IPOs: Hotelier Homeinns Looks Homeward With Buyout Bid

Bottom line: A new management-led privatization bid for Homeinns and many other similar recent plans could stand a 50-50 chance of failing if they don’t complete the process before China’s stock market rally ends.

Homeinns joins privatization queue

Leading budget hotel chain Homeinns (Nasdaq: HMIN) has become the latest US-listed Chinese company to receive a buyout offer, capping a record week that has seen at least 4 such bids. In the past, 4 privatizations in a 6-month period would be considered big, even though such bids have been coming at a slow trickle over the last 3 years for Chinese companies whose shares have languished on Wall Street. But that tickle has turned into a flood these last 2 months, fueled mostly by greed, as company owners look enviously at China’s rallying stock markets that have more than doubled over the last year. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 12, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 12. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Homeinns (Nasdaq: HMIN) Announces Receipt of “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • Integrated Silicon (Nasdaq: ISSI) Agrees To Be Bought By China’s Uphill (English article)
  • Xiaomi Invested 1.8 Bln Yuan in its Content Business Since November 2014 (English article)
  • Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) Greater China President Resigns for Job at Xiaomi (Chinese article)
  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Chief Jack Ma Says No Plans to Buy Yahoo, eBay (Chinese article)

FINANCE: Shanda Tries Finance With Russell Investments Bid

Bottom line: Shanda’s participation in a bid for a US financial firm marks the start of the company’s move into finance, and reflects the broader rise of a new group of major private equity investors in Shanghai.

Shanda joins bid for US investment firm

Following its failed bid to become a major online entertainment company, the Shanghai-based Shanda is trying its hand at deal-making, with word that it’s part of a group making a bid for major US financial firm Russell Investments. Shanda’s entry to the private equity realm marks a growing trend that is seeing Shanghai-based companies emerge as some of China’s most aggressive homegrown private equity investors.

That trend is being led by Fosun International (HKEx: 656), which has been one of China’s biggest international buyers these last 2 years with a number of high-profile investments in Europe and North America. More recently Fosun has been joined by the aggressive China Media Group, which is connected to Shanghai’s leading media company SMG, and whose name is also showing up on a growing number of high profile investments. And then there’s the recently formed China Minsheng Investment Corp, an offshoot of the entrepreneurial China Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), which is also being quite aggressive. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Privatization Wave: A House of Cards?

Bottom line: An ongoing wave of buyout offers for US-listed Chinese firms is being funded by speculative money that will quickly evaporate when China’s stock market rally fizzles, causing some deals to collapse when that happens.

Gamblers fund privatization wave

It’s a new day, which means it’s time to take a look at the latest US-listed Chinese companies receiving privatization offers from opportunistic investors looking for bargains. Today it’s data center operator 21Vianet (Nasdaq: VNET) and beleaguered social networking site (SNS) operator Renren (NYSE: RENN) that are headed for the exit door.

I’ve been writing about this recent flurry of privatizations for the last few months, which is quickly turning into a flood as investors scramble to assemble deals to buy companies whose shares have languished on Wall Street. The idea is that these companies would be far more appreciated, and therefore get much higher valuations, from investors in their home China market, where an ongoing stock market rally has seen the main Shanghai index more than double over the last year. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Citic Securities Weds Social Fund, CCB Eyes Indonesia

Bottom line: Citic Securities’ new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund should bring it major new business, while CCB’s Indonesian tie-up talks reflect its approach of moving slowly into emerging markets for its nascent global expansion.

Citic Securities ties with Social Security Fund

Two big finance stories are casting a spotlight on different trends in China’s rapidly transforming financial services sector as Beijing tries to create an industry that can compete with the big global players. The larger news is domestically focused, with leading stock brokerage Citic Securities (HKEx: 6030; Shanghai: 600030) in a major new tie-up with China’s Social Security Fund that will see the pair cooperate in a wide array of financial services areas. The other news is outward looking, and has China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939; Shanghai: 601939) in talks to form a relatively modest new tie-up with a local bank in Indonesia. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 11, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Towers Watson, Shanda, Citic Vying for Russell Investments – Sources (English article)
  • Hunan TV’s Mango TV Raises 500 Mln Yuan, Valued At More Than 7 Bln Yuan (Chinese article)
  • LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), Unicom (HKEx: 763) Offer 4G Deals With Free Phone (Chinese article)
  • Renren (NYSE: RENN) Announces Receipt of “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • General Mills (NYSE: GIS) Launches Yoplait Yogurt Brand in China (Chinese article)

IPOs: Buyouts Roll On With New Bids For Jiayuan, E-House

Bottom line: The ongoing privatization wave of Chinese firms abandoning New York listings is likely at or near a peak, with gaming and solar companies as some of the likeliest candidates to make new announcements.

