Tag Archives: Ping An

Pingan latest financial, market & economic news and analysis by Doug Young, former Reuters Chief editor and expert about Chinese companies

News Digest: February 2-4 报摘:2013年2月2-4日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 2-4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Daimler (Frankfurt: DAIGn) Buys Stake In Chinese Automaker BAIC Motor (English article)
  • Geely (HKEx: 175) Buys Manganese Bronze For 11 Mln British Pounds (English article)
  • Unilever (London: ULVR) Completes Global Skippy Sale Outside of China (Businesswire)
  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Finds New Ways To Freeze Out Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) Browser (Chinese article)
  • China Approves HSBC (HKEx: 5) Sale Of Remaining $7.4 Bln Ping An Stake (English article)

News Digest: January 9 报摘:2013年1月9日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 9. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) Warns China Sales Fell More Than Expected (English article)
  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Tim Cook In China For Another Visit (Chinese article)
  • China’s CDB Wavers On Funding HSBC’s Ping An (HKEx: 2318) Stake Sale: Sources (English article)

PICC IPO, Ping An Sale Bolster Insurance  中国人保、平安售股提振保险业

If I were a short-term investor, I would say that now looks like a good time to buy Chinese insurance shares following positive developments from newly listed PICC Group (HKEx: 2328) and Ping An (HKEx: 2318; Shanghai: 601318), 2 of China’s leading players. But from a longer-term perspective, this brief and relatively rare uptick is likely to be short-lived for an industry that faces a number of major problems despite the strong growth potential of China’s insurance market.

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News Digest: December 6 报摘: 2012年12月6日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • GM (NYSE: GM) Hints At Joining With China’s SAIC (Shanghai: 600104) In SE Asia (English article)
  • China Mobile (HKEx: 941; NYSE: CHL) to Release Self-Branded Handsets (English article)
  • Yahoo’s (Nasdaq: YHOO) Jacqueline Reses Joins Alibaba Group Board (Businesswire)
  • Starbucks (Nasdaq: SBUX) Back On Expansion Path In Americas, China (English article)
  • Thai Group Buys $9.4 Bln Ping An (HKEx: 2318) Stake From HSBC (HKEx: 5) (English article)

M&A: HSBC Dumps Ping An, Sinopec in Nigeria 汇丰拟售平保股份 中石化收购尼日利亚石油资产

Two new mega-deals on the M&A front are highlighting the fact that foreign companies are shedding assets as they look to improve their performance during the global downturn, providing both risks and opportunities for major Chinese firms. On the risk side of the equation, Ping An Insurance (HKEx: 2318; Shanghai: 601318) is learning the hard way that having a big foreign investor has both its advantages and disadvantages, as global banking giant HSBC (HKEx: 5; London: HSBA) prepares to dump its $9.5 billion stake in the company. On the positive side, oil refiner Sinopec (HKEx: 386; Shanghai: 600028) could be getting a good deal with its new $2.5 billion purchase of Nigerian oil assets from Total (Paris: TOTF) as the French oil giant looks to raise cash to boost its exploration operations.

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Bank of China Joins Beggars Queue, More to Come 中行或拉开新一轮银行融资潮序幕

After a flurry of capital raising in the beginning of the year, China’s banks have been silent over the last 6 months despite my previous predictions that 2012 would see a big flurry of money raising by these financially-challenged companies. But now that silence has abruptly ended with word that Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601988), one of the nation’s top 4 lenders, is preparing to raise about 23 billion yuan, or around $3.7 billion, through a subordinated bond offering. (English article) So now the question becomes: is this the beginning of a new flurry of fund-raising by China’s banks? The answer is a definite “probably”, though in this case we’ll probably simply see the banks that didn’t raise capital late last year or early this year engage in new fund raising.

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Alibaba, Tencent, Ping An JV: Insuring Failure 阿里巴巴、腾讯和平安联手网上卖保险

I was quite intrigued when buzz first emerged last week about a new tie-up between Internet leaders Alibaba and Tencent (HKEx: 700) and insurance giant Ping An (HKEx: 2318; Shanghai: 601318), hoping we might see an innovative financial services tie-up between these 3 industry titans. So it came as somewhat of a disappointment when reports disclosed the companies would pool resources to simply launch a new online insurance joint venture. (English article; Chinese article)

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News Digest: August 25-27, 2012 报摘: 2012年8月25-27日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 25-27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Nexen (Toronto: NXY) Schedules Vote on CNOOC’s (HKEx: 883) $15.1 Bln Offer (English article)
  • Alibaba, Tencent (HKEx: 700), Ping An (HKEx: 2318) Establish Insurance JV (English article)
  • US Investigates Youku (NYSE: YOKU), Tudou Over Insider Trading (Chinese article)
  • China Telecom (HKEx: 728) Merges International Operations (English article)
  • China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939) Quarterly Earnings Beat Forecasts (English article)

ICBC Enters Insurance, US 工行开疆辟土:进军美国 涉足保险

China’s top bank ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) is making more smart moves in its drive to look more like a commercial lender, consummating previously announced deals that should provide good starting points to develop new business areas with big potential. The first of those has seen the bank close its acquisition of a mid-sized US lender, paving the way for it to enter that important market; while the second has seen ICBC close its purchase of a controlling stake in a China-based insurance joint venture, setting the stage for it to enter a sector with big potential in its drive to become a more fully-diversified lender.

