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China e-House latest Financial news from Doug Young, the Expert on Chinese High Tech Market, (finance Journalist and Chief editor at Reuters)

China News Digest: August 13-15, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on August 13-15. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China Film (Shanghai: 600977) Jumps 91 Pct in 1st Week After Record Entertainment IPO (English article)
  • McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) to Stop Using Antibiotic Food in US, No Word on China (Chinese article)
  • E-House (NYSE: EJ) Announces Completion of Merger (PRNewswire)
  • China Mobile (HKEx: 941) to Eliminate Domestic Roaming Fees by Year End (Chinese article)
  • AC Milan’s Chinese Buyers Name Club’s Future CEO (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

China News Digest: August 6-8, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on August 6-8. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Chinese Buyer Purchases UK Premier League Soccer Club West Bromwich Albion (Chinese article)
  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Removes Toutiao News App From China Store (Chinese article)
  • E-House (NYSE: EJ) Announces Shareholder Approval of Merger Agreement (PRNewswire)
  • Ele.me Threatens Merchants with Removal for Failure to Pay Technology Fee (Chinese article)
  • Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA) EV Owner Reports First China Accident Using Self-Drive Mode (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

IPOs: Better Oversight, Not Ban, Needed for China Backdoor Listings

Bottom line: The CSRC should take steps to better regulate backdoor listings by Chinese companies privatizing from New York to ensure market stability, but shouldn’t ban the process completely.

CSRC weighs closing backdoor listings

Chinese companies planning to re-list at home after disappointing results with overseas IPOs got some troublesome signals last week, when rumors emerged that China’s securities regulator might be planning to slow or halt a mechanism that has quickly become the preferred route for such homecomings.

That mechanism has seen newly privatized companies make back-door listings using Shenzhen- and Shanghai-traded firms that are often just shells of former state-run enterprises whose own businesses have withered. Returning companies have chosen such a path because conventional IPOs in China have slowed to a crawl due to the regulator’s concerns about market volatility, creating a huge waiting line for new listings. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Metals Trader Yintech in NY, BOC Aviation in HK

Bottom line: New IPOs from metals trading specialist Yintech in New York and aircraft leaser BOC Aviation will meet with lukewarm reception that sees them price in the middle of their range and post flat trading debuts.

Yintech banks on precious metals trading

A couple of IPO stories are in the headlines, including the first major offering of a Chinese company in New York this year set to take place by metals exchange operator Yintech. Meantime in Hong Kong, the airline leasing unit connected to Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) is also sniffing for interest in its plan for an offering to raise up to $1.5 billion.

Each of these IPO stories is quite different, in terms of size, industry and stage of development. But a common theme is that both come from relatively traditional older industries in China, rather than the high-growth tech and media sectors that more typically like to list offshore. To the contrary, this year has seen many of those high-growth companies like Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) and E-House (NYSE: EJ) de-list from New York after failing to attract enough interest from US investors. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Autohome, E-House Drive Back to China

Bottom line: Autohome and E-House are both likely to complete their privatizations from New York, continuing the migration of US-listed Chinese firms returning home to seek higher valuations on China’s stock markets.

Autohome drives away from New York

The drive back home for New York-listed Chinese companies continues as we head into the new week, with online car site Autohome (NYSE: ATHM) becoming the latest to announce a privatization plan. In a slightly unusual twist to that story, Autohome shares actually rose above the offer price before the buyout deal was announced, suggesting investors were hoping for a bigger premium than the one offered. But they quickly fell back to the offer price in after-hours trading.

At the same time, online real estate company E-House (NYSE: EJ) announced it has signed a definitive deal to privatize, nearly a year after it first announced its plan to de-list from New York. E-House’s plan has gone down a windy road since it was first announced last June at the height of a rally that saw China’s stock markets more than double in a year. Since then Chinese markets have tanked twice, and are now about 40 percent lower than where they were when E-House first announced its offer. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Qihoo, Mindray Buyouts Move Ahead, Boost Sentiment

Bottom line: The looming completion of buyouts for Qihoo 360 and Mindray Medical points to growing momentum for successful privatizations of other Chinese firms waiting to de-list from New York.

Qihoo, Mindray head back to China

Two of the largest in a wave of privatizations by US-listed Chinese firms have just taken big steps forward, with major new announcements from software security specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) and medical device maker Mindray (NYSE: MR). One case has Qihoo announcing a formal date for a meeting where shareholders will vote on its plan to privatize the company. The other has Mindray announcing it has formally completed its own buyout plan, and has filed to have its shares de-listed from New York.

