Tag Archives: Shanda Interactive

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…

INTERNET – Shanda Breakup Nears End With Game Unit Sale

Bottom line: Chen Tianqiao’s sale of his Shanda Games stake marks his symbolic exit from online entertainment, and he will probably return to deal-making by setting up his own private equity firm.

Chen Tianqiao steps down from Shanda Games

The slow-motion breakup of the online entertainment empire of Shanda Interactive has taken a major step forward, with news that the company is selling its entire stake in its core online gaming unit. The news follows previous reports that Shanda Interactive had reached a deal to sell a controlling stake in its Cloudary online literature unit, and its sale earlier this year of a controlling stake in its struggling Ku6 Media (Nasdaq: KUTV) online video unit. All of this comes as Shanda Interactive’s chairman and founder Chen Tianqiao looks to disband his empire that was an early leader in online entertainment, but later languished as it was overtaken by rivals like NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) and Tencent (HKEx: 700). Read Full Post…

New Digest: November 27, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) Dismisses 30 China Executives In Restructuring (English article)
  • Shanda Interactive Sells Controlling Interest In Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME) (PRNewswire)
  • China Widens ‘Tax-Evasion’ Net Amid Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Case (English article)
  • ReneSola (NYSE: SOL) Announces Q3 Results (PRNewswire)
  • Meizu to Release Ubuntu OS Smartphone In Q1 2015 (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q3 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Focus Media Move Caps Tough Year For China 分众传媒为中国艰难的一年画上句号

This year will go down as one that most US-listed Chinese companies would like to forget, and now outdoor advertising specialist Focus Media (Nasdaq: FMCN) is giving a suitable send-off for 2012 with word that its plan to privatize and de-list is nearing completion. This latest development followed earlier word that one of the investors planning to provide $200 million to help fund Focus Media’s plan had backed out of the deal due to concerns about inadequate returns. (previous post) Now media are reporting that Focus has just signed the last agreement it will need to complete the deal, which will formally be carried out by a company called Giovanna Acquisition Ltd. (Chinese article)

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Shanda Delists: Thanks for the Profits 盛大网络退市:获利可喜

Anyone who invested in Shanda Interactive (Nasdaq: SNDA), China’s first online game company to go public, must surely be happy by the ending to the company’s story as a publicly traded firm, which officially comes today with its delisting from the Nasdaq following a successful privatization bid. From my own observer’s perspective, I’m also quite welcoming of this delisting, as Shanda’s core online game business is already well represented for investors by its separately listed game unit, Shanda Games (Nasdaq: GAME); thus this delisting will remove a duplicate company from the market that only serves to confuse investors with the kinds of accounting tricks that Chinese firms need to stop to restore credibility to their tarnished reputation. Let’s look quickly at this final chapter of publicly traded life for Shanda, which officially ended on Tuesday when shareholders approved a generous takeover offer led by the company’s deal-making founder, Chen Tianqiao. (company announcement; Chinese article) Under that deal, shareholders will get $41.35 for each American Depositary Share (ADS) they hold, representing a handsome 275 percent return for anyone who initially bought the company’s ADSs for their IPO price of $11 when Shanda went public in 2004. Since then Shanda’s shares have gone on a roller coaster ride that saw them rise as high as $55 in 2010, only to sink to $32 last year amid a series of accounting scandals at US-listed Chinese firms. Amid all that, the company spun off Shanda Games and was planning to spin off its online literature unit, called Cloudary, last summer before indefinitely scrapping the offer when market sentiment plummeted. From an investor perspective, the delisting of the parent Shanda Interactive, which aspires to become a diversified entertainment company, should be a welcome development, as it will greatly simplify this company by only listing each of its individual business units, while removing a parent company whose own financial results were essentially double-counting the performance of each of those units. This kind of double counting is relatively common among not only Chinese but also Hong Kong companies, and represents the kind of games that are one of the biggest risks for investors when buying Chinese stocks. So I congratulate Chen on this new delisting, even though I doubt his motivations are so pure. Instead, Chen has indicated he may try to list Shanda Interactive on a domestic Chinese stock market, most likely China’s Nasadaq-style ChiNext or its planned international board in Shanghai. But I wouldn’t look for that offering anytime soon, certainly not this year though possibly in 2013.

Bottom line: Shanda Interactive’s successful delisting marks a positive move for better transparency at US-listed Chinese firms, and could presage a re-listing on a Chinese exchange as soon as 2013.

Related postings 相关文章:

Shanda Plays Games With Big Dividend 盛大游戏寄望高额分红计划提振股价

Shanda Moves Ahead With Privatization 投资者对盛大私有化仍持保留态度

Grentech Follows Shanda in Privatization Ploy 国人通信赴盛大网络後尘宣布私有化

Ku6-YouTube Tie-Up: China Hype Alive and Well 酷6网和YouTube合作恐难成正果

I want to start today with a silly story that shows that despite the recent confidence crisis for US-listed Chinese stocks, anyone with a good China story to tell can still earn a fast buck on Wall Street. The story I’m referring to involves battered video sharing site Ku6 Media (Nasdaq: KUTV), which has announced a tie-up with YouTube that will see the global giant start a new channel to bring Ku6’s content to a global audience. (company announcement; Chinese article) The announcement contains no additional details, but that didn’t stop investors from getting excited enough over a good China story to boost Ku6’s Nasdaq-listed shares by a whopping 140 percent on Tuesday. Cynics like myself will note that even with the jump, Ku6 shares are still at less than half of their highs from last May, when a broader sell-off began for US-listed China stocks due to a series of accounting scandals. Let’s sit back and think about this new deal for a minute. Sure, YouTube is a huge name in online video and there are certainly plenty of people outside China who might be interested in watching more China-generated content. But nowhere in Ku6’s announcement is there any mention of exclusivity, and if this tie-up is even remotely successful I suspect YouTube will quickly start looking for more China partners with bigger content libraries, such as Youku (NYSE: YOKU) and Tudou (Nasdaq: TUDO), which undoubtedly would be happy to enter into such alliances. What’s more, Ku6 is a company with a bit of an identity crisis, having undergone a number of major changes in its management and strategic direction over the past year at the instigation of its fickle controlling shareholder, Shanda Interactive (Nasdaq: SNDA). In fact, I strongly suspect this new announcement is the work of Shanda founder and chairman Chen Tianqiao, who has proven himself a master at making headlines that sounds exciting but mostly lack substance. At the end of the day, I seriously doubt this new tie-up will rescue Ku6, although it could theoretically become a more attractive takeover target for one of its larger rivals. At the end of the day, all this just shows that western investors will always love a good China story, regardless of how much substance it has — or lacks.

Bottom line: A new tie-up between Ku6 and YouTube will bring minimal benefits to Ku6, but a huge jump  in Ku6 stock shows that western investors will always love an good China story.

Related postings 相关文章:

Ku6 Media Bulks Up, Heats Up Online Video 酷6扩张版图

Ku6 Media CEO Falls Victim to Whimsical Ways of Shanda’s Chen

Shanda’s New Deal: Spinning Off Literature 盛大文学拟分拆上市