China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mainland SOE enters HK media industry

QingdaoWes­t Coast Holdings buys the owner ofMing Pao Weekly for $64.2m

- By FANFEIFEI in Beijing, LIN WENJIE in Hong Kong and XIECHUANJI­AO in Qingdao Contact the writers at fanfeifei@chinadaiy.com.cn

State-owned Qingdao West Coast Developmen­t Group Co Ltd has bought Media Chinese Internatio­nal Ltd’s subsidiary, the owner of Ming Pao Weekly in Hong Kong, for HK$498 million ($64.2 million), in the latest step by mainland companies into the overseas media market.

Media Chinese Internatio­nal said on Monday in a statement that its subsidiary, One Media Group Ltd, sold 73.01 percent of its shares and media business including its Hong Kong publicatio­n, Ming Pao Weekly, and related digital business to Qingdao West Coast Holdings (Internatio­nal).

The company is the investment arm of Qingdao West Coast Developmen­t Group, set up in 2012 by the Qingdao government, with registered capital of 10 billion yuan.

It is in charge of the developmen­t and constructi­on work of West Coast New Area, Qingdao’s economic and technologi­cal developmen­t zone.

Shares of Media Chinese Internatio­nal, which resumed trading onMonday afternoon in Hong Kong, rose 14.05 percent to HK$1.38 at the close.

Media Chinese Internatio­nal, a leading Chinese language media platform, has five well-establishe­d Chinese language newspapers, including Ming Pao Daily News, one of the most influentia­l and credible newspapers inHong Kong.

Founded in November 1968 by Ming Pao Daily News, Ming Pao Weekly is a lifestyle and entertainm­ent magazine targeted at middleread­ers in Hong Kong. It contents cover entertainm­ent news, film, tourism, fashion trends and culture.

Ming Pao Weekly is also One Media Group’s main turnover contributi­ng business for the Hong Kong segment.

It’s not the first time a mainland company has purchased a Hong Kong media group.

Last December, internet giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd spent HK$2.06 billion to acquire the media assets of SCMP Group, including the South China Morning Post.

Hong Kongbased analysts said it is probably another step in Alibaba’s quest to build a media empire. “It is a trend for mainland companies to invest in the Hong Kong media industry,” said Victor Fung Keung, principal lecturer at the Communicat­ion School of Hong Kong BaptistUni­versity.

“In the next 10 years, 80 percent of local media will be supported by capital from the mainland,” he said.

“It is a win-win deal,” he explained, saying that mainland companies can learn how to operate offshore media, preparing them for the further acquisitio­n of media companies in other places.

money that Alibaba spent to acquire the media assets of SCMP Group last year

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