Tag Archives: China Mobile Games

ENTERTAINMENT: Gaming Deals Plunge, End of an Era?

Bottom line: M&A and IPOs by Chinese gaming companies will remain low for the next 2-3 years due to lack of investor interest, but could pick up after that if some players start losing money and have to close or sell themselves to rivals.

Investors shun gaming companies

A new report on global gaming deals in 2015 is shining a spotlight on 2 major trends in China, namely the sector’s high degree of fragmentation and also the near-freeze in IPOs by Chinese companies last year. In fact, 3 Chinese gaming companies actually privatized from New York stock exchanges last year, accounting for more than half of the sector’s global deals last year in terms of total value.

Among the big Chinese deals, the largest saw stalwart Shanda Games finally privatize in a buyout valued at nearly $2 billion, ending a 2-year process. Another big gaming firm to privatize last year was veteran Perfect World, whose buyout was valued at $1 billion. The third was China Mobile Games, whose buyout was worth about $700 million. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: iKang’s Poison Pill, CMGE’s China Homecoming

Bottom line: iKang’s poison pill plan will kill a hostile offer for the company but could force a management-led group to raise its earlier bid, while CMGE’s China backdoor listing shows a quickening of the process for US-listed Chinese companies to return home.

iKang launches poison pill plan

The first bidding war for a Chinese company looking to privatize from New York has taken an interesting twist, with word that medical clinic operator iKang (Nasdaq: KANG) has launched a shareholder rights program often called a “poison pill”, aimed at preventing hostile takeovers. Usually I’m relatively neutral on this kind of defensive move, as it’s often aimed at getting shareholders better value for their money. But in this case the move seems like a somewhat abusive use of power by iKang’s founder and chief executive to protect his own earlier and significantly lower buyout offer for the company.

Meantime another headline from the recent wave of US-listed Chinese companies to privatize has gaming company China Mobile Games (CMGE) already preparing to re-list in China. If successful, CMGE’s homecoming would be remarkably quick, since it only completed its privatization from New York 3 months ago.  Read Full Post…

ENTERTAINMENT: Shanda Games Heads for Sunset — Finally

Bottom line: Shanda Games’ imminent de-listing could be followed by a behind-the-scenes consolidation by one or more savvy private equity firms to create a major new online game firm capable of challenging NetEase or even Tencent.

Shanda Games heads for de-listing door

Faded online gaming pioneer Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) is finally heading for greener pastures, releasing what’s likely to be its final earnings report as its shareholders get set to vote on a plan to privatize the company. Shanda Games’ road to privatization has been long and tortured, and is only now finally coming to completion after its initial announcement nearly 2 years ago. (previous post) But that said, I do have to commend Shanda’s strong-willed founder and chief Chen Tianqiao for finally getting the job done.

From a broader perspective, Shanda’s departure continues a trend that has seen online game companies de-listing en mass, after their stocks struggled for years due to stiff competition. In an interesting twist to that trend, these gaming laggards have been one of the few groups to actually complete privatizations among the 3 dozen US-traded Chinese companies that announced such buyouts earlier this year. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Giant Eyes China Backdoor, Qihoo Still Trying

Bottom line: Giant Interactive is likely to achieve a backdoor listing in China over the next 12 months, while Qihoo could receive a new, lowered privatization offer by the end of this year.

Giant eyes China backdoor listing

Early signs of stabilizing on China’s stock markets are breathing new life into the nascent migration by Chinese tech firms that are abandoning overseas listings to re-list back at home. The latest signals of new movement are coming from formerly New York-listed Giant Interactive, which is eyeing a backdoor listing in Shenzhen, and from Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU), which is indicating its faltering plan to de-list from New York is still alive.

Both of these deals have a bit of history, and are part of a broader wave that saw 3 dozen US-listed Chinese firms announce plans to privatize in the first half of this year. Most of those plans came when China’s domestic stock markets were rallying sharply. Backers of the bids were betting that companies whose shares had languished in New York could get much higher valuations from investors in their home China market. 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: Buyouts Roll On With New Bids For Jiayuan, E-House

Bottom line: The ongoing privatization wave of Chinese firms abandoning New York listings is likely at or near a peak, with gaming and solar companies as some of the likeliest candidates to make new announcements.

