Bottom line: CMC’s purchase of a stake in the parent of the Manchester City soccer club looks at least partly political, and could be followed by similar purchases by Alibaba or LeTV next year as companies try to earn goodwill from Beijing.
CMC buys into global soccer
Anyone who thought the entrepreneurial China Media Capital (CMC) might represent a new breed of market-oriented Chinese investors will be disappointed to learn the company’s latest purchase looks quite political and aimed at pleasing Beijing. That investment has the Shanghai-based CMC teaming up with the financial giant Citic Group, another highly political animal, to buy 13 percent of a company whose prize asset is the Manchester City soccer club.
I’m probably being slightly unfair in calling this move purely political, since China is certainly a soccer-crazy country that could benefit from the expertise that CMC will get through its investment in City Football Group (CFG). But the timing of this deal looks quite suspicious, as it comes just weeks after Chinese President Xi Jinping visited the team during a tour of Britain, where he released a plan to turn China into a soccer powerhouse. Read Full Post…
As this year’s first blast of winter made headlines in Shanghai, another item on a new program to curb bicycle theft transported me back to a warmer time that now seems like a distant memory from China’s past. Anyone who spent time here in the 1990s or earlier clearly remembers that past, when bicycles were the main mode of private transport and ruled the streets of everywhere from top-tier cities like Shanghai all the way down to the smallest rural villages.
Those days are mostly gone in the present, when car ownership has become one of several prerequisites for young city dwellers seeking to attract future partners in today’s Shanghai. But the growing problems of congestion and pollution are making Shanghai think twice about the desirability of too much car ownership, which perhaps is behind a growing number of recent programs like this one aimed at easing concerns about things like theft and inconvenience. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: iKang’s managers may have to raise their earlier buyout offer to counter a new rival bid for the company, which could embolden investors to demand similar better prices for other US-listed Chinese companies being privatized.
Bidding war erupts for iKang
An interesting new wrinkle has entered the recent privatization wave sweeping US-listed Chinese companies, with word that a group backed by some major investors is making a rival buyout offer for medical clinic operator iKang (Nasdaq: KANG). So far as I know, this is the first case of a rival bid emerging to challenge any of the nearly 3 dozen privatization offers to emerge this year, mostly from management-led groups.
That’s not to say that this latest development is completely unexpected. Many minority stakeholders have complained loudly that most of the management-led buyout offers to be announced so far grossly undervalue the companies. Those complaints have worked once or twice, most notably in the case of online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE), whose non-management suitor sharply raised its buyout offer after investors complained that the original bid was too low. (previous post) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: 58.com’s latest quarterly results reveal a case of indigestion after its recent M&A binge, but the company could emerge as a new Chinese Internet leader if can successfully digest those assets over the next 2-3 quarters.
58.com gets M&A indigestion
Leading online classified site 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) has always been a company to watch, due to its market leading position that has led many to call it the Craigslist of China. But the company is suffering from a case of indigestion in its latest earnings report, which revealed a massive loss that shows it needs to take time from its recent buying spree to digest some of those newly purchased assets.
Investors didn’t seem too worried about the report, and actually bid up 58.com’s shares by 3.6 percent after its latest report came out, sending them to a 4-month high. With a current market value of $8.4 billion, 58.com is quickly emerging as one of China’s biggest Internet companies, behind only the big 3 of Alibaba(NYSE: BABA), Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), as well a handful of other sector leaders like Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Beijing should eliminate barriers that are slowing the flow of private money into lending services, in a move to offset a slowdown in lending from traditional banks that are dealing with a growing bad-loan crisis.
Obstacles hinder private lending growth
A flurry of headlines last week highlighted the recent move by private companies into China’s financial services market, led by reports that Apple(Nasdaq: AAPL) could become the first major foreign company to offer electronic payments in the country. At the same time, a chilly reception for a Hong Kong IPO by regional lender Qingdao Bank (HKEx: 3866) highlighted the difficulties many traditional Chinese banks now face due to concerns about a looming bad debt crisis.
Beijing regulators should be commended for their recent efforts to open up the financial services market to more private investment, but should consider accelerating the campaign by streamlining bureaucracy for big and well-financed domestic and foreign names like Apple and Tencent(HKEx: 700). It should also consider a similar streamlining of bureaucracy for foreign banks, many of which have left China off their global roadmaps due to stiff restrictions that make doing business difficult. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 1. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Bank of Jinzhou (HKEx: 416) Said to Be Poised to Raise $794 Mln in IPO (English article)
Ant Financial-Backed Korean Internet Bank Wins Approval (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Huawei’s strong sales for its Mate line of mid-range smartphones and positive coverage of Apple’s newest China store opening spotlight 2 of this year’s top Chinese smartphone trends, which should continue into next year.
