Tag Archives: China Information Technology

BUYOUTS: Autohome, CNIT Drop Buyout Bids; Sky-mobi Moves Ahead

Bottom line: Many US-listed Chinese companies that have yet to complete privatization bids announced last year are likely to formally abandon the plans in the next few months, after new withdrawals from Autohome and China Information Technology.  

Autohome abandons buyout bid

It’s been well over a year since the cresting for a wave of privatization bids by US-listed Chinese firms, which were hoping to leave New York and get better valuations by re-listing back in China. But despite the early enthusiasm, many of the firms that announced such bids at the height of the frenzy have yet to complete their  plans.

A small group of larger names, including Internet companies YY (Nasdaq: YY) and Momo (Nasdaq: MOMO), have formally announced the scrapping of their bids. Now 2 more have joined their ranks, with online car specialist Autohome (NYSE: ATHM) and cloud services provider China Information Technology (CNIT) (Nasdaq: CNIT) both announcing they have also abandoned their bids.  At the same time, game developer Sky-mobi is moving forward with its own privatization bid, and has just announced the scheduling of a shareholder meeting to vote on the proposal.  Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Qihoo Buyout Unraveling, China Mobile Games Wraps

Qihoo buyout in danger of sinking

Following last week’s wild ride for Chinese stocks, now seems like a good opportunity to revisit the flurry of privatization bids for US-listed China Internet companies and how they’re faring. The list of headlines is led by reports that the biggest of the buyout bids for software security maker Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is showing signs of unraveling, as investors balk at the widening gap between their original buyout offer and the company’s latest share price following last week’s sharp declines.

Meantime, another much smaller deal first announced at the height of the buyout wave in June has been quietly completed, resulting in the delisting of shares for China Mobile Games. Completion of this second deal just a couple of months after it was originally announced shows that such buyouts can still be done despite the big sell-offs in both China and New York that are making it hard to value such deals. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Focus Media Changes Course, Renaissance Eyes Buyouts

Bottom line: Focus Media will re-list with a high valuation on a new enterprise-style board set to launch in Shanghai next year, while China Renaissance’s new fund to help US-listed firms privatize will attract strong investor interest.

Focus Media changes IPO re-listing plan

A couple of items are in the news involving the recent buyout wave for US-listed Chinese companies, which are rapidly abandoning New York in search of higher valuations in their home market. In an abrupt and somewhat surprising shift, Focus Media, one of the first companies in this homecoming wave, is reportedly abandoning its original plan for Shanghai.

The second item has China Renaissance, a well-respected domestic private equity firm, preparing to raise a major new fund that will help to finance privatizations of Chinese firms from New York. This particular deal looks significant, since many of the nearly 3 dozens firms to announce privatization plans this year could soon need new funding if previous commitments collapse due to recent volatility in China’s domestic stock markets. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Perfect World Wraps, Investors Wary on Others

Bottom line: Investors are regaining confidence that some of the bigger, recently announced buyouts for US-listed China companies could be completed, but believe many smaller deals will ultimately collapse.

Perfect World completes buyout

Online game operator Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) has formally completed its management-led buyout, offering us a good opportunity to check the status of dozens of other pending offers that look shaky due to recent turbulence in China’s stock markets. Perfect World was one of a handful of companies that launched their privatization drives before May, when a wave of new bids fueled by speculative money from China’s frothy stock markets suddenly began.

I’ve previously said that many of the earlier bids like Perfect World’s are likely to succeed, as their funding sources seemed more solid. But some of the other bids may run into trouble due shaky money sources that may rapidly disappear as China’s stock markets show signs of heading into another tailspin. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Jiayuan Committed to Buyout, As Investor Doubts Persist

Bottom line: Earlier announcers of privatization plans like Jiayuan are likely to succeed due to their more reliable funding sources, but many of the deals announced by Chinese firms in the second half of June could ultimately collapse.

De-listing bells keep ringing for Jiayuan

China’s sudden stock market rally isn’t reassuring US investors who believe that many of the most recent buy-out offers for New York-listed Chinese firms may collapse due to questionable funding. That has prompted at least 1 firm, online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE), to come out and openly say it is still committed to the privatization process that could ultimately end with its departure from New York and re-listing of its shares in its home China market.

The rationale for this kind of a move hasn’t changed throughout China’s massive stock market gyrations, which saw the main Shanghai index more than double over the past year at its early June peak, before crashing in a major sell-off. The crash has subsided in the last few days thanks to major intervention by Beijing, though it’s far from clear whether the selling binge is over. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: China Share Slump Infects US as Panic Spreads

Bottom line: The accelerating sell-off for US-listed China shares looks overblown and stocks are likely to rebound once the panic subsidies, but many previously announced buyout bids are still likely to collapse.

