Tudou Plus Youku: Two Small Potatoes

Note to readers: This article was written and published on Tuesday, March 13, in Hong Kong’s Economic Journal, but I’m just posting it today (Thursday) on  my blog as part of my agreement with them.

It’s not often that mergers happen among publicly traded companies in China’s crowded Internet space, so I’m not even sure where to begin in discussing the just-announced deal that will see leading online video site Youku (NYSE: YOKU) buy rival Tudou (Nasdaq: TUDO) to form an undisputed domestic leader in online video. (company announcement) On paper and in theory the deal sounds quite attractive, combining China’s biggest and second biggest video sharing sites in an interesting marriage between Youku’s more corporate style and Tudou, which has a much more entrepreneurial background under the leadership of outspoken founder Gary Wang. But the reality is much less interesting, with this newly merged company still a relatively small entity likely to face numerous challenges going forward. For Tudou shareholders at least, the deal looks quite sweet. After seeing Tudou shares sink steadily to lose about half of their value following the company’s initial public offering last August, investors who had enough patience to hold on will get a rare premium of 38 percent to the company’s original IPO price, and an even juicier 160 percent to its last closing price before the deal was announced. Investors bid Tudou shares up by nearly that amount in Monday trade after the deal was announced, in a jump that should surprise no one. But perhaps more telling, Youku shares also rose 27 percent, a jump partly due to excitement about this new industry leader but also, in my view, because many believe the new company could itself soon become an acquisition target. At the end of the day, the deal itself is relatively tiny, valuing Tudou at just over $1 billion even after the big premium. That, combined with Youku’s own market value of $2.85 billion, means the entire merged company will be worth just under $4 billion — hardly a figure to get anyone too excited, and still trailing most other big Chinese Internet names like Sina (Nasdaq: SINA), NetEase (NTES) and well behind Internet search leaders Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent (HKEx: 700). Youku now controls about 22 percent of China’s online video market and Tudou another 14 percent, meaning the combined company will still control less than half of this highly fragmented space. Both Youku and Tudou are also currently losing money, though this deal could help them move to profitability more quickly than each might have done as an individual company. Still, both companies’ latest quarterly results are hardly reassuring. Youku saw its loss actually widen 32 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, not the best sign for a company aiming for profitability. Tudou, meantime, also saw its fourth-quarter loss balloon ten-fold from a year ago, after it notched an unexpected profit in the third quarter. The situation doesn’t look set to improve anytime soon, with a looming advertising slowdown for the broader Internet market also likely to hurt video sites in general, since advertisers looking for the most effective channel for their money are likely to skip those sites in favor of more effective platforms like Sina’s popular web portal and Baidu’s sector-leading search page. From the perspective of someone who has watched China’s Internet space for years, I have to say that I like this deal from a historical perspective as it represents one of the largest friendly mergers to date of two companies that strongly complement each other. But from the perspective of an investor, I honestly can’t get too excited about this deal, since both Youku and Tudou are ultimately just little players in China’s huge Internet realm that will quickly find that one small potato plus another small potato still equals a small potato. Furthermore, both companies have a number of factors working against them, including bottom lines moving in the wrong direction, potential integration issues of 2 very different corporate cultures, and a looming slowdown in advertising, their key revenue source. If I were a gambling man, I would bet that this new merged company will face a number of issues in the next year, but could ultimately still reward investors if it gets acquired by an even bigger company in the next 2 years, much the way that Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) purchased Youtube.

Bottom line: The Youku-Tudou merger is notable for setting a precedent, but will ultimately still create a small Internet player most likely to get purchased itself in the next 2 years.

Related postings 相关文章:

Regulator Eyes Online Video in Ad Crackdown 广电总局或限制视频网站广告

Tudou-Sina Tie-Up: More to Come? 土豆网联手新浪

Tudou Surprises With Profit, Licensing Deal 土豆网意外扭亏为盈视频分享市场的好兆头

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