E-House heads for exit door

The exodus from New York by neglected Chinese companies marches on this week, with online real estate company E-House (NYSE: EJ) becoming the latest to receive a management-led buyout offer. At the same time, online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE) has announced that a suitor who made a similar offer for the company in March has sharply raised its bid, following complaints that the original offer grossly undervalued the company.

When the history books are written, the second quarter of 2015 could well go down as the height of a wave of privatization bids for New York-listed Chinese firms, whose shares have languished in the last few years due to lack of interest from US investors. At the same time, many of those companies are casting an envious eye on China’s rallying stock markets, and are almost certainly hoping to re-list at home in the future. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: LeTV Revs Up for HK Showdown with PCCW

Bottom line: LeTV will embark on an aggressive content-acquisition and hiring spree in Hong Kong in the second half of this year, as it aims to become the city’s second largest premium video service by the end of 2016.

LeTV challenges PCCW
LeTV challenges PCCW

As Hong Kong’s establishment fights over traditional TV broadcast licenses, mainland high-flyer LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) is quietly taking aim at the market with a rapid but stealthy entree over the Internet. After a low-key start for a Hong Kong version of its Internet-based video service last fall, China’s leading online video company is rapidly turning up the volume of its local campaign, with plans to spend HK$6 billion ($770 million) to build up its library of local content for the small but lucrative market. Read Full Post…

IPOs: China Needs IPO Roadmap For Returning Companies

Bottom line: China’s securities regulator should work with overseas-listed Chinese firms to chart a well-defined path for them to return home to list, to encourage such movement and avoid burdensome bureaucracy.

Chinese “turtles” return home to list

A growing trend that is seeing Chinese firms abandon US listings to return home gained big momentum last week, when 2 more companies announced plans to de-list from New York and a third that privatized 2 years ago moved close to a China re-listing.

In the first category, medical devices maker Mindray Medical (NYSE: MR) announced a management led buy-out offer late in the week, which was followed a day later by a similar offer for solar panel maker JA Solar (Nasdaq: JASO). Meantime, formerly New York-listed outdoor advertising specialist Focus Media took a major step toward becoming the first Chinese company to re-list at home by injecting itself to an existing Shenzhen-traded company. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 10, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • E-House (NYSE: EJ) Announces Receipt of Preliminary “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE) Announces Receipt of Amended “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) Denies Plan To Outright Acquire Car Services Firm Yidao (Chinese article)
  • Car Maintenance B2C Platform Tuhu Yangche Wins $100 Mln Series C Funding (English article)
  • 500.com (NYSE: WBAI) Welcomes Tshinghua Unigroup as Strategic Investor (PRNewswire)

MEDIA: LeTV, iQiyi, Youku Snared In Crackdown — Again

Bottom line: Beijing’s latest online video clean-up is part of its drive to guide a bigger transition from a traditional TV to an Internet-based broadcasting landscape, with more similar moves likely over the next 1-2 years.

Beijing cracks down on cartoons

It’s been at least a month or two since Beijing’s latest crackdown on unhealthy Internet content, so it should come as no surprise that the morality police have launched yet another campaign, this time targeting cartoons. The latest dragnet has snared video superstar LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104), Baidu-backed (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi and most other top industry players, who are among 29 companies being investigated in this latest web clampdown.

China’s broader Internet clean-up campaign is now actually entering its second year, and dates back to April last year when leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) had its video license revoked for hosting pornographic content. (previous post) Since then, nearly ever major video site has been investigated and punished at one point or another, and social networking sites (SNS) like Tencent (HKEx: 700) WeChat have also embarked on clean-ups of controversial content. Read Full Post…