Huawei aims high with Mate 8 launch
A couple of smartphone headlines are spotlighting 2 of this year’s top trends in the market, namely the rapid rise of Huaweiand the remarkable turnaround in China for Apple(Nasdaq: AAPL). The first headline has Huawei announcing lofty targets for the latest model from its line of mid-range smartphones. The second has Beijing becoming Apple’s unofficial Asian capital, with the opening of its fifth store in the city — more than any other in Asia.
Both of these stories are quite remarkable, as each represents a major shift from previous trends in 2014. Huawei has struggled for the last few years to differentiate itself from a crowded field of domestic smartphone makers, but finally emerged as a leader this year based on its better product designs. Similarly, Apple’s recent surge marked a major turnaround from the last few years, when its reputation took a beating in China due to poor relations with Beijing. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: New York has lost its appeal for listings by smaller Chinese Internet companies, but should remain attractive for sector leaders like Didi Kuaidi and Meituan-Dianping.
Chinese NY IPOs shrink sharply in 2015
China’s imminent resumption of IPOs after a 4-month pause seems like a good opportunity to review what’s shaping up as the year of the “reverse IPO” in New York by Chinese companies. Market watchers will know that I’m talking about this year’s record wave of privatization bids by US-listed Chinese firms, which saw around 3 dozen companies announce plans to de-list from New York during the year with an eye to re-listing back in China.
That’s not to say that no Chinese companies listed in New York this year, and I was able to track down at least 4 that made such offers. But those 4 collectively raised a paltry $200 million, or just a tiny fraction of the nearly $30 billion that Chinese companies raised in a record year for New York IPOs in 2014. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple could become the first big foreign company to offer domestic electronic payment services in China, representing a major accomplishment for CEO Tim Cook in his recent campaign to improve relations with Beijing.
Apple Pay eyes February China launch
Big names like Visa (NYSE: V), MasterCard (NYSE: MA) and PayPal have been waiting for years to offer electronic payment services in China, but now it appears that tech titan Apple(Nasdaq: AAPL) may be the first to break into the lucrative market. That’s the signal coming from the latest headlines, which say that Apple is aiming to formally launch its Apple Pay electronic payments service in its second largest global market in the next few months.
If Apple succeeds, the move would represent a major victory for the company and vindication of CEO Tim Cook’s recent campaign to cultivate better relations with Beijing. Apple Pay would be entering the market less than 2 years after the product’s formal launch, which is extremely fast for bureaucratic China. By comparison, Visa, MasterCard and PayPal have all been waiting more than a decade for China to open the market, and the 2 credit card giants even led a campaign that resulted in a complaint at the WTO. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Uber’s 2016 China expansion plan looks aggressive but typical for the company, while Didi Kuaidi should invest its big cash pot on expansion and becoming profitable rather than unrelated services like O2O take-out dining.
Uber, Didi race towards 2016 with big investments
Private car service leaders Uber and Didi Kuaidi are both in the headlines as we race towards the end of 2015, a year that will go down as a watershed for this fast-rising sector both in China and globally. The first news comes from Uber, which is detailing an aggressive expansion plan for 2016 as China surpasses the US to become its largest global market. The second headline has Didi Kuaidi confirming a major new investment in online take-out dining site Ele.me, just days after separate reports said that e-commerce giant Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) also wants to invest in the company.
This year has certainly been a watershed for both Uber and Didi Kuadi in China, reflecting the rapid rise of their private car services that use location-based (LBS) GPS technology to challenge traditional taxi operators. Uber has said repeatedly that China is its top priority outside its home US market. Reflecting that position, Uber took the unusual step of spinning off its China unit into a separate company earlier this year, and also said it would spend $1 billion in 2015 to build up its service in the market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s spin-off of its C2C marketplace for second-hand goods could reflect a new trend for big Internet firms to separately run individual assets, while LeTV may have provided most of the money in the first funding round for its smartphone unit.
Taobao spins off Xianyu
A couple of fund-raising headlines are spotlighting emerging trends in China, including a nascent move by big companies to spin off smaller units as separately run and funded entities. That move was center stage in new reports that e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba(NYSE: BABA) is spinning off its Xianyu marketplace that specializes in sales of second-hand goods between consumers.
The second headline comes from online video high-flyer LeTV(Shenzhen: 300104), and spotlights a trend that shows rapidly cooling investor sentiment towards overheated sectors like video and smartphones. That news has LeTV declining to name any of the backers in the first funding round for its fledgling smartphone unit, hinting that no serious investors were interested in this particular opportunity that raised $530 million. Read Full Post…