Tag Archives: Xueda

News Digest: August 11, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 11. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) to Invest $4.6 Bln in Retailer Suning (Shenzhen: 002024) (English article)
  • Bank of Communications (HKEx: 3328) Said to Let HSBC Name Vice Chmn (English article)
  • Vipshop (NYSE: VIPS) Reports Unaudited Q2 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Bright Food Prepares for 4 More Acquisitions in Europe (Chinese article)
  • Insight Investment Raises 5.5 Bln Yuan for Xueda (NYSE: XUE) Buyout (Chinese article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

BUYOUTS: Perfect World Wraps, Investors Wary on Others

Bottom line: Investors are regaining confidence that some of the bigger, recently announced buyouts for US-listed China companies could be completed, but believe many smaller deals will ultimately collapse.

Perfect World completes buyout

Online game operator Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) has formally completed its management-led buyout, offering us a good opportunity to check the status of dozens of other pending offers that look shaky due to recent turbulence in China’s stock markets. Perfect World was one of a handful of companies that launched their privatization drives before May, when a wave of new bids fueled by speculative money from China’s frothy stock markets suddenly began.

I’ve previously said that many of the earlier bids like Perfect World’s are likely to succeed, as their funding sources seemed more solid. But some of the other bids may run into trouble due shaky money sources that may rapidly disappear as China’s stock markets show signs of heading into another tailspin. Read Full Post…

IPOs: Buyouts Roll On With New Bids For Jiayuan, E-House

Bottom line: The ongoing privatization wave of Chinese firms abandoning New York listings is likely at or near a peak, with gaming and solar companies as some of the likeliest candidates to make new announcements.

E-House heads for exit door

The exodus from New York by neglected Chinese companies marches on this week, with online real estate company E-House (NYSE: EJ) becoming the latest to receive a management-led buyout offer. At the same time, online dating site Jiayuan (Nasdaq: DATE) has announced that a suitor who made a similar offer for the company in March has sharply raised its bid, following complaints that the original offer grossly undervalued the company.

When the history books are written, the second quarter of 2015 could well go down as the height of a wave of privatization bids for New York-listed Chinese firms, whose shares have languished in the last few years due to lack of interest from US investors. At the same time, many of those companies are casting an envious eye on China’s rallying stock markets, and are almost certainly hoping to re-list at home in the future. Read Full Post…

IPOs: China Needs IPO Roadmap For Returning Companies

Bottom line: China’s securities regulator should work with overseas-listed Chinese firms to chart a well-defined path for them to return home to list, to encourage such movement and avoid burdensome bureaucracy.

Chinese “turtles” return home to list

A growing trend that is seeing Chinese firms abandon US listings to return home gained big momentum last week, when 2 more companies announced plans to de-list from New York and a third that privatized 2 years ago moved close to a China re-listing.

In the first category, medical devices maker Mindray Medical (NYSE: MR) announced a management led buy-out offer late in the week, which was followed a day later by a similar offer for solar panel maker JA Solar (Nasdaq: JASO). Meantime, formerly New York-listed outdoor advertising specialist Focus Media took a major step toward becoming the first Chinese company to re-list at home by injecting itself to an existing Shenzhen-traded company. Read Full Post…

FUND RAISING: Focus Media Eyes China Listing, Xueda Gets Buyout Offer

Bottom line: A booming China stock market and IPO reforms could fuel a new wave of re-listings by Chinese tech and media firms that were formerly traded in New York, led by an upcoming backdoor listing by Focus Media.

Xueda gets buyout offer

A pair of stories in the headlines today are highlighting a nascent movement that could see a growing number of US-listed Chinese firms take down their shingle in New York to return to stock markets closer to home. No companies have made such a move yet, but advertising specialist Focus Media could soon become the first with word that it’s moving closer to making a backdoor listing in China after leaving New York in 2013.