E-House heads for exit door

The exodus from New York by neglected Chinese companies marches on this week, with online real estate company E-House (NYSE: EJ) becoming the latest to receive a management-led buyout offer. At the same time, online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE) has announced that a suitor who made a similar offer for the company in March has sharply raised its bid, following complaints that the original offer grossly undervalued the company.

When the history books are written, the second quarter of 2015 could well go down as the height of a wave of privatization bids for New York-listed Chinese firms, whose shares have languished in the last few years due to lack of interest from US investors. At the same time, many of those companies are casting an envious eye on China’s rallying stock markets, and are almost certainly hoping to re-list at home in the future. Read Full Post…

IPOs: China Needs IPO Roadmap For Returning Companies

Bottom line: China’s securities regulator should work with overseas-listed Chinese firms to chart a well-defined path for them to return home to list, to encourage such movement and avoid burdensome bureaucracy.

Chinese “turtles” return home to list

A growing trend that is seeing Chinese firms abandon US listings to return home gained big momentum last week, when 2 more companies announced plans to de-list from New York and a third that privatized 2 years ago moved close to a China re-listing.

In the first category, medical devices maker Mindray Medical (NYSE: MR) announced a management led buy-out offer late in the week, which was followed a day later by a similar offer for solar panel maker JA Solar (Nasdaq: JASO). Meantime, formerly New York-listed outdoor advertising specialist Focus Media took a major step toward becoming the first Chinese company to re-list at home by injecting itself to an existing Shenzhen-traded company. Read Full Post…

IPOs: China Mobile Games Joins Homeward Migration

Bottom line: China Mobile Games could be combined with Shanda Games if buyouts for the 2 companies succeed, followed by a re-listing in China that could gain strong interest from local investors.

China Mobile Games joins de-listing queue

The latest news that China Mobile Games (Nasdaq: CMGE) has received a buyout offer won’t surprise anyone, as it becomes the latest New York-listed Chinese Internet firm to receive such a bid due to its low valuation. What does come as a slight surprise is investor reaction to the bid, which saw China Mobile Games’ share price drop to well below the offer price. The could reflect some skepticism about the quality of this particular bid, which is coming from a Chinese securities brokerage.

This deal marks the latest in a long string of similar buyouts for US-listed Chinese firms whose shares have often languished in New York due to lack of interest from western investors who are unfamiliar with these names. Many of the companies are eying quick re-listings in their home China market, where they believe they can get valuations that are as much as double what they were worth in New York. Read Full Post…

News Digest: May 20, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Uber Joins Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) As Nokia’s Maps Unit Draws Multiple Bidders (English article)
  • Bank of Communications (HKEx: 3328) Agrees To Buy 80 Pct Of Brazil’s BBM (English article)
  • China’s Unigroup Says Wins Bid To Buy 51 Pct Stake In HP (NYSE: HP) Unit (English article)
  • E-House (NYSE: EJ) Reports Q1 Results (PRNewswire)
  • China Mobile Games (Nasdaq: CMGE) Announces Receipt of Buy-Out Offer (PRNewswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

China Mobile Games: De-Listing Ahead?

China Mobile Games hit by bribery scandal

Another US-traded Chinese online game firm could be headed for de-listing, after shares of China Mobile Games (Nasdaq: CMGE) tanked on reports of a major bribery scandal. China Mobile Games’ woes are just the latest in a growing list for US-traded online game makers, which have earned the official title of “no respect” from Wall Street investors. Two of the sector’s biggest players, Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) and Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA), are in the process of privatizing, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see a buyout offer emerge for China Mobile Games following this new scandal. Read Full Post…

News Digest: June 20, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Solar Tariffs To Boost Prices for Chinese Panels In US By 14 Pct – Report (English article)
  • China Mobile Games (Nasdaq: CMGE) In Mgmt Shake-Up Over Business Practices (Chinese article)
  • Starwood (NYSE: HOT) To Double Luxury Portfolio in China in Next 2 Years (Businesswire)
  • Haier To Cut 10,000 Jobs In Ongoing Efficiency Drive (Chinese article)
  • Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) Fully Acquires Online Lottery Site Aicai.com (English article)