Tag Archives: Pactera

IPOs: Pactera, New Oriental Online Unit Eye China IPOs

Bottom line: Pactera is likely to get sold and re-listed in China later this year, while New Oriental is likely to make a domestic listing worth up to $100 million for its Xun Cheng online education in a similar time frame.

Blackstone shops around Pactera

The homeward migration of overseas-listed Chinese firms is moving ahead, with word that privatized IT outsourcing firm Pactera and the online unit of education giant New Oriental (NYSE: EDU) are both potentially eyeing domestic IPOs in the upcoming Year of the Monkey. These stories represent 2 different threads from the larger story of overseas-listed Chinese companies returning home to make new IPOs.

The thread represented by Pactera has seen around 40 US-listed Chinese companies receive privatization offers over the last year from buyout groups hoping to re-list the firms in China at higher valuations. The New Oriental bid represents a second, more recent trend that has seen US-listed category leaders indicate they will keep their primary listings in New York, but then spin off some of their smaller units for separate domestic listings in China. Read Full Post…

News Digest: February 2, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 2. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) VP Questioned by Police for Illegal Activity (Chinese article)
  • New Oriental Proposes China IPO for Xun Cheng, After Tencent Investment (PRNewswire)
  • Blackstone Shops China Software Firm Pactera to Potential Buyers (English article)
  • Sinovac (Nasdaq: SVA) Announces Receipt of Proposal to Buy the Company (PRNewswire)
  • OPPO, Vivo Snap at Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) Heels in China Mobile Market (English article)

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…

Adobe, Visa Snub China As R&D Dud

Adobe to shutter China R&D lab

Product development centers aren’t extremely expensive as investments, but they carry a much higher level of prestige for developing countries due to their status as cutting-edge centers for innovation. Against that backdrop, major new R&D moves by global corporate giants Adobe Systems (Nasdaq: ADBE) and Visa (NYSE: V) certainly don’t look too good for China. In the former case, software giant Adobe has announced it will shutter its China R&D facility, resulting in the loss of hundreds of jobs. In the latter, financial services giant Visa has also snubbed China by announcing a major new global technology development strategy that includes a new center in neighboring India but not in China. Read Full Post…

Lending Platform Eyes IPO, Camelot Delisting Looms

China Risk Finance eyes NY listing

Nearly all of the Chinese companies to list in New York during the current IPO boom have come from the tech sector, but reports of a new candidate that combines tech and finance looks like an interesting one to watch. The company, China Risk Finance, operates a peer-to-peer (P2P) loan platform, and is reportedly talking to investment banks about a potential New York listing later this year. (Chinese article) That could provide investors with an interesting and potentially exciting chance to buy into China’s small but quickly growing private financial services sector. Read Full Post…

AsiaInfo, Simcere Bow Out From New York

Curtain comes down on AsiaInfo, Simcere

It seems appropriate that 2 more longtime-listed Chinese companies are bowing out of New York as we head into the final days of 2013, with word that shareholders have approved plans to privatize telecoms software maker AsiaInfo-Linkage (Nasdaq: ASIA) and drugmaker Simcere Pharmaceutical (NYSE: SCR). AsiaInfo was the more lively of these 2 de-listing stories, with a narrow majority of shareholders approving a buy-out offer after several months of protest from others who thought the price was too low. Meantime, Simcere’s looming privatization raises the question of what’s next for this neglected company, whose foreign partners include Bristol-Myers Squbb (NYSE: BMY) and Merck (NYSE: MRK). Read Full Post…

Lawyers Question Giant Interactive Buyout

Firms threaten lawsuits over Giant Interactive buyout

It may be quiet in the US during the Thanksgiving holiday, but shareholder lawyers were hard at work scrutinizing the new management-led buyout offer for online game operator Giant Interactive (NYSE: GA), with at least 2 hinting they will file lawsuits to seek a better bid. This is the second time we’ve seen lawyers question a buyout offer for a US-listed Chinese firm, following a similar development for privatizing telecoms software maker AsiaInfo-Linkage (Nasdaq: ASIA). Both cases highlight the challenges that such buy-outs can face, especially when buyer groups have strong ties to the companies they are seeking to privatize. Read Full Post…

News Digest: November 22, 2013

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 23. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba Gives Away 7 Mln Cellphones In Assault On Wireless Space (Chinese article)
  • China’s Cinda to raise up to $2.5 billion in Hong Kong IPO (English article)
  • Pactera (Nasdaq: PACT) Announces Q3 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Acquires Perfect World Literature Unit – Source (English article)
  • LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) Announces Onshore Financing Arrangement for 1.56 Bln Yuan (PRNewswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

AsiaInfo Nears The End With Buyout Vote

End nears for AsiaInfo’s life as a public company

The end of life as a public company is fast approaching for telecoms software maker AsiaInfo-Linkage (Nasdaq: ASIA), marking the end of a long chapter for one of China’s first technology firms to list overseas. A newly announced special meeting will see AsiaInfo shareholders vote on a plan to privatize the company, whose shares have been ignored for years now by western investors. More broadly speaking, AsiaInfo’s looming buyout represents the challenges that smaller China tech firms face as they struggle to be noticed by western investors. Read Full Post…

UTStarcom Privatization Derails

UTStarcom fizzles with buyout collapse

In the more than 2 years since I started this blog, today marks the first time I’m writing about telecoms equipment and services provider UTStarcom (Nasdaq: UTSI), which has just announced that a plan to privatize the company has derailed. The reason I point out this fact is that when I first started writing about Chinese tech firms a decade ago, UTStarcom was an investor darling, riding high on a low-end wireless technology. But investors quickly abandoned the company after it failed to find a new blockbuster product, and now it appears that even its potential rescuer has decided to give the company a pass. Read Full Post…

Pactera Bows From NY, Dianping Waits

Pactera signs privatization deal

I’m always looking for signs that the overseas IPO market for Chinese tech firms may finally be warming after a long winter now in its third year, but the latest signs from privatizing IT outsourcing firm Pactera (Nasdaq: PACT) and restaurant ratings site Dianping are hardly encouraging. Pactera has just announced it has formally signed a buyout offer that will take the company private, making it the latest in a long string of Chinese companies to de-list from New York. Meantime, media are reporting that Dianping, a dynamic site often likened to US site Yelp (NYSE: YELP), doesn’t plan to list for the next 5 years. Read Full Post…