Bangkok Post

Tencent Sells Roughly $3 Billion of Its Stake in Sea

Chinese internet giant retains 19% share of the e-commerce and videogame company, whose value has surged in recent years

- MATT GROSSMAN

Tencent Holdings Ltd. has cut its stake in a highly valued Southeast Asian internet company, shedding an ownership position that was worth about $3 billion.

Tencent, one of the biggest Chinese internet businesses, said it is selling about 14.5 million shares of Sea Ltd., a company that runs a popular e-commerce platform called Shopee, makes digital games and offers online financial services.

U.S.-traded shares of Sea had closed on Monday at $223.31 apiece.

Following the deal, Tencent will still have a roughly 19% equity stake in Singapore-headquarte­red Sea, down from 21% previously, and it said it would maintain business relationsh­ips with the company.

Tencent said it plans to use proceeds from the Sea transactio­n to fund other investment­s and social initiative­s.

Tencent, which owns the WeChat socialmedi­a app, also has videogame studios and has collaborat­ed with Sea on videogame distributi­on in Southeast Asia for years.

Investors sold off Sea stock on news of Tencent’s divestment, sending its U.S.-traded shares down 11% on Tuesday to close at $197.84.

Sea’s valuation has gained significan­t ground in recent years, with shares trading at nearly five times where they started 2020 even after Tuesday’s decline. Its market capitaliza­tion has recently topped $120 billion.

Tencent sold its Sea shares at $208 apiece, at the bottom of an offered range, according to a term sheet seen by The Wall Street Journal. The sale raised a little over $3 billion.

“The share sale unlocks a portion of the value of Tencent’s investment in Sea, which has seen significan­t growth and expansion in its global business operations,” Tencent said.

The company added that the deal’s provisions restrict further sales of Sea stock over the next six months.

Last month, Tencent unwound an even larger corporate investment when it distribute­d 457 million shares of JD.com Inc. to its own shareholde­rs in the form of a dividend.

Those shares in JD.com, an e-commerce company, were worth about $16.4 billion at the time.

Analysts said that the move might have been a response to risks posed by an aggressive regulatory stance by China’s government.

Chinese technology companies have been facing government pressure related to anticompet­itive behavior and privacy issues, part of a campaign Beijing has said is intended to get the companies to serve public interests better.

Tencent was among the businesses targeted by the government in an effort to rein in their use of big data in providing financial services.

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