It’s quite significant that both of these plans are moving forward now, since China’s own stock markets where both Qihoo and Mindray hope to eventually re-list have been in a state of turmoil these days. That turmoil has seen the main Shanghai index tumble around 20 percent this year, and it’s quite possible that more turbulence lies ahead. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: Mindray Defies Buyout Doubters, Shares Jump

Bottom line: Mindray, E-House, Ming Yang and other US-listed Chinese companies that announce revised buyout offers by the end of this month stand a better than 70 percent chance of completing their privatizations.

Mindray shares leap on merger deal signing

After several months of silence, the wave of privatization bids by US-listed Chinese firms earlier this year is suddenly jumping back into the headlines with a series of new developments that indicate the more solid offers will move forward. The latest news has medical device maker Mindray (NYSE: MR) announcing it has just entered into a formal buyout deal, which even includes a price that’s slightly higher than its previous offer.

Mindray’s announcement comes the same week that wind power equipment maker Ming Yang (NYSE: MY) announced its own new privatization bid (previous post), and real estate services company E-House (NYSE: EJ) announced a lower price for its previously announced bid. (previous post) In both of those cases, skeptical investors reacted by dumping shares of both companies, causing them to trade well below the offer price. Read Full Post…

BUYOUTS: E-House Lowers Buyout Price, Investors Flee

Bottom line: A new round of buyouts for US-listed Chinese firms is being greeted with skepticism due to China’s volatile economy, and could offer a good buying opportunity for investors with strong appetite for risk.

Investors dump E-House shares after new buyout offer

In what looks like an emerging new trend, investors are dumping shares of online real estate services firm E-House (NYSE: EJ) after it announced a new lower offer price for its shares under a privatization bid first announced in June. This lowering of the price doesn’t come as a huge surprise, since US-listed Chinese shares have tumbled since many first announced privatization bids in the first half of the year with an eye to re-listing back in China.

But what does come as a surprise is US investor reaction to the new offer. In the case of E-House, the company’s shares fell more than 5 percent after it announced the new buyout price, which still represented a nearly 7 percent premium to the stock’s last close. Normally one would expect the shares to rise after such an announcement to approach the new bid price. But in this case the sell-off seems to reflect investor skepticism that the new deal will ever get completed, even at the lower price. Read Full Post…

News Digest: November 4, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) Says Alibaba Pressuring Merchants Before Singles’ Day (English article)
  • Over 40 Pct of China’s Online Sales Counterfeit, Shoddy: Xinhua (English article)
  • E-House (NYSE: EJ) Announces Receipt of Revised “Going Private” Proposal (PRNewswire)
  • Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) CEO Page: We Want to do More in China (Chinese article)
  • Didi Kuaidi Says Cash Burn Has Slowed With Lower Payouts (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

INTERNET: Inflate Gate Scandal Rocks SouFun

Bottom line: A scandal involving inflated sales reporting by workers at SouFun could cause the company to miss 2015 revenue guidance, and reflects pressures that China Internet firms are facing due to a slowing home economy.

SouFun uncovers inflated sales by employees

Just when it was beginning to claw its way back to favor with investors, real estate services website SouFun (NYSE: SFUN) is being rocked by a scandal after an internal probe revealed that some employees were inflating their new orders. The latest reports say SouFun has verified it fired some workers after uncovering the issue, though there’s no word on the magnitude of the problem.

More broadly speaking, this kind of report highlights the stresses that SouFun and rivals like E-House (NYSE: EJ) are facing due to a sharp slowdown in China’s overheated real estate market. That slowdown has caused prices to stagnate and transaction volumes to also tumble as buyers and sellers wait to see how the market will trend. That’s critical for companies like SouFun, since they depend on transactions for a big part of their business. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: BitAuto, Autohome Slump, Buyouts Coming?

Bottom line: Both Autohome and especially BitAuto look like strong candidates for buyout bids, following rapid declines in both companies’ stocks due to a rapid slowdown in China’s car market.

Internet auto stocks run out of steam

We’ll begin the new week with a look at 2 of China’s leading online auto specialists, BitAuto (NYSE: BITA) and Autohome (NYSE: ATHM), whose shares have both tanked over the last 3 months in tandem with a rapid cooling of China’s car market. The trend is similar to what’s happened at online real estate service providers, whose shares have slumped for the last year due to a prolonged and much-needed correction in China’s overheated property market.

China stock watchers will know that E-House (NYSE: EJ), one of the two major US-listed real estate services firms, launched a privatization bid in June, part of a broader wave that has seen dozens of Chinese firms leave New York this year due to low valuations. (previous post) That leads to my next prediction, namely that BitAuto, Autohome or potentially both could soon become the latest companies to join the privatization queue. Read Full Post…