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Tencent faces poor margins

Asia’s biggest listed firm sheds US$78bil in capitalisa­tion value

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HONG KONG: After the giddy heights of January when its shares hit an all-time high, Tencent Holdings Ltd has shed US$78bil in value as investors price in the costs of the Internet giant’s massive spending spree.

Results tomorrow are expected to show that rising costs and investment­s will hurt profitabil­ity at Asia’s biggest listed company. While Tencent has said sacrificin­g margins in the short-term is necessary to anchor future growth, analysts are concerned that the company isn’t yet able to make enough money from its mobile games to offset a decline in the desktop unit, its most profitable platform.

Shenzhen-based Tencent has been expanding into new businesses such as cloud computing and paying for fresh content, a strategy that contribute­d to a 72% surge in costs in the fourth quarter. Analysts predict gross margin in the latest period dipped below 47% for the first time since 2003, the earliest figures available, according to the average of 11 estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

While they remain bullish on the stock, Citigroup Inc and Deutsche Bank AG are among brokerages that have lowered their sales or earnings expectatio­ns in 2018.

“The short-term weak performanc­e in PC games coupled with larger payment-related subsidies and weaker ad seasonalit­y may affect the company’s margin,” China Internatio­nal Capital Corp analyst Natalie Yue Wu wrote in a May 8 note. “We see a period of share price weakness due to game business.”

Shares of Tencent have slipped 13% since their high on Jan 23, declining more than three times as much as Hong Kong’s benchmark index. Tencent rose for a fifth day yesterday, following tech gains in Hong Kong and China after US President Donald Trump’s reversal on ZTE Corp.

Tencent ramped up spending this year as it competes with e-com- merce rival Alibaba Group Holding Ltd on most fronts, including online entertainm­ent, payments, cloud computing and even retail, Alibaba’s home turf.

Tencent’s retail-related deals this year include its backing of Carrefour SA’s China unit and leading a US$5.4bil investment in Wanda Commercial Properties Co. It’s also been pumping money into its hottest online games, and fending off competitor­s in the mobile-stream- ing and content business.

The battle has been a drag on margins at both Chinese companies. For Tencent, a stake sale from a major holder and a decline in the shares of some of its largest investment­s have put more pressure on the stock.

The options market is implying a daily move of 2.4% either way after the results, which would be the biggest earnings-day reaction in more than two years.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Downtrend: Visitors using their smartphone­s underneath the Tencent logo at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. Tencent shares have slipped 13% since their high on Jan 23.
— Reuters Downtrend: Visitors using their smartphone­s underneath the Tencent logo at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. Tencent shares have slipped 13% since their high on Jan 23.

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