Ailing Chinese stocks infect US

The panic gripping China’s stock markets is spreading to US-listed Chinese shares, with even Internet blue chips like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) getting sucked into the vortex of what looks like increasingly irrational selling. One media report is pointing out that tycoons like Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Alibaba founders Pony Ma and Jack Ma have seen their fortunes shrink by hundreds of millions or even more than a billion dollars in the latest trading day of the ongoing sell-off.

Another report cites China-based asset managers saying that a flood of privatization plans for China-listed US firms will still move forward despite the growing panic. Their optimism contrasts with growing skepticism among US investors who fear that many of the plans will collapse in tandem with China’s own crumbling stock markets. Anyone who agrees with those asset managers could make some big money right now, as the plummeting US stock prices mean many of these buyout candidates are now trading as much as 40 percent below their offer prices. Read Full Post…

IPOs: New China Board Nets iQiyi, Ant Financial; Buyout Shares Sag

Bottom line: Shanghai will bid aggressively for Chinese tech firms to list on a new Nasdaq-style board planned for the city, while shares of companies privatizing from New York will continue to sag in sync with China’s stock market sell-off.

Soccer club eyes IPO on new Shanghai board

A new Shanghai-based Chinese board that aims to compete with Wall Street for new high-tech listings is moving closer to reality, with reports that Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) iQiyi online video service and Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA) affiliated Ant Financial unit will be among the exchange’s inaugural listing candidates. A separate report also says that another Alibaba-affiliated company, soccer team Evergrande Taobao, will also list on the board, which is being referred to right now as the new strategic industries board.

Meantime in New York, the current week looks set to end with just a single privatization announcement for a US-listed Chinese firm, a sharp slowdown from the 20 earlier offers in the month of June. In this case the abrupt slowdown is at least partly due to the plunge in China’s stock markets this week, and we’re unlikely to see any more offers until the situation stabilizes. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: KongZhong Stumbles Into Buyout Queue, Legend Limps Up

Bottom line: The current fund-raising frenzy reflected in a recent round of buyouts for US-listed Chinese companies and large IPOs like the one for Legend Holdings is likely to quickly fizzle if China’s stock market sell-off continues.

KongZhong gets buyout offer

The China fund-raising machine has continued to rumble ahead despite the recent stock market sell-off in Shanghai, with yet another privatization offer coming for a New York-listed firm and a lethargic but respectable debut for newly listed Legend Holdings (HKEx: 3396). The former item saw shares of game operator KongZhong (Nasdaq: KZ) jump after receiving a buyout offer, even as most New York-listed Chinese shares slumped in line with the big sell-off in Shanghai. The latter item saw Legend shares finish down slightly in their Hong Kong trading debut, which doesn’t sound too exciting but was still far better than the 3.3 percent decline of the Shanghai benchmark index. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Bond Issues Boom at Baidu, Ctrip as Buyouts Pause

Bottom line: Chinese Internet blue chips like Baidu and Ctrip should continue to flourish on Wall Street due to their leading status, while shares of smaller names will sputter and even plunge if a recent wave of buyout offers starts to collapse.

Baidu in $1.25 bln bond offer

The last 2 days have been most notable for what hasn’t happened over that time, namely the announcement of any new buyout offers for US-listed Chinese companies. Barring any new announcements on this final day of the trading week, the second quarter of 2015 is likely to end with a record 20 such privatization bids for Chinese firms looking to de-list from New York in search of better valuations back in China.

At the same time, 2 of China’s premier US-listed Internet companies are on the cusp of issuing a combined total of nearly $2.5 billion in new bonds, reflecting a new reality for Chinese companies on Wall Street. That reality is allowing China’s leading Internet names like search giant Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and top online travel agent Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) to still do quite well in New York, even as the far bigger number of lesser-known companies see their shares sputter. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Vimicro, CNIT, AirMedia Line Up; Sina Joins E-House Bid

Bottom line: The next 2 weeks could see another 3-5 US-listed Chinese companies announce buy-out bids, but the number will slow after that and many deals could collapse if China’s stock market rally falters.

3 more names join buy-out queue

Another 3 companies have joined the fast-growing privatization queue over China’s long holiday weekend, leading me to create the temporary tag of “buyouts” for headlines describing this brief but explosive story. For anyone who hasn’t followed that story closely, the current quarter has now seen 19 privatizations unveiled by US-listed Chinese firms, including the 3 latest announcements from video surveillance specialist Vimicro (Nasdaq: VMIC), advertising specialist AirMedia (Nasdaq: AMCN) and IT services provider China Information Technology (Nasdaq: CNIT).

In related news, leading web portal Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) has announced it is joining a group making a previously announced privatization bid for E-House (NYSE: EJ), one of China’s leading real estate services companies. That particular move looks related to an existing alliance between the 2 companies, and thus probably just marks a continuation of that relationship that I’ll describe below.

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