BUYOUTS: Chaos in NY De-Listing Queue Shakes Up China Stocks

US China stocks losing balance

The headlines last week were littered with signs of growing unrest and chaos among the dozens of US-listed Chinese companies trying to privatize from New York and return to China in search of higher valuations. One of the biggest items saw signs of a new bidding war break out for private clinic operator iKang (Nasdaq: KANG), while another saw data center operator 21Vianet (Nasdaq: VNET) mount what increasingly looks like a stealth privatization campaign. A third saw social media website operator YY (Nasdaq: YY) become the first to abandon its privatization bid altogether, casting doubt on many of the other similar pending offers that have gone for months without any progress. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: June 21, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Swaps 145 Mln Shares for Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) Yihaodian (Chinese article)
  • China Mobile (HKEx: 941) Adds 17.9 Mln 4G Users in May, Total Up to 409 Mln (Chinese article)
  • Kuka (Frankfurt: KU2) Investor Loh Says Not Planning Counter Bid to Midea’s (English article)
  • Perfect World Buys Back Online Literature Unit from Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) (Chinese article)
  • Orient Securities Hong Kong IPO Seeks Up to $1.2 Bln (English article)

SMARTPHONES: LeEco Ups Coolpad Stake, Eyes Silicon Valley Campus

Bottom line: LeEco will try to buy out Coolpad later this year in its new position as the company’s largest stakeholder, while its plans for a massive Silicon Valley campus stand a less than 50 percent chance of getting completed.

LeEco boosts Coolpad stake

The phenomenal but problematic entertainment superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) is in a couple of big headlines as the new week begins, led by word that a new transaction has made it the largest stakeholder in struggling smartphone maker Coolpad (HKEx: 2369). Rumors were flying thick and fast last week that LeEco, formerly known as LeTV, was on the cusp of an outright takeover of Coolpad, and this latest move certainly looks like a possible prelude to such an bid. Meantime, separate media reports are confirming news from earlier this year saying LeEco has purchased a piece of prime Silicon Valley land that it hopes to develop as a campus for its future US headquarters. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Postal Bank, Orient Securities Line Up for Listings

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.

Postal Bank set for mega-IPO in HK

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…

Shanghai Street View: Experiencing History

Big queues haunt Shanghai Disney
Big queues haunt Shanghai Disney

Shanghai’s past and future are center stage in this week’s Street View, the former represented by an exhibit on one of our city’s most famous historic families and the latter by this week’s opening of our new Disneyland theme park in Pudong.

I attended “The Soong Sisters: Special Memories” exhibition shortly after it opened last month, hoping to learn more about 3 of Shanghai’s most famous figures in the early 20th century. Separately, I visited the new Shanghai Disneyland (NYSE: DIS) a few days before its official opening this past Thursday, in a different quest to understand what is likely to become one of China’s top tourist attractions of the 21st century. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: June 18-20, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 18-20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Hit With New China Setback in Beijing Patent Ruling (English article)
  • China’s Postal Savings Bank May File For Up to $8 Bln HK IPO Next Week (English article)
  • LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) Becomes Coolpad’s (HKEx: 2369) Top Shareholder (Chinese article)
  • 21Vianet (Nasdsaq: VNET) and Unisplendour Establish Cloud Joint Venture (GlobeNewswire)
  • Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) Shutters ‘Future Store’ in New E-Commerce Failure (Chinese article)

CONSUMER: Berlin Blesses Midea-Kuka Marriage, But With Conditions

Bottom line: Midea’s investment in Kuka is likely to move ahead and could be successful, but will be far more costly than a Chinese joint venture between the 2 sides that would have achieved most of Midea’s objectives.

Berlin OKs Midea’s Kuka investment

After showing growing signs of collapse, a deal that would see Chinese appliance giant Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) buy a large stake in German industrial robotics firm Kuka (Frankfurt: KU2) is suddenly springing back to life, with word the deal has received the official nod from Berlin. But Berlin is only giving its approval with a number of major conditions, including reassurances that Midea won’t try to buy a majority of Kuka and also that Kuka’s German-based jobs will be protected. Such a compromise looks promising and could ultimately help to seal the deal. But it also raises the question of why exactly Midea needs to make this particular form of investment. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: iKang War Re-heats, 21Vianet in Stealth De-Listing?

Bottom line: A new China Life bid for iKang could trump Yunfeng, while 21Vianet could be mounting a stealth privatization bid that would see it slowly sell most of its shares to big buyers before mounting a formal de-listing attempt.

China Life eyeing bid for iKang?

A few strange twists are taking place in the story that has seen some 40 US-listed Chinese companies launch privatization bids since the start of last year, led by the surprise re-heating of a bidding war for private clinic operator iKang (iKang). In a separate headline, data center operator 21Vianet (Nasdaq: VNET) gave a new signal that it will abandon a previous buyout offer and may launch a stealth de-listing bid instead. And in the strangest development, the board of web portal operator Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) has rejected an investment plan by the company’s founder that looked like a prelude to a possible buyout offer at the time. Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Opportunistic Bears Feast on Alibaba, JD Stock

Bottom line: Shares of Alibaba and JD.com will remain under pressure for the next few months from opportunistic short selling, but should rebound late this year due to strong growth prospects for their core e-commerce business.

Short sellers pressure Alibaba, JD shares

Separate reports are spotlighting a recent short-selling spree targeting China’s 2 leading e-commerce companies, Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), wiping out billions of dollars in market value over the last few weeks. But the negative sentiment also raises the question of whether there’s something systemically wrong with these companies and China’s e-commerce market in general, or whether this is a short-term phenomenon created by people looking to make some quick profits. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: June 17, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 17. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) Rejects Investment Proposal From CEO, Seeks Other Options (PRNewswire)
  • Japan’s Rakuten (Tokyo: 4755), NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) in E-Commerce Tie-Up (Chinese article)
  • 21Vianet (Nasda: VNET) Announces Addition To Board, Gets $388 Mln Investment (GlobeNewswire)
  • China Life (HKEx: 2628) to Challenge Yunfeng in Bidding for iKang (Nasdaq: KANG) (Chinese article)
  • Berlin Approves Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) Bid for Kuka (Frankfurt: KU2) (English article)

 

BUYOUTS: YY Becomes First to Scrap Privatization

Bottom line: YY’s abandonment of its privatization plan and concurrent share buyback look like savvy moves to build confidence and attract attention from investors, and could soon be followed by similar withdrawals by other big buyout candidates.

YY abandons privatization

Following a steady stream of signals hinting at new obstacles for US-listed Chinese stocks trying to privatize, social networking site YY (Nasdaq: YY) has become the first to formally abandon its plans to abandon New York.  I’ve been predicting that up to half or more of the 40-odd privatization plans announced since the start of last year could ultimately collapse, and have to commend YY for being brave enough to be the first to openly discuss the abandonment of its buyout offer. The original buyout group led by YY’s chairman and CEO could have easily just remained quiet on the subject until everyone assumed the offer was dead. But in this case they’ve taken the more responsible route of admitting to failure. Read Full Post…