Business Day

Trump’s WeChat ban threatens to derail Tencent’s market bonanza

- Zheping Huang and Jeanny Yu Hong Kong PUBG Mobile Call of Duty Mobile. League of Legends

Donald Trump’s WeChat ban targets a celebrated Chinese innovation at the heart of the world’s largest mobile gaming and social media empire, threatenin­g one of the more eye-catching stock rallies of 2020.

It is hard to overstate WeChat’s importance to Tencent: it is the means through which the company introduces 1-billion people to games and other online content, funnelling trillions of dollars in annual payments to brands from Apple to Walmart.

WeChat’s reach underpinne­d Tencent’s $280bn gain in market value since a March 18 Covid-19 trough — the fifthbigge­st dollar-gain on the planet over that period.

Trump single-handedly stopped that rally cold. The US president signed an executive order last week to ban US entities from dealing with WeChat — along with TikTok, ByteDance’s viral video platform — in 45 days. Confusion and uncertaint­y reigned as investors grappled with the vague edict. Tencent shed $66bn over two days before it partly bounced back.

Executives will seek to reassure the market it can withstand a White House campaign that has already ensnared Huawei and dozens of Chinese up-and-comers.

A US official clarified the sanction involves only the app and not its owner. But the sweeping language of Trump’s order — which bars “transactio­ns” with the Chinese company — leaves the door open for the administra­tion to extend it well beyond WeChat, dubbed Weixin locally.

“It’s really a gut-punch to those companies when you look at their global expansion plans,” Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives told Bloomberg Television.

The WeChat operator is doing well in the short run: analysts on average foresee a 27% rise in June-quarter revenue and a 13% spike in net income. But investors appear divided over the fate of China’s secondlarg­est corporatio­n. Options on the company — contracts that let the holder buy or sell stock at a pre-agreed price — suggest traders are bracing for a 5.7% swing in Tencent’s shares after it unveiled earnings on Wednesday, or about four times the usual band.

The three most popular options as of Wednesday included a bullish contract that projected a roughly 16% rise to HK$600 by September’s end and a bearish one that suggested a 20% plunge, Bloomberg data showed. But the put-to-call ratio, or the number of traded sell options divided by the number of buy contracts, is near its lowest since May, suggesting more upbeat than bearish investors still.

The widening gulf reflects the central role WeChat plays in Tencent’s empire, and the outsize fallout now that it is in Trump’s crosshairs. Started in 2011 as a WhatsApp clone, the service has become ingrained in Chinese life, indispensa­ble to the hordes who use it to chat, shop, watch videos, play games, flirt, order food and taxis.

It pioneered the all-in-one or super-app concept by embedding lite apps or mini programs — a model emulated by Alibaba as well as Facebook. Its success sprang in part from the fact that China banned global services such as WhatsApp, Twitter and Instagram, allowing WeChat and a host of other Chinese equivalent­s to flourish.

Today, if the Chinese company is a mash-up of Facebook, Netflix, WhatsApp and Spotify, then WeChat is the smartphone and payments backbone that ties them all together.

“The impact on valuation would be more severe if the implementa­tion included banning all transactio­ns of Chinese businesses of US companies with Tencent as a whole, as this would also hurt Weixin, advertisin­g in mainland China by USaffiliat­ed firms, the internatio­nal cloud business, the internatio­nal gaming business, and so on,” Morningsta­r analyst Chelsey Tam said this week.

At a minimum, Trump’s order likely gets WeChat removed from Apple and Google’s mobile stores, which in turn means suspending updates or even blacking out a service vital to communicat­ions on the factory floor, in households and the boardroom. And if US consumer giants such as Starbucks and Walmart are prevented from doing business with WeChat in China, Tencent may also take a blow to advertisin­g and e-commerce sales.

But the ban has wider implicatio­ns. Even if the executive order does not cover WeChat China, it could hamstring Tencent in other ways.

Take Tencent’s $15bn cloud services and fintech division, a major driver of growth over past years. If American firms cannot sell servers to support WeChat, that effectivel­y means they cannot sell to Tencent itself unless the messaging service can be completely ring-fenced. Secretary of state Michael Pompeo has already urged American companies to cut ties with Chinese cloud providers including Tencent and Alibaba.

Then there is Tencent’s cash cow. Gamers the world over were among the fastest and loudest opponents of the action, going online to campaign to save titles such as and

Tencent has about $22bn of investment­s in US gaming assets and companies from Activision Blizzard to

developer

Riot Games.

Tencent in recent years has searched for ways to extend its dominance of China’s social media and gaming scenes internatio­nally, with mixed success. Its smaller global exposure now becomes an edge over upstart ByteDance, whose TikTok is the first truly successful Chinesemad­e internet service.

Now it is turning inward faster than before. On Monday, Tencent kicked off a deal to merge game-streaming platforms DouYu Internatio­nal and Huya into a $10bn local leader. In July, it offered to buy out domestic search engine Sogou.

But Beijing’s own moves could complicate the matter. China has threatened to retaliate against what it perceives as rising US aggression, but any attempt to undercut US operations in China could hurt Tencent and potentiall­y complicate matters for non-US players.

“Uncertaint­ies still exist for Tencent and other Chinese internet companies with business in the US, and Chinese pure-plays will be perceived as safer by investors,” Bernstein analysts including David Dai wrote in a report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa