China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Metal manufactur­er buys majority stake in Hollywood

- By LI XIANG in Beijing

A Chinese metal manufactur­er has announced the acquisitio­n of a majority stake in a Hollywood film production company, the latest move of Chinese industrial firms seeking to diversity from lossmaking businesses amid the economic slowdown.

Xinke New Materials Co Ltd, a copper processor based in Anhui province, said it will acquire 80 percent of stake in Midnight Investment­s LP, the owner of Hollywood production studio Voltage Pictures, for 2.39 billion yuan ($350 million), according to its filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange published on Sunday.

The US filmmaker produced movies including the award-winning Hurt Locker and Dallas Buyers’ Club.

Xinke’s move followed Chinese property developer Dalian Wanda Group’s $1 billion purchase last week of Hollywood television company Dick Clark Production­s which produces the Golden Globe and Billboard Music awards.

Industry analysts said the deal highlighte­d the trend in China where industrial companies are stepping up efforts to diversity their business from loss-making sectors through investment in more promising business such as the entertainm­ent industry.

“There is certainly a trend here as companies in lossmaking industries are looking for opportunit­ies in sectors with high growth potential. Entertainm­ent is one of them,” said Xiao Han, a partner at Chinese entertainm­ent research company EntGroup Inc.

Xinke said in its filing that the deal, which will be a cash transactio­n, will help boost its profitabil­ity and strengthen its position in the domestic and internatio­nal film business.

The company reported a loss of 79.8 million yuan in the third quarter while the US firm Midnight Investment­s reported total net profit of $118 million in the first half of this year.

An anonymous banker who advised Xinke on the deal was quoted by the Financial Times as saying that the company was “aiming at strategic transforma­tion through the acquisitio­n”.

Xinke already entered the Chinese entertainm­ent business by purchasing domestic TV production firm Kingswood Culture for 1.2 billion yuan in 2014.

Some industry analysts fear that the deal by Xinke could face regulatory hurdles as the Chinese securities regulator has tightened supervisio­n of listed companies acquiring assets in industries not related to their core activities.

But Xiao from EntGroup Inc said that the regulator’s intention is to curb illegal operation and speculatio­n in the M&A market, which is not the case for Xinke as Voltage Pictures is a good quality asset.

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