Tag Archives: Bright Food

Bright Food latest financial, market & economic news and analysis by Doug Young, former Reuters Chief editor and expert about Chinese companies

CONSUMER: Bright Food Gets Indigestion from Weetabix

Bottom line: Bright’s plan to sell Weetabix 4 years after the purchase is mostly due to declining performance at the British cereal maker, with similar sales likely to follow for other poorly planned food purchases by Chinese buyers.

Bright loses appetite for Weetabix

After splashing into the global M&A headlines 4 years ago with its purchase of a well-known British breakfast cereal maker, Shanghai’s Bright Food has decided that Weetabix apparently isn’t its cup of tea. That seems to be the message in the latest headlines, which say that Bright is looking to sell the British company for quite a discount to the price it paid at the time of the ground-breaking deal in 2012.

Of course much has happened since Bright, known in Shanghai for its biscuits and dairy products, first announced the deal. Bright brought Weetabix’s core breakfast cereal products to China not long after the deal was closed, and even talked about making a separate listing for the British company. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: September 21, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on September 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Postal Savings Bank of China Set to Price Hong Kong IPO Near Low End (English article)
  • New Disclosure Shows Tencent (HKEx: 700) Owns 45 Pct of Search Engine Sogou (Chinese article)
  • NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) Launches Cloud Service, to Invest ‘Several Billion Yuan’ (Chinese article)
  • Dangdang (NYSE: DANG) Announces Completion of Merger (PRNewswire)
  • Bright Food Approved to Buy Stake in New Zealand’s Largest Meat Processor (English article)

FINANCE: Fosun’s Missing Guo Illuminates China Transparency Gap

Bottom line: Beijing should make investigators be more transparent when making publicly visible moves like detaining company executives, or risk financial turmoil when markets are left to try and guess what’s happening.

Transparency needed when big execs are detained

Beijing’s anti-corruption campaign took an unexpected turn into the private sector last week with the sudden disappearance of Guo Guangchang, one of China’s richest men and chairman of one of its most successful private conglomerates, Fosun Group. Word of Guo’s disappearance sparked widespread speculation and also some panic among investors in his dozen listed companies, forcing the group to scramble for answers to avoid financial chaos.

The case highlights the need for greater transparency by anti-graft investigators as they dig deeper into China’s corporate realm to root out corruption that has become all too common in the nation’s business culture. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Fosun Chairman Guo Disappears, Who’s Next?

Bottom line: The detention of Fosun Chairman Guo Guangchang could signal a move into the private sector for Beijing’s anti-corruption drive, a move that would put top executives in traditional sectors like finance and real estate most at risk.

Questions hover over disappearance of Guo Guangchang

Beijing’s 2-year-old anti-corruption drive has taken an unexpected twist into the private sector, with word that one of the country’s richest men and head of the high-profile Fosun Group was taken away by police. There’s very little detail on reasons behind the disappearance of Guo Guangchang, sometimes called the Warren Buffett of China for his investing acumen. But speculation centers on his potential involvement in corruption investigations involving a major figure in his home base of Shanghai.

Up until now, nearly all of the dozens of company executives being investigated for corruption have come from the state-run sector, where officials are much more likely to use their position for personal gain. But corrupt practices like lavish gift giving and bribery are a fundamental part of doing business in China, and there’s little doubt that such practices also occur in the country’s vibrant private sector. Read Full Post…

News Digest: October 31-November 2, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 31-November 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Jin Jiang (HKEx: 2006) Prepares to Raise 4.5 Bln Yuan to Improve Capital Structure (Chinese article)
  • Tsinghua Unigroup to Take 25 Pct in Taiwan’s Powertech (Taipei: 6239) for $600 Mln (English article)
  • VMWare (NYSE: VMW), Sugon (Shanghai: 603019) Form China JV (Chinese article)
  • Bright Food Said to Prepare IPO of $1 Bln Manassen Foods Distribution Arm (English article)
  • LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) CEO Sells 100 Mln Shares, Lends Proceeds to Company (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

CONSUMER: Delisi Shops for Meat in Australia

Bottom line: A Shandong company’s purchase of nearly half of an Australian beef producer is the latest in a string of offshore meat acquisitions by Chinese firms, many of which could ultimately fail due to cultural differences.

Delisi buys 45 pct of Australian beef firm

Foreign meat companies have become the flavor of the day for acquisitive Chinese buyers, with word that a company called Delisi has just purchased 45 percent of Australian beef company Bindaree. The deal would come just weeks after leading Shanghai food group Bright Food paid a similar price for half of a New Zealand meat company, and a couple of years after the blockbuster purchase of leading US pork products maker Smithfield by WH Group (HKEx: 288).

