Bottom line: Wanda will continue to operate its ffan e-commerce site for another year, following the departure of its CEO, but could quietly end the initiative afterwards due to lack of synergies with its brick-and-mortar shopping malls.
Success evades Wanda in e-commerce
The headlines have been buzzing this week about the departure of the chief executive of the e-commerce unit Wanda Group, the real estate-turned-entertainment giant with a voracious appetite for global acquisitions. The big theme from the chatter is that the departure of Li Jinling, the unit’s third CEO in 3 years, marks a setback and possibly even presages a death knell for the Wanda initiative into the online shopping realm.
Wanda is speaking out on the subject, saying it never intended to launch a website that would compete directly with the likes of sector leaders Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and JD.com(Nasdaq: JD). Perhaps that’s true, though that didn’t stop Wanda and its ultra-confident chief Wang Jianlin from boasting of lofty ambitions when it signed up Internet titans Baidu(Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) as partners to its ffan e-commerce site in 2014. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda’s cautionary words to Donald Trump are unlikely to have much impact on the incoming US president, who is likely to take a more skeptical view of Chinese M&A in Hollywood.
Wanda appeals to Trump via MPAA
Wanda Group founder and chief Wang Jianlin is used to getting what he wants, especially when it comes to overseas buying as he tries to build up a global entertainment empire. But one of China’s richest men is clearly rattled by the ambivalent or even hostile attitude towards his country by US president-elect Donald Trump.
Worried about the changing winds in Washington, Wang has turned to Hollywood’s mouthpiece, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), to tell Trump that Hollywood could face huge consequences if he tries to shut down China’s recent buying binge. Wang has been Hollywood’s most enthusiastic shopper these days, purchasing cinema operator AMC Entertainment (NYSE: AMC) and studio Legendary Entertainment over the last few years. He also announced a recent deal to buy Dick Clark Productions, and recently signed a major co-production deal with Sony Pictures. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: China’s Wanda Group will continue a recent trend of hunting for top global talent to build its growing entertainment empire, as it seeks to challenge the likes of Disney.
The aggressively expanding Wanda Group is filling up its ranks with foreign-trained China veterans as it tries to challenge the likes of global names like Disney (NYSE: DIS) with moves into the movie and theme park spaces. Now the company is going on a major shopping spree for top talent from some of those companies, led by new reports that it has just poached a top Disney theme park executive to head its own theme park division. At the same time, other reports are pointing out that Wanda also recently hired Google’s (Nasdaq: GOOG) former top China executive to help lead its Internet division. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda is likely to succeed in its purchase of Dick Clark Productions, but could pay a rich premium for the awards show producer as part of an effort to develop similar programs in China.
Wanda in talks to buy Dick Clark Productions
Just a week after making headlines through a strategic tie-up with Sony Pictures, China’s star-struck Wanda Group is in talks for yet another blockbuster deal to buy Dick Clark Productions, known for producing a number of popular award shows. My first reaction to the headline was a big “So what?” since the production company’s namesake, who died in 2012, is best known to me as the maker of the aging annual program celebrating New Year’s Eve in Times Square, New York. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda will look for new Hollywood assets after being rejected in the bidding for a stake of Paramount, while the departure of a member of the group buying Baidu Video is a minor setback and a new investor will be easily found.
Paramount abandons stake sale plan
A couple of headlines are showing that China’s love affair with the film and video industries isn’t always so smooth, with the collapse of 2 major deals involving cinema giant Wanda and online search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). The far larger of the 2 developments has seen leading Hollywood studio Paramount scrap plans to sell a strategic stake in itself, ending a deal that reportedly had seen Wanda emerge as one of the most likely buyers. The Baidu deal is quite a bit smaller, and has seen one of the buyout partners withdraw in a plan to spin off its relatively minor Baidu Video business. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda Group is making an aggressive bid to be selected for a $1 billion strategic investment in Paramount, but the bid is likely to fail due to objections by the studio’s controlling shareholder.
Wanda’s Paramount bid likely to fail
New comments from China’s richest man indicate he is aggressively bidding for a stake in leading US film studio Paramount, which was put up for sale earlier this year as its parent sought to find a strategic investor. But separate reports last week show that such a deal could face difficulty due to objections by Sumner Redstone, who controls Paramount parent Viacom (Nasdaq: VIAB).
