Tag Archives: Focus Media

FUND RAISING: Focus Media Eyes China Listing, Xueda Gets Buyout Offer

Bottom line: A booming China stock market and IPO reforms could fuel a new wave of re-listings by Chinese tech and media firms that were formerly traded in New York, led by an upcoming backdoor listing by Focus Media.

Xueda gets buyout offer

A pair of stories in the headlines today are highlighting a nascent movement that could see a growing number of US-listed Chinese firms take down their shingle in New York to return to stock markets closer to home. No companies have made such a move yet, but advertising specialist Focus Media could soon become the first with word that it’s moving closer to making a backdoor listing in China after leaving New York in 2013.

Meantime in a related piece of news Xueda Education (NYSE: XUE) said it has received a buy-out offer from Chinese financial firm Insight Investment (Shenzhen: 000526). Such a move would continue a trend that has seen a growing number of neglected US-listed Chinese firms abandon New York, where their shares have stagnated over the last few years. Read Full Post…

News Digest: April 22, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on April 22. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Yum (NYSE: YUM) CEO Says China Business Mending, Sees Strong Year-End (English article)
  • ICBC (HKEx: 1398) To Provide $4.3 Bln In Financing For Pakistan Power Projects (English article)
  • Forbes Releases Wealthiest Chinese List, Internet “Big 3” BAT Chiefs In Top 10 (Chinese article)
  • Insight Investment (Shenzhen: 000526) Eyes Privatizing Xueda Education (NYSE: XUE) (Chinese article)
  • Focus Media Said To Ready China Listing With Loan Refinancing (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

INTERNET: The End Finally Nears For Shanda Games

Bottom line: Shanda Games is likely to close its privatization by next month, as group founder Chen Tianqiao finishes dismantling his entertainment empire to try a possible new career in private equity.

De-listing looms for Shanda Games

The long and tortured privatization Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) could finally be near, with word that a group bidding for the faded online gaming giant has finalized its funding for a $1.9 billion buyout. If and when this buyout finally closes, it will mark the end of a privatization bid that began more than a year ago. That would easily make it the most drawn out such buyout among about a dozen major Chinese companies that have left New York over the last 2 years due to lack of interest from investors. Read Full Post…

MEDIA: Focus Media Eyes Market Return With A-Share Plan

Bottom line: Focus Media’s plan for a backdoor listing in China stands a better than 50 percent chance of success, potentially opening a new re-listing path for Chinese firms whose shares are undervalued in New York.

Focus Media eyes China backdoor listing

Former advertising services high-flyer Focus Media is eying a plan to become listed again, with an ambitious target of tripling its value from just 2 years ago when it privatized. If the plan really works, it could create an attractive template for a return to publicly-traded status for the group of about a dozen Chinese companies that were formerly listed in New York but privatized after their shares became undervalued. The key to the plan appears to be a decision to list back at home in China, where Focus’ name is more familiar and local investors are far less sophisticated and prone to hype and overinflating values of well-known companies. Read Full Post…

News Digest: September 23, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on September 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Underwriters Exercise Option To Buy Additional ADSs (Businesswire)
  • Shanghai Husi Lays Off 340, Says Factory Unable To Reopen In Near-Term (Chinese article)
  • Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) Piles Up 1.77 Bln Yuan In Losses In 4 Years Since IPO (Chinese article)
  • Focus Media, Kingsoft’s (HKEx: 3888) Westhouse Partner On Mobile Gaming (English article)
  • Lenovo (HKEx: 992) Workers Move Into Motorola HQ As Merger Nears End (Chinese article)

Giant, RDA De-List As Deal-Making Slows

RDK closes privatization

Two more US-traded Chinese firms are on the cusp of de-listing, with online game operator Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA) and chipmaker RDA Microelectronics (NYSE: RDA) just announcing they have wrapped up buy-out deals that will pave the way for their imminent privatization. These 2 de-listing stories were announced months ago and are completely expected. But the bigger underlying story is the lack of major new privatization announcements in the last half year. In a similar development, major new IPOs by Chinese firms in New York have slowed considerably since a boom of offerings in April and May, indicating the broader deal-making market may be entering a new, more stable phase. Read Full Post…

Neglected Luye Finds Tonic In HK Listing

The old saying “One man’s trash can be another man’s treasure” certainly seems pertinent for drug firm Luye Pharma (HKEx: 2186), which has found a receptive audience in Hong Kong for its newly listed shares. The company’s high valuation and strong trading debut contrast sharply with its performance during a previous life as a listed company in Singapore, where it was ignored by investors before privatizing in 2012.

Some analysts are saying Luye’s move could mark the start of a wave of similar re-listings for “China orphans” — Chinese firms that listed in New York or Singapore, only to see their shares languish due to lack of investor interest. But I would caution that Hong Kong investors are quite sophisticated and will still be looking for firms with strong growth potential — a quality that was lacking in many of the New York and Singapore-listed firms that privatized over the last 2 years. Read Full Post…

Fosun In Hollywood, ‘Transformers’ Clears China Way

Fosun invests in Studio 8

A day after I wrote about a conflict that threatened to delay the premier of the new “Transformers” movie in China, media are reporting the commercial dispute in the matter has been resolved. Meantime, leading Chinese private equity investor Fosun International (HKEx: 656) is also catching the Hollywood fever that has been infecting Chinese media companies lately, announcing a major new investment in a start-up production house led by a former Warner Bros (NYSE: TWX) chief. Both of these stories show that the through train connecting China and Hollywood continues to gain momentum, and even Beijing is getting on board to help solve business disputes that could otherwise cost millions of dollars in lost sales. Read Full Post…

Short Sellers: Good Medicine For China

Montage comes under short seller attack

Semiconductor chipmaker Montage Technology (Nasdaq: MONT) could soon become the latest Chinese firm to de-list from New York, after it accepted a buyout offer last week not long after its shares were hammered by a short seller attack. Like many of its US-listed Chinese peers that have also recently privatized, Montage learned the hard way that publicly traded firms are often helpless in the face of short sellers that prey on weak and poorly governed listed companies. Read Full Post…

Internet Consolidation To Test Anti-Monopoly Regulator

Anti-monopoly regulator may need to brandish veto stamp

After years of fragmentation, China’s Internet has undergone a sudden and radical overhaul over the past year, with 3 major firms emerging as major consolidators. The frenzy of new tie-ups and acquisitions has been a welcome development, helping to cool overheated competition in a wide array of sectors where most companies were losing money.

But with the emergence of Alibaba, Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) as the 3 major consolidators, China’s anti-monopoly regulator should start to give closer scrutiny to future deals to avoid too much reduction in the competition necessary to ensure future innovation and consumer choice.  Such scrutiny could and should ultimately lead to the veto of some future deals, especially larger ones, by regulators who need to become more assertive in the space.
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Chindex Joins Privatization Queue With Fosun Buyout

Fosun Pharma, TPG make offer for Chindex

I’ll start this post with a major disclaimer, since one of my main reasons is simple sentimentality for writing about the newly announced buyout of New York-listed hospital operator Chindex (Nasdaq: CHDX) by a unit of the aggressive Fosun Group.  When I first arrived in Beijing in 1987 as recent college graduate, I worked briefly in Chindex’s Beijing offices, which at the time were in the old Xiyuan hotel near the Beijing zoo. Since then, the company has transformed from its early days as an importer of medical and industrial equipment to its current focus on building and operating hospitals and clinics. Along the way it also made an IPO, and has quietly grown into a company with a market value of nearly $300 million. Read Full Post…