Cape Times

Tencent posts a 61% jump in its net income

- Lulu Yilun Chen

TENCENT Holdings posted a quarterly profit that exceeded estimates, bolstered by mobile game blockbuste­rs like Player-Unknown’s Battlegrou­nds as users on China’s most popular social network surpassed a billion for the first time.

Tencent posted a 61 percent jump in net income to 23.3 billion yuan (R45.55bn) in the three months ended March, outstrippi­ng the 17.4bn-yuan average projection. That was buoyed by a one-time gain of almost 7.6bn yuan as the value of investment­s in arenas from video streaming to news content rose.

China’s largest social network and gaming company defied fears that outsized spending would hammer margins. The owner of the giant WeChat messaging platform opened its wallet to sustain growth as PC gaming slows, investing in cloud computing, entertainm­ent and physical retail to lock horns with Alibaba Group Holding.

It has also secured Chinese distributi­on rights to some of the world’s hottest games, including shooters PUBG and Fortnite, adapting some into mobile titles to draw in users on smartphone­s.

“Mobile game growth was very strong, as the first quarter is usually a good season when users spend more time on their devices during the holidays,” said Benjamin Wu, a Shanghai-based analyst with Pacific Epoch. “Honour of Kings was a major contributo­r for mobile gaming revenue.”

Tencent’s strength in the mobile games market also comes from its equity relationsh­ip with global developers.

Revenue rose 48 percent to 73.5bn yuan, also surpassing estimates for 70.8bn yuan. But adjusted earnings-pershare, which strips out onetime items, came to 1.92 yuan, missing the 1.94 yuan average estimate.

Shares of Tencent were largely unchanged in Hong Kong before earnings were announced. The stock has fallen 2.4 percent this year, compared with a 14 percent rise for New York-listed Alibaba.

Tencent continues to draw the lion’s share of its business from gaming, while counting on advertisin­g and finance via WeChat to drive future growth. Revenue from Value Added Services, which includes online games and messaging, rose 34 percent to 46.9bn yuan.

The company, however, has been leery of barraging its users with ads – yesterday, it declared that it had raised the maximum number of ads that customers see on WeChat Moments, a function similar to Facebook’s newsfeed, to just two a day, from one previously.

Honour of Kings continues to be a core source of earnings. Developed by Tencent’s own studio, the mobile title resembles the world’s most popular desktop title League of Legends, whose developer was acquired by Tencent in 2015. Anchored by its marquee title, the smartphone games business yielded 68 percent growth in the quarter.

But overall costs surged 51 percent. Tencent executives have signalled a willingnes­s to sacrifice margins in favour of longer-term growth in new businesses, although that would depend on growing and engaging a massive user base now primarily confined to China.

WeChat had 1.04 billion monthly active users while the mobile version of QQ – the older of its two social networks – saw users drop 6.4 percent to 805.5 million at the end of the quarter.

“We expect Tencent to consolidat­e both the PC and mobile games markets,” said Alex Yao, a Hong Kong-based analyst at JPMorgan Chase.

“Tencent’s strength in the mobile games market also comes from its equity relationsh­ip with leading global developers.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Visitors use their smartphone­s underneath the logo of Tencent. China’s largest social network and gaming company posted a 61 percent jump in net income to 23.3 billion yuan in the three months ended March.
PHOTO: REUTERS Visitors use their smartphone­s underneath the logo of Tencent. China’s largest social network and gaming company posted a 61 percent jump in net income to 23.3 billion yuan in the three months ended March.

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