Los Angeles Times

DMG Entertainm­ent will be going public in China

The Beijing firm will enter exchange via a reverse takeover with Sichuan Gaojin Foods.

- By Julie Makinen julie.makinen@latimes.com Tommy Yang and Nicole Liu in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

BEIJING — DMG Entertainm­ent, the Beijing-based company that co-produced Hollywood films including “Iron Man 3” and “Transcende­nce,” is in the process of going public on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

The move will see DMG enter the exchange through a reverse takeover with meat-processing company Sichuan Gaojin Foods. The deal still needs regulatory approval.

According to DMG and Sichuan Gaojin, the deal values DMG at $970 million. That’s three times the value of Gaojin at the end of 2013. After the transactio­n, the company’s largest shareholde­r will be DMG Chairman Peter Xiao Wenge.

Documents filed by Sichuan Gaojin with the Shenzhen Exchange said DMG’s revenue grew from about $181 million in 2011 to $270 million in 2012 and $271 million in 2013. Film and television revenue saw a large jump between 2012 and 2013, rising from $9.3 million to $48.2 million.

“Iron Man 3,” released in 2013, grossed $121 million at the mainland box office.

Profit at DMG rose to $45.9 million in 2013, up from $25.3 million in 2011, Sichuan Gaojin’s documentat­ion indicated.

DMG began as an advertisin­g and TV commercial production firm but has also invested in domestic film and TV production and distributi­on and has interests in music and other sectors.

Shares of Sichuan Gaojin, which had been sus- pended for months, resumed trading April 8 and have nearly doubled in the last 21⁄ 2 weeks.

Until recently, China had enacted a moratorium on initial public offerings, and a backlog of listings is now awaiting approval.

Among the entertainm­ent-related companies that recently announced plans for IPOs are Wanda Cinema Line, China’s biggest movie theater chain, which plans to raise $321 million, and Shanghai Film Corp., a film producer, distributo­r and exhibitor that wants to raise $155 million.

Media firms remain a highly regulated, largely government-controlled sector in China, and a reverse takeover could allow DMG — which has several non-Chinese principals — to go public without drawing too much attention to itself. Chinese-language media carried reports of the reverse takeover earlier this month, but DMG had not made a statement until this week, when Variety first reported the news.

A number of Chinese companies — including restaurant chains, fireworks manufactur­ers, dairy firms and video game makers — have shown interest this year in acquiring media, TV and film production companies.

Restaurant chain Beijing Xiangeqing said in March that it would acquire 51% of China Film & Television Production Co. and 51% of Di Nu Film & Television. The same month, Panda Fireworks Group announced that it would spend $91 million to acquire Dongyang Huahai Shidai Pictures Media.

 ?? Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times ?? JOHNNY DEPP, left, plays guitar during a taping for a Chinese TV show about his film “Transcende­nce.” The movie is co-produced by DMG Entertainm­ent, which is entering the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times JOHNNY DEPP, left, plays guitar during a taping for a Chinese TV show about his film “Transcende­nce.” The movie is co-produced by DMG Entertainm­ent, which is entering the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

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