The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Tsinghua Unigroup Affiliate to Raise $13 Bln to Bankroll Chip Plants (English article)
China’s Solar Power Eyes $300 Mln US IPO to Crowdfund Green Power (English article)
SAIC (Shanghai: 600104) to Raise 15 Bln Yuan, Quicken New Energy Car Efforts (Chinese article)
MIIT Official Responds to Telecoms Consolidation Talk, Says No Overhaul Begun Yet (Chinese article)
Commerce Minister Zhang Mao Visits Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), Encourages Innovation (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Canadian Solar is likely to target at least $100 million in an IPO for its power plant-building unit before year end, which could be an attractive investment alternative for buyers of traditional utility stocks.
Canadian Solar IPO spotlights plant construction
Just days after announcing big new financing for its unit focused on solar power plant construction, Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) is taking a big new step by disclosing it is preparing an IPO to separately list that unit. The move marks the latest wrinkle in the evolving story for Chinese solar panel manufacturers, which are quickly becoming their own best customers by selling their products to solar plants that they build themselves.
Canadian Solar and some of its peers have actually engaged in this kind of plant construction for a while, though the pace has picked up in the last couple of years. But the latest trend marks a divergence from the past, since Canadian Solar and others are now becoming long-term owners of the plants they build and putting them into wholly-owned units that look like a solar equivalent of traditional power utilities. In the past, Canadian Solar and the others would simply build solar plants, and then sell them to independent long-term owners upon completion. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Mindray, E-House, Ming Yang and other US-listed Chinese companies that announce revised buyout offers by the end of this month stand a better than 70 percent chance of completing their privatizations.
Mindray shares leap on merger deal signing
After several months of silence, the wave of privatization bids by US-listed Chinese firms earlier this year is suddenly jumping back into the headlines with a series of new developments that indicate the more solid offers will move forward. The latest news has medical device maker Mindray (NYSE: MR) announcing it has just entered into a formal buyout deal, which even includes a price that’s slightly higher than its previous offer.
Mindray’s announcement comes the same week that wind power equipment maker Ming Yang (NYSE: MY) announced its own new privatization bid (previous post), and real estate services company E-House (NYSE: EJ) announced a lower price for its previously announced bid. (previous post) In both of those cases, skeptical investors reacted by dumping shares of both companies, causing them to trade well below the offer price. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Tencent’s latest plan to invest $1 billion in Meituan-Dianping looks like an awkward bid for control of the newly merged company, which could attract a rival bid from Alibaba.
Tencent as awkward suitor
Social networking giant Tencent(HKEx: 700) has never been very good at public relations, unlike slicker Internet rivals Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), whose founders are much better at wooing the media and investors. That refrain is ringing true once again with the latest mega-investment headlines, which appear to show Tencent making an awkward bid for the newly formed group buying giant created by the merger between former rivals Dianping and Meituan.
In fact, Tencent isn’t really bidding for the new company outright, but appears to be voicing its future intent by offering the merged company $1 billion in new funding. Such a funding would boost Tencent’s current equity in the merged company, in which it already holds a stake following its purchase of 20 percent of Dianping last year for $400 million. Such a bid would seem like a direct challenge to Alibaba, which also holds a relatively large stake in the newly merged company through its participation in a $300 million funding round for Meituan last year. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) Submits Confidential YieldCo Registration Statement (PRNewswire)
Dali Foods Seeks Up to $1.34 Bln in Hong Kong IPO (English article)
Wanda Closing Dept Stores, Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) to Take Over Some (Chinese article)
Mindray (NYSE: MR) Enters into Definitive Merger Agreement for Going Private (PRNewswire)
Tongcheng Forms JV with Japanese Travel Agent HIS (Chinese article)
Bottom line: A new round of buyouts for US-listed Chinese firms is being greeted with skepticism due to China’s volatile economy, and could offer a good buying opportunity for investors with strong appetite for risk.
Investors dump E-House shares after new buyout offer
In what looks like an emerging new trend, investors are dumping shares of online real estate services firm E-House (NYSE: EJ) after it announced a new lower offer price for its shares under a privatization bid first announced in June. This lowering of the price doesn’t come as a huge surprise, since US-listed Chinese shares have tumbled since many first announced privatization bids in the first half of the year with an eye to re-listing back in China.