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China Life Joins Financial Begging Line 中国人寿加入融资潮 暗含行业危机

The smoldering crisis quietly seeping through China’s financial services sector has infected the nation’s largest insurer, China Life (HKEx: 2628; Shanghai: 601628), which has announced plans to raise about $6 billion this year through the issue of subordinated debt, becoming the latest player to turn to financial markets to raise billions of dollars in new cash as provisions for shaky investments. (English article) The entry of China Life into the beggar’s cue is quite significant, as up until now the latest cash-raising frenzy has been confined mostly to big state-controlled banks that made questionable loans under a Beijing-ordered lending spree to stimulate the economy at the height of the global financial crisis. China Life’s biggest rival, Ping An Insurance (HKEx: 2318; Shanghai: 601318), also previously went to financial markets not once but twice last year, announcing plans to raise a total of more than $6 billion as well. (previous post) But unlike Ping An, which is considered a relatively aggressive investor, China Life is known for its conservative investment policies. As such, the fact that its investments are also running into trouble could be an early warning sign that the problems in China’s financial system run much deeper than industry and government officials realize or are admitting. Beijing has already made several moves to ease the burden on Chinese banks, including a potential plan to let them delay collecting repayment on many of the problematic infrastructure loans they made to local governments that may now be in danger of default. (previous post) China Life announced its fund-raising plan after reporting its quarterly profit slumped 86 percent in last year’s fourth quarter, its worst-ever decline. A 22 percent slump in China’s stock market last year certainly contributed to China Life’s woes, as the company invests up to 10 percent of its money in stocks. But I suspect that such a big profit decline, combined with big fund-raising plans, indicate that stocks alone weren’t responsible for the big downturn, and that many of China Life’s other investments also may be running into problems. The company joins a growing list of major financial institutions that have announced multibillion-dollar capital raising plans in the last half year, including Ping An, Bank of Communications (HKEx: 3328; Shanghai: 601328), China Merchants Bank (HKEx: 3968; Shanghai: 600036) and ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398). Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), one of the nation’s most entrepreneurial lenders, announced its own intent to raise funds last month, and earlier this week gave final details for the $1.4 billion planned Hong Kong share sale. (English article) Look for more fund-raising plans this year, accompanied by significant asset write-downs at both the insurers and banks as the defaults start to swell. From an investor standpoint, unless you have a strong stomach I would say that stocks for these and other major financial institutions look like volatile bets for at least the next 1-2 years.

Bottom line: China Life’s new $6 billion capital raising plan indicates China’s building banking crisis may be worse than most people realize.

Related postings 相关文章:

AgBank Results: First Look at Banking Winter 中国农业银行财报:银行业的冬天

Bocom Recapitalizes, Govt Pays the Bill 交行再融资或掀起新一轮银行再融资热潮

More Banking Bad News From Minsheng 民生银行融资揭示银行业困境

 

More Banking Bad News From Minsheng 民生银行融资揭示银行业困境

The latest sign of trouble is emerging from China’s banking sector, where Minsheng Bank (HKEx: 1988; Shanghai: 600016), one of the nation’s more commercially-focused lenders, has just announced plans to raise up to $1.6 billion or more to bolster its shaky capital base, even as Beijing is encouraging banks to lend even more. Minsheng’s plan would see it issue new H-shares in Hong Kong, and could also see a convertible bond offering linked to its Shanghai-listed A-shares, according to a filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange. (HKEx filing; English article) The new fund raising would follow similar recent moves by ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398), China Merchants Bank (HKEx: 3968; Shanghai: 60036) and Ping An Insurance (HKEx: 2318; Shanghai: 601318), and are likely to be followed by more such announcements this year as many of the loans made to local governments in 2009 to boost China’s economy during the financial crisis start to sour. This latest share issue from Minsheng is particularly worrisome, as the privately-funded bank is one of China’s few major players that doesn’t count the government as its major stakeholder, meaning it is more commercially focused and better reflects true market conditions. Look for more capital raising plans in the next few months, with analysts saying Agricultural Bank of China (HKEx: 1288; Shanghai: 601288) and Bank of Communications (HKEx: 3328; Shanghai: 601328) both looking likely to need new cash soon. The new round of cash calls is even more alarming than a similar round 2 years ago, as this time the banks, despite their shaky balance sheets, are also being called on by Beijing to boost their lending as economic growth shows signs of slowing sharply. Beijing is making its call even though it has also ordered banks to sharply cut back on their loans for mortgages and to local governments, which are 2 major sources for new lending. As a result, one of the few outlets for new loans has been the stock market, which has rallied 10 percent since the beginning of the year on a flood of new money into stocks. Reflecting the unbalanced situation in the stock market, newly listed Jishi Media (Shanghai: 601929) soared 87 percent in its trading debut in Shanghai on Thursday. (English article) Sure, perhaps Jishi is an interesting company as China finally starts to let its media companies go public. But at the end of the day, Jishi is still just a tiny national player and shouldn’t be getting this much attention. Look for the stock market rally to continue as long as banks keep boosting their lending, and then for problems to set in later this year when the rally fizzles and many of the new loans start to sour.

Bottom line: Minsheng Bank’s new capital raising plan is the latest for China’s troubled banking sector, with more to come this year as banks try to obey Beijing’s orders to boost their lending.

Related postings 相关文章:

2012: Capital Raising II Year For China Banks 2012:中国银行业的又一个融资年

Banks to Lend More, But to Whom? 银行获准增加放贷 但流向选择有限

Ping An Returns to Market With Second Big Fund Request 中国平安拟发大规模可转债