China Daily (Hong Kong)

Meituan-Dianping bets big

Tencent-backed company has lined up $1.5b from five cornerston­e investors

- By LUO WEITENG in Hong Kong sophia@chinadaily­hk.com

Despite its money-losing business and lofty valuation, Meituan-Dianping, the online food review and delivery company, has attracted big-name early investors to its IPO that could raise as much as $4.4 billion.

The Beijing-based company has lined up $1.5 billion from five cornerston­e investors, including its major backer and largest institutio­nal shareholde­r Tencent Holdings Ltd, which accepted six-month lockups in return for large allocation­s and will take a combined one-third of the shares being offered.

The world’s third-most-valuable unicorn, a private commade pany valued at $1 billion or above, has set an indicative price range of HK$60 ($7.64) to HK$72, with a minimum investment of HK$7,272.55 for a board lot of 100 shares.

It started taking orders from institutio­nal investors on Tuesday and will open the book to retail investors on Friday. The offering is scheduled to be priced on Sept 13 and commence trading on Sept 20.

New York-based long-term investor Oppenheime­r Holdings led the pack, acquiring $500 million of the shares on offer.

Tencent, which owned a 20 percent stake in Meituan-Dianping before listing, has agreed to invest $400 million.

London-based hedge fund Lansdowne Partners, which a name for itself with its investment in British online supermarke­t Ocado in 2012, and New York-based asset manager Darsana have committed $300 million and $200 million respective­ly.

The State-backed China Structural Reform Fund, a 350 billion yuan ($51 billion) State enterprise restructur­ing fund backed by shareholde­rs such as China Chengtong Holdings Group, China Merchants Group and China Mobile, has agreed to purchase shares worth $100 million.

Founded in 2010 by serial entreprene­ur Wang Xing, Meituan-Dianping is still a moneylosin­g machine. It lost 22.8 billion yuan on changes in the fair value of its preferred stock over the first four months of the year and the impact of acquiring unprofitab­le bike-sharing firm Mobike in a $2.7 billion deal.

Even without the accounting adjustment­s, its loss was 2 billion yuan, according to the latest details released on Tuesday.

During the period, revenue jumped 95 percent to 15.8 billion yuan, more than 60 percent of which comes from its backbone business in food delivery, which raises the question of why it would pitch itself as a tech firm and sound out investors with a sky-high price tag.

“I don’t think it looks like a realistic valuation, given that it said in a filing it can’t guarantee that Mobike or its business as a whole will achieve profitabil­ity in the future,” said Lam Ka-kei, managing director of Hong Kong-based Grand View Securities Ltd.

“Despite its dominance in mainland’s $1.3 trillion food delivery and online services industry, and the backing from large hedge funds, the company may still be penalized for a geopolitic­al storm and global stock sell-offs beyond its control,” Lam said.

 ?? ZHAO JUNCHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A Meituan Autonomous Delivery car, or MAD — a smart concept vehicle designed by Meituan-Dianping to boost its unmanned delivery service — is displayed at a high-tech exhibition in Chongqing.
ZHAO JUNCHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY A Meituan Autonomous Delivery car, or MAD — a smart concept vehicle designed by Meituan-Dianping to boost its unmanned delivery service — is displayed at a high-tech exhibition in Chongqing.

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