Redstone and Viacom’s current CEO Philippe Dauman have been locked in a battle for control of the company, but a resolution of that feud now appears to be close. Unfortunately for Wanda, that resolution would see a departure from Viacom by Dauman, the main proponent of the Paramount stake sale plan. That would leave Redstone, who was cool on such a plan, with the final rights to approve or veto a stake sale. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Reports that Tencent and Baidu have withdrawn from Wanda’s O2O e-commerce venture are probably true, and the service may be quietly retired over the next 12 month due to lack of progress.
Baidu, Tencent dump Wanda’s ffan.com
Real estate giant Wanda Group may be zipping ahead with its diversification drive into entertainment, but its lower profile move into Internet services doesn’t seem to be gaining nearly as much traction. That’s my latest assessment, following new reports saying Internet giants Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) have quietly pulled out of Wanda’s high-profile foray into e-commerce announced more than a year ago. The reports are based on market talk citing some business filings that indirectly hint at such a withdrawal, which wouldn’t be too surprising. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Wanda will use AMC as its flagship for building a global entertainment empire, which will include its newly purchased European Odeon theater chain and could also include a revised higher bid for US operator Carmike.
Wanda’s AMC in deal to buy UK’s Odeon
The acquisitive Wanda Group is in a couple of major headlines in its quest to build a global movie theaters empire, led by a new blockbuster acquisition that will see it buy Britain’s Odeon and UCI CinemasGroup for about $1.2 billion. But while it advances in Europe, the company is hitting more resistance in the US, where Wanda already owns top player AMC Entertainment (NYSE: AMC). Wanda is trying to expand its US base by buying smaller operator Carmike Cinemas (Nasdaq: CKEC), but now new reports are saying the company is unlikely to raise its bid to a level that investors are demanding. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: AMC is likely to raise its offer for Carmike Cinemas to the $33-$35 range to placate investors who say the original bid price is too low.
AMC to delay Carmike bid vote
Just days after meeting resistance in a bid to privatize his Hong Kong-listed real estate company, billionaire Wang Jianlin is running into similar difficulties in his plans for a similar buyout of US-listed movie theater operator Carmike Cinemas (Nasdaq: CKEC). Wang first bid for Carmike earlier this year, hoping to combine it with his previously purchased AMC Entertainment (NYSE: AMC), the second largest US movie chain operator. But shareholders quickly said the offer price was too low, and now it appears that Wanda and Wang are reconsidering the bid. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qihoo’s privatization from New York is likely to move ahead after it resolves a temporary impasse with the foreign exchange regulator, while Wanda’s privatization is also likely to proceed on its belief it can make a quick backdoor re-listing in China.
Qihoo shares fall on latest buyout obstacle
New ripples are spilling through the realm of Chinese companies seeking to return to China after getting lukewarm receptions with offshore listings, reflecting the complexity and difficulty of such deals. Two of the largest such deals are in the headlines as we round out the week, led by word that a privatization plan by software security specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) may be running into trouble due to China’s strict foreign exchange controls. The other major deal has real estate giant Dalian Wanda (HKEx: 3699) reportedly moving ahead with a plan to privatize the company, after indicating earlier this week it might abandon its original plan.
It’s becoming quite a challenge to write about this so-called “homecoming trend” by Chinese firms these past 2 weeks, since new obstacles seem to be popping up almost daily on this road back to China. The process was never an easy one, and involves raising hundreds of millions or sometimes even billions of dollars to take a company private. Then the buyout groups, usually led by company managers, must convince New York or Hong Kong shareholders to sell their stock, often at modest premiums. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Alibaba’s new co-production deal with Paramount suggests the pair could soon form an equity alliance, following Paramount’s February announcement that it may sell a stake of itself to a strategic partner.
Alibaba Pictures invests in 2 Paramount films
The hyperactive Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) is in yet another major headline today, forming a tie-up to co-produce 2 of the most successful movie franchises from Hollywood giant Paramount. But what’s most intriguing about this latest deal is the timing, since it comes just over a month after Paramount announced it may be preparing to sell a stake of itself to a Chinese buyer.
Paramount announced that intent in late February, as part of a broader move by Hollywood to cash in on China’s booming box office that is the world’s second largest behind only the US. (previous post) Paramount and the other Hollywood studios also like the fact that Chinese buyers are often willing to pay big premiums for big-name brands, which should theoretically help to boost the stock prices of those foreign companies. Read Full Post…