But what does come as a surprise is US investor reaction to the new offer. In the case of E-House, the company’s shares fell more than 5 percent after it announced the new buyout price, which still represented a nearly 7 percent premium to the stock’s last close. Normally one would expect the shares to rise after such an announcement to approach the new bid price. But in this case the sell-off seems to reflect investor skepticism that the new deal will ever get completed, even at the lower price. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The latest spat between Alibaba and JD over behind-the-scenes strong-arm tactics will quickly subside following JD’s filing of a formal complaint, as both come under government pressure to clean up their sites of counterfeit goods.
JD accuses Alibaba of strong-arm tactics
In what’s quickly becoming an annual ritual of fall, a war of words has broken out between e-commerce leaders Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) and JD.com(Nasdaq: JD) in the run-up to China’s November 11 Singles Day, the world’s biggest online spending extravaganza. This year JD has accused its larger rival of pressuring third-party online merchants to limit their Singles Day promotions to Alibaba’s own websites, effectively freezing out other sites like JD’s where those same merchants may also operate other online stores.
At the same time, Alibaba, JD and their many smaller e-commerce peers are coming under fire from a new Beijing report saying that more than 40 percent of goods sold online in China are either fake or of poor quality. This new report looks similar to another one that came out early this year uncovering rampant piracy among Chinese e-commerce firms. This time no specific companies are named in the latest media reports. The report earlier this year named many specific companies, and cited Alibaba’s popular Taobao mall as one of the most egregious marketplaces for trade in counterfeit goods. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Hailiang looks well placed for growth due to its small size, a major new expansion and positioning in the recession-proof education space, which could help to boost its shares that look quite cheap at current levels.
Hailiang builds business in primary education
After a period of neglect due to their low-tech image and overly eager expansion by some, Chinese education stocks appear to be coming back into vogue on growth that looks solid, if not spectacular. On the heels of solid quarterly reports by 2 sector leaders 2 weeks ago, the much smaller and recently listed Hailiang Education (Nasdaq: HLG) has just released its first post-IPO earnings report that shows similar respectable growth. But more intriguing is the potential for growth acceleration, as the company launches a massive new campus and starts to expand its well-regarded brand as one of China’s leading private educators.
As a regular China IPO watcher, I’ll admit that Hailiang didn’t make it onto my radar screen in July when it made a small offering using the relatively low-profile “best-efforts” method. That’s not too surprising, since China’s markets were in free-fall at that time after a spectacular run the previous year, and their downward spiral was infecting most of their US-listed Chinese cousins. Read Full Post…
This week’s Street View takes us off the roads of Shanghai and into the office, as the issue of job titles in the workplace made national headlines. It seems that Vanke (Shenzhen: 000002), the property giant better known for its apartment blocks than corporate practices, attracted big attention when its Shanghai office banned the use of a popular honorific title used by many workers to address superiors.
The story casts a spotlight on the issue of job titles and the important role they play throughout face-conscious Asia, especially in China. When I first arrived in the region back in the mid-1980s, I was immediately impressed by how much importance people placed on job titles, and also how they loved to give out business cards. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Says Alibaba Pressuring Merchants Before Singles’ Day (English article)
Over 40 Pct of China’s Online Sales Counterfeit, Shoddy: Xinhua (English article)
Bottom line: Weak share reaction to Ming Yang’s new buyout offer and a low valuation for Giant Interactive’s China backdoor listing reflect weakening investor sentiment towards poorly performing Chinese Internet companies.
Chilly reaction for Ming Yang buyout plan
After a brief period of relative quiet, movement is picking up again in the tide of Chinese companies privatizing from New York to re-list back in China. This time former new-energy high flyer Ming Yang (NYSE: MY) announced it has received a management-led buyout offer, becoming the latest firm to receive such an offer. Meantime in China, one of the earlier firms to privatize, gaming company Giant Interactive, has taken the latest step for a backdoor listing in Shenzhen using a shell company called New Century Cruises. (Shenzhen: 002258).
But in an interesting twist to the homeward migration story, a chilly reception from investors seems to reflecting shriveling interest in these poorly performing Chinese companies. In the Giant story, the proposed new valuation for the company looks quite low — far less than what Giant was worth when it de-listed from New York in 2013. That’s quite a switch from what Giant’s talkative chief was saying just 4 months ago, when he boasted his company might be able to get valued as much as 5 times the $3 billion it was worth when it was still listed in New York. Read Full Post…