Meantime in a related piece of news Xueda Education (NYSE: XUE) said it has received a buy-out offer from Chinese financial firm Insight Investment (Shenzhen: 000526). Such a move would continue a trend that has seen a growing number of neglected US-listed Chinese firms abandon New York, where their shares have stagnated over the last few years. Read Full Post…

News Digest: March 10, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on March 10. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • GSK (London: GSK) Cuts China Staff, Ends Cash Awards For Sales Model (Chinese article)
  • LightInTheBox (NYSE: LITB) Reports Q4 And Full Year 2014 Financial Results (PRNewswire)
  • Tuniu (Nasdaq: TOUR) Announces The Acquisitions Of Two Travel Agencies (Globe Newswire)
  • Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU), Xueda (NYSE: XUE) Form Internet Education JV (English article)
  • 58.com (NYSE: WUBA) Acquires Minority Stake In Interior Decoration Service Platform (PRNewswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q4 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

New Oriental Gets Accounting Lesson 新东方受到会计调查

Tuesday was not a kind day to US-listed Chinese companies, as education specialist New Oriental (NYSE: EDU) led a downward charge that saw its shares go into free-fall, losing a third of their value, after it released its latest quarterly results. But investors weren’t focused on the results themselves, which were actually quite respectable, but rather got spooked by a note near the bottom of the announcement saying the company was being investigated by the US securities regulator for its accounting practices. (results announcement)

Read Full Post…

News Digest: May 12-14, 2012 报摘: 2012年5月12-14日

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on May 12-14. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.

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◙ US Senator Questions Fed on Chinese Bank Decision (English article)

Perfect World (Nasdaq: PWRD) Announces Findings of Internal Investigation (PRNewswire)

Baidu’s (Nasdaq: BIDU) Qunar Sues Ctrip (Nasdaq: CTRP) for Defamation (English article)

Xueda Education (NYSE: XUE) Buys 60 Pct of Weilan Int’l for 18.9 Mln Yuan (Chinese article)

Home Inns (Nasdaq: HMIN) Reports Q1 Financial Results (PRNewswire)

◙ Latest calendar for Q1 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Education Getting Lesson in Competition

The latest signals from the education sector, including a mid-sized acquisition by a major foreign player, indicate competition is heating up in the space, posing future challenges for everyone. The latest deal is seeing British publishing giant Pearson (London: PSON) offering to buy a relatively small Chinese firm, Global Education and Technology Group (Nasdaq: GEDU) for just over $11 per share, or $155 million. (English article) That represented a 100 percent premium to Global Education’s last close before the deal was announced, and is nearly 4 times where it was trading in the days before that. The news didn’t help homegrown education leaders New Oriental Education (NYSE: EDU), TAL Education (NYSE: XRS) and Xueda (NYSE: XUE), whose shares all fell amid a broader Wall Street sell-off. Pearson’s latest China education buy follows its earlier purchase of Wall Street English, another major provider of English-language teaching in China, and also follows a move into the market earlier this year by US education giant DeVry (NYSE: DV) (previous post), showing foreign giants, whose ranks also include Disney (NYSE: DIS), realize the big potential in the market and are looking to capitalize on it. Of course all this could mean bad news for homegrown players like New Oriental and Xueda, the former of which reported slowing growth last week while the later posted a widening quarter loss. (previous post) Perhaps sensing vulnerability among the homegrown players, a small investment house, OLP Global, launched a short-selling attack on New Oriental late last week, drawing on recent concerns about the quality of accounting at many US-listed Chinese firms to imply New Oriental may have been playing tricks with its own accounting. The attack prompted New Oriental to issue a statement denying the allegations (company announcement) The statement may have stopped a broad slide for New Oriental shares, but its stock is still down 24 percent since the beginning of November, including a 10 percent drop after it announced its third quarter results. The way things are going, don’t look for the situation to improve for domestic education firms anytime soon.

Bottom line: The latest M&A by a foreign company in China’s education market show competition is growing intense, leaving domestic players vulnerable.

Related postings 相关文章:

New Oriental Results: Slowing Education Growth Story 新东方发表最新财报 中国教育服务增长减速?

Parade of China Money-Losers Report to Wall Street 多家中国企业亏损凸显市场竞争激烈

Education: DeVry Deal Showcases Corporate Opportunity