China News Digest: June 15, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Sees Growth Rising to 48 Pct in First Forecast (English article)
  • ChemChina, New Hope Said to Weigh McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) Franchise Bids (English article)
  • Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE) Reports Q1 Results (PRNewswire)
  • China’s Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) Wants Only 49 Pct of Kuka: Sources (English article)
  • NXP (Nasdaq: NXPI) Selling Products Unit for $2.75 Bln to Chinese Group (English article)

TRAVEL: Looming Downturn Wipes Shine Off China Lodging

Bottom line: China Lodging’s revenue growth could slip into single digits by the end of the year and could start to contract in 2017, as China’s hotel industry corrects after years of strong growth.

China Lodging assists franchisees

Overbuilding and a slowing economy are taking a toll on one of China’s leading hotel operators, which has just revealed it is slashing some of the fees it charges to its franchising partners as they struggle for business. The revelations by China Lodging Group (Nasdaq: HTHT), also known as Huazhu, bode poorly for China’s broader hotel industry, which is suffering a hangover following explosive growth over the last 2 decades. Investors greeted the downbeat news by selling off China Lodging shares, which closed down 2.4 percent and have lost more than 12 percent of their value since the end of March. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Baidu Pays $1.3 Bln Price for Transparency

Bottom line: Baidu’s long-term revenues will decline by 15-20 percent from current levels as a result of a cut-back in sponsored links and new transparency policies that will scare away some of its advertisers. 

Baidu cuts Q2 revenue outlook

What’s the cost of being honest, or at least a little more honest? If your name is Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), apparently the answer is about $400 million, which is how much China’s leading search engine has just lowered its latest quarterly revenue forecast after taking steps to become more transparent. Put differently, the figure is about one-eighth of Baidu’s previous revenue forecast for the quarter, meaning it would translate to lost revenue of about $1.3 billion of the $10.25 billion it generated for all of last year. Read Full Post…

CHIPS: TSMC Offers New Tech Route to Taiwan for China

Bottom line: New remarks by TSMC Chairman Morris Chang could signal a revival of several stalled mainland investments in Taiwan’s microchip sector, with new focus on creating mechanisms to prevent IP theft.

TSMC remarks hint at revival of China-Taiwan chip deals

New reports are citing one of Taiwan’s most influential technology executives saying he welcomes investment from China, offering a tantalizing new path to the island for Chinese high-tech firms who so far have been rebuffed in such moves. The new signals are coming from the chairman of leading Taiwanese high-tech chip maker TSMC (Taipei: 2330), who is saying he could accept a Chinese investor as a strategic stakeholder as long as the company doesn’t require a place on his company’s board. Read Full Post…

IPOs: 51Talk IPO Falls Flat, iKang Bidders Back Off

Bottom line: A lackluster debut for China Online Education and abrupt end to the bidding war for iKang point to weak investor interest in US-listed Chinese stocks, which is likely to persist through year end.

51Talk operator fizzles in NY trading debut

Chinese IPOs in New York continue to sputter heading into the summer months, with the latest offering by China Online Education Group (NYSE: COE) debuting flat after raising a very modest $46 million. Meantime, one of the most hotly contested privatizations in an exodus of Chinese companies from New York has come to an abrupt and somewhat disappointing end in the case of clinic operator iKang (NYSE: KANG). That development has come with word that 2 groups vying to buy out iKang have suddenly dropped their bids, yielding to a third group associated with e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: iKang Gets New Suitor, TCL’s Tired Phone Unit Bows

Bottom line: A bidding war for iKang could see prices rise above the current highest offer of $25 per ADS, while a buyout bid for TCL Communication will be priced at a slight premium to the current stock price and meet with little resistance.

iKang attracts new buyout offer

The twisted privatization tale of private clinic operator iKang (Nasdaq: KANG) has just taken a new turn, with its receipt of another buyout offer from Yunfeng Capital, the private equity investor with ties to e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). This development makes Yunfeng the third party to bid for iKang, which has easily become the most contested of some 40 US-listed Chinese companies trying to privatize from New York. Meantime, a far less contested buyout offer has just come in Hong Kong, where faded cellphone maker TCL Communications (HKEx: 2618) has just received a buyout offer from its China-listed parent. Read Full Post…

CONSUMER: Trustworthy Gestures Need to Salvage Midea-Kuka Deal

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.

Trust needed to reduce resistance to Midea-Kuka deal

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…

E-COMMERCE: Alibaba in $185 Bln Identity Crisis with SoftBank Sale

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.

Alibaba estimates value at $185 bln

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…

China News Digest: June 8, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on June 8. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • iKang (Nasdaq: KANG) Receives Competing “Going Private” Proposal from Yunfeng (GlobeNewswire)
  • Parcel Delivery Firm Uni-Top Gets 15 Bln Yuan in New Investment (Chinese article)
  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Chief Jack Ma Says Hopes Ant Financial to Make IPO in HK (Chinese article)
  • TSMC (Taipei: 2330) Chairman Welcomes China Investment, But No Board Seats (Chinese article)
  • Haier’s GE (NYSE: GE) Home Appliance Buy Nears Close, Final Price at $5.58 Bln (Chinese article)

INTERNET: Tencent, Baidu Travel Together with Bitauto Investment

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.

Baidu, Tencent, JD invest in Bitauto

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…

NEW ENERGY: Yingli’s Shock Profit, Ming Yang Exit Nears

Bottom line: YIngli’s surprise profit announcement could be the result of a government rescue that will result in a sale of the company, while Ming Yang’s quick privatization reflects its profitability and strong longer-term prospects.

Ming Yang shareholders approve buyout

In a huge surprise to new energy stock watchers, nearly insolvent solar panel maker YIngli (NYSE: YGE) has suddenly announced its first quarterly profit since 2011, abruptly reversing years of massive losses. There’s no explanation for this sudden profit announcement, which comes in some preliminary results released ahead of an official conference call set for next week. Meantime, the more solvent wind power equipment specialist Ming Yang (NYSE: MY) is moving closer to New York exit door, with its announcement that shareholders have approved its plan to privatize as part of a broader wave of such de-listings by US-traded Chinese companies. Read Full Post…