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Tencent enters old-school finance with stake in China’s CICC

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HONG KONG: Tencent Holdings Ltd, China’s largest social media firm, is entering the traditiona­l finance industry by investing in CICC Internatio­nal Capital Corp, a move that may help the investment bank’s expansion in wealth management.

Shares of CICC jumped by a record after it said Tencent is paying HK$2.9bil (US$372mil) for roughly 5% of China’s oldest investment bank. The companies will team up on marketing and data analysis, according to an exchange filing.

CICC, once dubbed the Goldman Sachs of China after it brought some of the country’s largest state-run firms to market, has been reducing its dependence on volatile investment banking fees and expanding its business catering to rich individual­s.

It completed a US$2.5bil purchase of China Investment Securities Co this year, plunging into the retail investor market.

“Investors are buying into the fintech concept,” said Chi Man Wong, a Hong Kong-based analyst at China Galaxy Securities Co.

CICC gained wealthy clients through the acquisitio­n of China Investment, and Tencent’s investment “gives the firm lots of room to play with big data and financial technology. The whole strategy is consistent.”

Tencent, which operates the popular WeChat social media service, is buying 207.5 million new Hong Kong-listed shares for HK$13.80 apiece, CICC said. That’s an 11% discount to CICC’s Wednesday closing price in Hong Kong, and translates into about 4.95% of its total shares once new stock is issued.

Shares of CICC surged as much as 19% to HK$18.48 and traded 16% higher at 11:59am in Hong Kong. Tencent was little changed.

Cooperatio­n with Tencent in areas such as precision marketing and big-data analysis “will enable the company to enlarge its customer base and provide more personalis­ed and diversifie­d wealth management products and services for customers,” CICC said.

Set up in 1995, CICC was part-owned by New York-based Morgan Stanley until 2010. Its shares were listed in Hong Kong in 2015. The brokerage reported a 46% jump in wealth management revenue in the first half, while investment banking sales remained flat.

Tencent gets most of its revenue from gaming but has ramped up its investment­s in finance, seeking to displace Jack Ma’s Ant Financial’s dominance in mobile payments as well as money management.

Other Internet firms from JD.com Inc to Baidu Inc have set up online finance operations, hoping to up-end an industry controlled by state banks that have traditiona­lly favoured large government enterprise­s at the expense of smaller private firms.

Tencent’s online finance business remains nascent and includes a stake in online lender WeBank. Its payments business, which competes directly with Ant’s Alipay, grew by triple-digits in its latest quarter, president Martin Lau told analysts on a conference call. — Bloomberg

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