Bangkok Post

Tesla gets the backing of Chinese internet giant

- PAUL LIENERT

DETROIT: China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd has bought a 5% stake in US electric car maker Tesla Inc for $1.78 billion, the latest investment by a Chinese internet company in the potentiall­y lucrative market for selfdrivin­g vehicles and related services.

Tencent’s investment, revealed in a US regulatory filing, provides Tesla with a deep-pocketed ally as it prepares to launch its mass-market Model 3.

Tencent also could help the US company sell — or even build — cars in China, the world’s largest auto market, analysts said.

“It certainly is a strong chess move for Tesla,” said Jeff Schuster, senior vice president of forecastin­g for researcher LMC Automotive, citing the cash infusion and “help in navigating the Chinese market.”

Tesla chief executive Elon Musk on Tuesday tweeted: “Glad to have Tencent as an investor and adviser to Tesla.”

Musk did not say what he meant by “adviser” but in a separate tweet he noted Tesla had “very few” Model 3 orders from China, where the car has not been formally introduced.

The mid-sized Model 3 is due to go on sale later this year in the United States.

The deal expands Tencent’s presence in an emerging investment sector that includes self-driving electric cars, which could enable such new modes of transporta­tion as automated ride-sharing and delivery services, as well as ancillary services ranging from infotainme­nt to e-commerce.

Those new technologi­es, and their potential to create new business models and revenue streams in the global transporta­tion sector, have attracted billions in investment from China’s three tech giants — Tencent, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Baidu Inc.

In an investor note, Morgan Stanley auto analyst Adam Jonas said on Tuesday that he “would not be surprised” to see Tencent and Tesla collaborat­e in the developmen­t and deployment of some of those technologi­es.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the Chinese investment in Tesla, but President Donald Trump has been critical of US automakers and of China trade policies.

Founded in 1998 by entreprene­ur Ma Huateng, Tencent is one of Asia’s largest tech companies, best known for its WeChat mobile messaging app. With a market capitalisa­tion of about $275 billion, it is roughly six times the size of 14-year-old Tesla, whose $45 billion market cap on Tuesday was only $1 billion shy of 114-year-old Ford Motor Co.

Tencent was an early investor in NextEV, a Shanghai-based electric vehicle startup that since has rebranded itself as Nio, with US headquarte­rs in San Jose, not far from Tesla’s Palo Alto base. Tencent also has funded at least two other Chinese EV startups, including Future Mobility in Shenzhen.

In addition, Tencent has invested in Didi Chuxing, the world’s second-largest ride services company behind Uber, and in Lyft, Uber’s chief US rival.

Baidu has invested in Nio, as well as in Uber and Velodyne, a California maker of laser-based lidar sensors for self-driving cars. Alibaba’s mobility investment­s include Didi and Lyft.

As Tesla is doing, many of the start-up companies backed by Tencent, Baidu and Alibaba are developing self-driving systems that eventually could be introduced in commercial ride-sharing fleets in the United States and China after 2020.

Tencent maintains a US office in Palo Alto, in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley. Beijing-based Baidu and Hangzhouba­sed Alibaba also maintain offices in Silicon Valley.

Tencent owns about 8.2 million shares in Tesla. It is the fifth-largest shareholde­r, behind Musk and investment companies Fidelity, Baillie Gifford and T. Rowe Price.

Musk had a stake of about 21% as of Dec 31.

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