU2). Politics may be partly to blame for the growing alarm signals in Europe over the deal, since many westerners still worry about ties between Beijing and big companies like Midea, which are private but whose major stakeholders often have government backgrounds. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new self-calculated valuation of $185 billion looks realistic and even possibly low, but the stock will remain under pressure until the intentions of big stakeholders SoftBank and Yahoo become clearer.
It’s not often that you get to see a major company put a value on itself, but that’s exactly what we’re getting as a result of new information coming from this week’s sale of nearly $8 billion worth of stock in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). I’ll end the suspense right away and say that Alibaba has valued itself at about $185 billion with the latest sale of a big block of its stock held by longtime Japanese backer SoftBank. While that number looks quite impressive, it’s also noteworthy because it values Alibaba quite a bit lower than arch-rival Tencent (HKEx: 700), as the pair jostle for the title of China’s biggest Internet company. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new $300 million investment by Tencent, Baidu, JD.com and a private equity firm in Bituato is aimed at providing major strategic partners to ensure its continued profitability as an independent car trading platform.
China’s non-stop chain of Internet M&A has created some strange bedfellows, including a new investment that will make partners out of search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700). The pair, 2 of China’s top 3 Internet companies, are coming together with e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) and another private equity firm to invest a fresh $300 million in online car listing services firm Bitauto (NYSE: BITA). The investment by each company is relatively small, and has slightly different significance for all 4 parties involved. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 7. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bitauto (NYSE: BITA) Announces $300 Mln Investment from Tencent, Baidu, JD.com (PRNewswire)
Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) Pays 270 Mln Euros for 70 Pct of Soccer Club Inter Milan (Chinese article)
TCL (Shenzhen: 000100) to Take Handset Maker TCL Communication (HKEx: 2618) Private (English article)
Yingli (NYSE: YGE) Announces Preliminary Financial Results for Q1 (PRNewswire)
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…