China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tencent move in line with regulation­s

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Tencent Holdings pledged to return capital to its existing shareholde­rs through the distributi­on of its $20.3 billion stake in food delivery firm Meituan, as China’s leading internet companies strive to redirect their investment­s amid the country’s normalized anti-monopoly regulation­s focused on the sector.

In an announceme­nt on Wednesday, Tencent said that it would divest 958.12 million Hong Konglisted shares in Meituan, which amounts to 90.9 percent of the Class B ordinary shares it holds in the company. The move will reduce its stake in Meituan from 17 percent to 1.5 percent, ending its long run as the company’s largest shareholde­r.

Following the news, Tencent’s shares slightly dipped 0.82 percent on Thursday while Meituan dropped 5.73 percent. Overall, the Hang Seng Index slid 1.16 percent.

“It is a relatively stable way of reducing shares, as once sold off at one time, both companies will face greater stock price pressure,” said Pan Helin, co-director of the Digital Economy and Financial Innovation Research Center at Zhejiang University’s Internatio­nal Business School.

Wang Peng, a researcher at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, said, “It is wise for Tencent to cash out when profit from Meituan has basically peaked, especially as Chinese tech stocks have been facing pressure recently.”

On late Wednesday, the tech group announced quarterly revenue of 140 billion yuan ($19 billion) during the third quarter, down 2 percent year-on-year, which beat market expectatio­ns. Its net profit hit 32.25 billion yuan, up 2 percent year-on-year, ending a four-quarter decline.

It was not the first time for Tencent to sell shares. The tech company announced plans in December to pare its stake in online retailer JD and sold about $3 billion worth of shares in Southeast Asia’s biggest internet company — Sea Ltd.

Analysts believe it is a trend for Chinese tech and internet giants to prune their various business lines to focus on their major business activities amid the country’s anti-monopoly efforts. These big tech companies will likely invest more in technologi­es and services that serve the real economy, like artificial intelligen­ce, they said.

“It is likely that Tencent will continue to pare its asset-heavy companies and gradually turn to its main business, including media and the internet, gaming, social networking, advertisin­g and finance,” Pan said.

In September, Tencent won its first license for a new gaming title since June 2021. Tencent President Martin Lau, who has resigned as a board member of Meituan, also said in a call on Wednesday that the company “believes more licenses will be forthcomin­g in the future”.

Wang added that similar moves will create space for more small and medium-sized enterprise­s, which is actually in accordance with the country’s goal of promoting common prosperity.

According to data tracking company Qichacha, the number of earlystage investment­s by Tencent in the entertainm­ent sector has been declining, but corporate service investment­s reached 16 cases last year, the highest ever.

Alibaba Group’s investment­s were tightened last year but still focused on its three main businesses of e-commerce logistics, corporate services and lifestyle-related services.

 ?? SONG YU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? The booth of Tencent during the 2022 China Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services held in Beijing in September.
SONG YU / FOR CHINA DAILY The booth of Tencent during the 2022 China Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services held in Beijing in September.

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