Tag Archives: Temasek

China News Digest: July 27, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on July 27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) to Buy US TV Maker Vizio for $2 Bln (English article)
  • South China Morning Post CEO Resigns, Takes Position at Temasek (Chinese article)
  • Huawei Says Sold 60.56 Mln Smartphones in H1, Consolidates World No. 3 Position (Chinese article)
  • Gome (HKEx: 493) in Online Alliance with China Resources’ Feiniu.com (Chinese article)
  • China’s 4G Subscriber Base Surpasses 600 Mln in June – MIIT (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

TELECOMS: Singapore Likes China Telecom, But Does Anyone Else?

Bottom line: GIC’s investment in China Telecom represents a vote of confidence in the company over the next 2 years, as it makes strong gains in 4G and data services and could become more aggressive under new leadership.

GIC bets on China Telecom

China’s smallest wireless carrier China Telecom (HKEx: 728; NYSE: CHA) has just received a vote of confidence from one of the world’s better-known global investors, with the new disclosure that Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC has purchased 5 percent of the telco’s Hong Kong-listed shares. That decision comes amid mixed signals coming from China Telecom, which has just received new leadership after its former chairman was booted out for corruption. On a more positive note, China Telecom has been posting strong growth in its year-old 4G business, though the foundation for that growth was largely laid by yet another previous leader who left the company about a year ago. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Postal Bank Eyes $10 Bln, Yum China Seeks Backers

Bottom line: Postal Savings Bank’s IPO is likely to get a moderately strong reception and come close to the upper end of its $10 billion target, while Yum China’s IPO is unlikely to come until the end of this year at earliest.

Yum China spin off plans hit delays
Yum China spin off plans hit delays

What’s likely to become the world’s biggest IPO in 2 years has just officially launched in Hong Kong, with word that China’s Postal Savings Bank has made its first filing for an offering that could raise up to $10 billion. Meantime, another high-profile IPO by the Chinese unit of fast-food giant Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) is getting hit by delays, as operator of the KFC chain seeks key local backers in the run-up to a listing that could also come in Hong Kong. The Yum offering could also be quite large at around $2 billion, though it appears the deal may not come now until the end of this year or may even get pushed back to 2017. Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Alibaba in $185 Bln Identity Crisis with SoftBank Sale

Bottom line: Alibaba’s new self-calculated valuation of $185 billion looks realistic and even possibly low, but the stock will remain under pressure until the intentions of big stakeholders SoftBank and Yahoo become clearer.

Alibaba estimates value at $185 bln

It’s not often that you get to see a major company put a value on itself, but that’s exactly what we’re getting as a result of new information coming from this week’s sale of nearly $8 billion worth of stock in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). I’ll end the suspense right away and say that Alibaba has valued itself at about $185 billion with the latest sale of a big block of its stock held by longtime Japanese backer SoftBank. While that number looks quite impressive, it’s also noteworthy because it values Alibaba quite a bit lower than arch-rival Tencent (HKEx: 700), as the pair jostle for the title of China’s biggest Internet company. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: May 20, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on May 20. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • Temasek, CIC-KKR Advance to 2nd Round of Yum (NYSE: YUM) China Stake Sale (English article)
  • BT (London: BT) Applies for Telecoms Value Added Service License In Shanghai FTZ (Chinese aticle)
  • Sohu’s (Nasdaq: SOHU) Sogou Integrates Bing’s English Search Results (English article)
  • One Year After Trading Suspension, What Has Happened to Hanergy (HKEx: 566)? (Chinese article)
  • Bank of China (HKEx: 3988) Plans 1st Bad Loan Securitization Since 2008 (English article)

VENTURE FOCUS: Tiger Brokers Feeds on China Appetite for US Stocks

Bottom line: Tiger Brokers could see strong growth by banking on Chinese demand for US and Hong Kong stocks, but also faces some risk if Beijing decides to regulate the company as a financial firm.

Tiger eyes Chinese with appetite for US, HK stocks
Tiger Brokers eyes Chinese with appetite for US, HK stocks

I’m kicking off my new series on noteworthy venture-backed companies with the fast-growing Tiger Brokers, which is feeding off a Chinese love of stocks and growing demand for access to overseas markets. In the current climate where China’s own stock markets have become quite volatile and prone to big sell-offs, Tiger’s gateway to the US and Hong Kong stock markets could prove a potent draw to Chinese traders looking to diversify their portfolios with international stocks from more mature markets.

In a small but highly symbolic footnote to this story, Tiger is also finally giving Chinese investors access to many of China’s hottest companies that are traded overseas, including the Internet “big 3” of Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700). That could ultimately provide some upside for many of those stocks over the longer term, since Chinese investors are likely to boost trading volumes for many of these homegrown companies whose shares previously languished due to lack of familiarity among western investors. Read Full Post…

STOCKS: Citic Offers Rare Excitement Among Big SOEs

Entrepreneurial spirit thrives at Citic

Anyone who has followed this series on my favorite Chinese stocks knows that all of my picks so far have come from the private sector, and that I’m generally not a fan of big state-owned enterprises (SOEs). But given the huge weight that SOEs carry in China’s economy and their preferential status in many key sectors, I feel obliged to recommend at least one such company in this series.

With that background in mind, my top pick among this group is the Hong Kong-listed Citic Ltd (HKEx: 267), one of China’s oldest conglomerates and a company often considered one of the nation’s most entrepreneurial SOEs. I particularly like Citic for its financial services focus, which includes its private equity arm, a bank and China’s leading brokerage, all of which are more commercially driven than many of China’s other big financial companies. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: April 6, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on April 6. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
══════════════════════════════════════════════

  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Completes SCMP Acquisition, Makes Digital Content Free (English article)
  • China’s ZTE (HKEx: 763) Names New Chief as It Grapples With US Blacklist (English article)
  • Youku Tudou (NYSE: YOKU) Announces Completion of Merger (PRNewswire)
  • Temasek Sees Valuation Concerns in Chinese Technology Industry (English article)
  • Ku6 Media (Nasdaq: KUTV) Enters Merger Agreement For Going Private (PRNewswire)

FUND RAISING: Meituan-Dianping, JD Finance, Lufax Raise $5.5 Bln

Bottom line: A sudden spate of new mega-fundings by Meituan-Dianping, Lufax and JD Finance show there is still big interest in China’s private tech and finance sectors, despite the nation’s rapidly slowing economy.

Investors throw billions at Meituan-Dianping, Lufax, JD Finance

It seems I may have been a bit premature with my recent prediction that the mega-fundings that crested in China a year ago were finished. That’s my assessment after reading about 3 new mega-deals in the tech sector this week, all worth more than $1 billion. Leading the pack was recently merged group buying giant Meituan-Dianping, whose whopping $3.3 billion in new funding values the company at $18 billion.

That latest news came just a day after media reported another deal that saw peer-to-peer (P2P) lending giant Lufax just raise its own new funding of $1.2 billion, valuing the firm at $18.5 billion. Last but not least was announcement at the start of the week that the finance unit of e-commerce giant JD.com (Nasdaq: JD) had just raised 6.65 billion yuan, or just over $1 billion, valuing the firm at 46.7 billion yuan ($7 billion). Read Full Post…

IPOs: Postal Bank Heats Up in HK, Canadian Solar Hypes Spinco in NY

Bottom line: Upcoming IPOs by China Postal Bank in Hong Kong and Canadian Solar’s solar plant-building unit in New York should get strong receptions, though both may have to wait until after the Christmas holidays to launch.  

Conservative Postal Bank draws big investors

An upcoming mega IPO in Hong Kong by the stodgy Postal Savings Bank of China is shaping up as one of this year’s hottest new offerings, with word that it’s added domestic heavyweights including China Life (HKEx: 2628; Shanghai: 601628; NYSE: LFC) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) to its impressive list of early investors. In other IPO news across the Pacific, solar panel maker Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ) is also drumming up hype for a new offering by its solar plant-building unit, which has landed some modest new financing from big-name western commercial lenders.

Each of these IPO stories has a different subplot, but a common theme is that both could be relatively hot despite distinctly cool sentiment these last few months towards new offshore Chinese listings. It’s not yet clear if either offering will make it to market by the end of next week, which is probably the latest they could occur before the traditional Christmas break. But even if they have to wait until next year, both could do reasonably well. Read Full Post…

FINANCE: Global Hotel, Chip Deals Highlight China’s Poor Credit

Bottom line: Chinese buyers will lose out to world-class rivals in bidding for top global M&A targets over the next 5-10 years, and credit ratings for the second-tier assets they do acquire will fall after ownership changes.

Stats ChipPac, Starwood deals highlight China’s shaky credit

Two major new deals are showing why China’s credit remains low when it comes to global M&A, hobbled by factors like lack of experience, unknown brands and a growing reality that Beijing may not provide bail outs if their business runs into trouble. The first deal comes in the high-tech chip sector, and has seen the credit rating of Singaporean heavyweight Stats ChipPac (Singapore: STAT) take a hit after being purchased by a Chinese buyer. The second deal has leading Chinese hotelier Jin Jiang (HKEx: 2006; Shanghai: 600574) being snubbed in its bid for US giant Starwood (NYSE: HOT), operator of the Sheraton and Westin Brands.

Neither of these developments comes as a big surprise, but they do reflect the very real challenges that Chinese companies will face as they try to become players on the global M&A scene. Many of these Chinese names have access to big cash from their state-run connections, though converting that to foreign currency and getting necessary government approvals is sometimes challenging. More importantly, these companies have little or no track record at running a major global company, which makes creditors wary and other more experienced suitors often look more attractive. Read Full Post…