Media are saying that a recent free trade agreement (FTA) between Australia and China may have helped to facilitate this latest deal between Delisi and Bindaree, and perhaps that’s partly true. But the reality is that China’s fast-growing economy is fueling a strong domestic appetite for meat. China’s own inefficient production also often means that locally produced meat is lower quality and more expensive than comparable products made overseas, which explains why these new offshore tie-ups are quite attractive. Read Full Post…

CONSUMER: Wal-Mart, Suntory Struggle in China; Bright Shops in NZ

Bottom line: Declining Wal-Mart China sales and Suntory’s decision to dissolve a China joint venture reflect difficulties foreign consumer names face in the fast changing market, and also challenges posed by local rivals like Bright Food.

Sales fall 6 pct at Walmart China JV stores

Two new consumer stories are shining a spotlight on the difficulties many big foreign brands are facing in China’s tough retailing market, where they compete with both homegrown giants and also smaller names that can quickly gain scale over the Internet. One story reports on falling sales at US retailing giant Wal-Mart’s (NYSE: WMT) China stores, based on rarely seen data from a local joint venture. The other reports that Japanese brewing giant Suntory (Tokyo: 2587) is putting a lid on its 3-year-old Chinese beer-making joint venture.

Meantime, a third outbound M&A story involving Shanghai-based Bright Food shines a spotlight on one of the rising local giants that is posing a growing challenge to the big western consumer names. That deal has the acquisitive Bright, which has made billion-dollar purchases in Britain and Israel, signing another smaller deal to buy half of a major New Zealand meat processor for $200 million. Bright’s agreement to buy the stake in Silver Fern Farms looks similar to WH Group’s (HKEx: 288) blockbuster deal 2 years ago that saw it purchase leading US pork producer Smithfield for nearly $5 billion. Read Full Post…

News Digest: October 17-19, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 17-19. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Offers $4.6 Bln for Rest of Youku (NYSE: YOKU) Video Site (English article)
  • Rare Store Sales Data Highlights Wal-Mart’s (NYSE: WMT) China Challenge (English article)
  • Bright Food to Buy 50 Pct of New Zealand Meat Processor for $200 Mln (English article)
  • Marvell (Nasdaq: MRVL) Cuts 800 Jobs in China, Workers Stage Protest (Chinese article)
  • IBM (NYSE: IBM) Gives Beijing Access to Software Code (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

News Digest: August 12, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 12. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Xiaomi Kicks Off India Production for Strengthened Redmi 2 Edition (Chinese article)
  • China Jails Former Bright Food Chief For 18 years For Embezzling $30 Mln (English article)
  • Tencent (HKEx: 700) Reports 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Cloud Service for Pornography (Chinese article)
  • ChemChina, Camfin to Launch Tender Offer for Rest of Pirelli (Milan: PECI) (English article)
  • Phoenix New Media (NYSE: FENG) Reports Q2 Unaudited Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

News Digest: August 11, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) to Invest $4.6 Bln in Retailer Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) (English article)
  • Bank of Communications (HKEx: 3328) Said to Let HSBC Name Vice Chmn (English article)
  • Vipshop (NYSE: VIPS) Reports Unaudited Q2 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Bright Food Prepares for 4 More Acquisitions in Europe (Chinese article)
  • Insight Investment Raises 5.5 Bln Yuan for Xueda (NYSE: XUE) Buyout (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

LEISURE: Voracious Jin Jiang Eyes Shenzhen Hotel Company

Bottom line: Jin Jiang’s pursuit of Shenzhen-based Vienna Hotel Group, combined with other recent M&A, could vault it to China’s leading hotel operator, though its sudden rapid expansion looks at least partly politically motivated.

Jin Jiang aims high with Vienna Hotel talks

Shanghai-based hotel operator Jin Jiang’s (HKEx: 2006; Shanghai: 600754) recent appetite for M&A continues to grow, with word that the company is in talks to buy a Shenzhen-based rival in a deal that would boost its hotel count by a third. A successful purchase of the privately held Vienna Hotel Group would mark the latest mega-purchase by Jin Jiang, which has suddenly emerged as China’s hot hotel company to watch.

Jin Jiang is certainly a household name in my adopted hometown of Shanghai, and this latest deal, when combined with others, would move the company into the ranks of one of China’s top 5 operators and the only one with a global presence. There’s only one problem with all of this, namely that Jin Jiang is one of the only top players that’s a state-run company. That contrasts sharply with other leading names like Homeinns (NYSE: HMIN), China Lodging (Nasdaq: HTHT) and Plateno, that are all privately owned. Read Full Post…