Los Angeles Times

Chinese interest in Hollywood cools

As foreign investment­s shrink, film biz looks closer to home

- By Ryan Faughnder and James Rufus Koren

In January, Paramount Pictures looked like it had scored a coup. Bejing-based Huahua Media had agreed to invest $1 billion in the studio’s movies, another sign that China would be Hollywood’s main foreign benefactor for the foreseeabl­e future.

Not anymore. After months of speculatio­n, Paramount last week said the co-financing arrangemen­t, which would’ve covered 25% of its film slate, had been scrapped because of the Chinese government’s clampdown on foreign investment in entertainm­ent and other industries.

The action was not only a blow to Paramount but also emblematic of a broader pullback of foreign money from Hollywood — by China in particular. The world’s second-largest film market has been a key source of box-office revenues, and it’s played an important role in helping studios to offset the rising costs of making movies.

In recent years, foreign investors from China and other countries have financed as much as 35% of film budgets, according to industry financing sources.

Other casualties of China’s tightening restrictio­ns on foreign investment include Chinese conglomera­te Recon Holding, which scrapped its bid to acquire a majority stake in Millennium Films for $100 million; and Dalian Wanda Group, which canceled its $1-billion acquisitio­n of Dick Clark Production­s. Wanda also abandoned plans to integrate Burbank-based Legendary Entertainm­ent into its publicly traded film company.

The last year has seen a dramatic falloff in Chinese money pouring into America’s film and TV industry. In 2016, Chinese investment in the U.S. entertainm­ent industry hit $4.78 billion. This year, investment­s have shrunk to $489 million as of Sept. 30, according to the research firm Rhodium Group. Beijing has tightened control on money leaving the country, fearing that the outflow of capital could weaken its economy.

“For now, everybody’s laying low,” said Los Angeles movie producer Scott Ein-

Chinese investment in the U.S. entertainm­ent industry $4.78 billion In 2016 $489 million In 2017* * through Sept. 30

binder, whose company Cristal Pictures is backed by Hong Kong’s East Light Media. “There’s still definitely business being done, but it’s been constraine­d quite a bit.”

China’s retreat fits a recurring pattern of foreign investors who come to Hollywood with big ambitions, only to stumble. French conglomera­te Vivendi in 2000 took control of Universal Studios through its acquisitio­n of Seagram, but sold off most of its entertainm­ent assets to General Electric in 2004 after amassing huge debts. India’s Reliance Entertainm­ent backed a relaunch of DreamWorks in 2008, an investment that proved costly. And Japan’s Sony Corp. has long struggled to get its film and TV division to work handin-hand with its electronic­s business.

With China taking a step back, there’s no clear foreign player stepping in to fill the gap. The industry has turned to other sources closer to home for money. Paramount, for example, has signed co-financing deals with David Ellison’s Skydance Media based in Santa Monica and with toy maker Hasbro, which is based in Pawtucket, R.I.

“From where we’re sitting, foreign financing seems to be fairly quiet,” said Guillaume de Chalendar, global head of media and entertainm­ent for Bank Leumi, the U.S. division of Israel’s Leumi Group. “There are a lot of stories of Chinese investment getting canceled, and there’s not an obvious source of capital to replace that.”

Not that there is a shortage of capital for the film and TV business. Technology companies, including Netflix, Amazon and Apple, are spending billions on movies and TV shows for their own streaming services. While that’s a boon for filmmakers who want to get their projects funded, it’s another threat to legacy studios.

“There’s a lot of money going to the movie business through these tech companies, but it’s not going to the studios. It’s going directly into the creation of content,” said one entertainm­ent executive.

Netf lix, for example, is expected to spend $8 billion on content next year, including licensed material and originals, up from $6 billion in 2017. The Los Gatos, Calif., company is buying global rights to movies, leaving fewer opportunit­ies for foreign distributo­rs that finance movies by purchasing distributi­on rights. Apple has touted plans to invest $1 billion in original TV shows and films over the next year.

“The digital footprint is worldwide,” said Schuyler Moore, a partner at Greenberg Glusker who specialize­s in cross-border entertainm­ent deals. “They are replacing foreign capital by squeezing the foreign distributo­rs.”

To be sure, plenty of foreign money still flows through Hollywood. Sovereign wealth funds have long been interested in film investment­s, particular­ly studio film libraries that generate reliable revenues. Qatar Investment Authority, for example, bought Miramax in 2010 with Colony Capital, and later sold the onetime indie powerhouse to Qatari broadcaste­r BeIN Media. Wealth funds, including Singapore’s state-backed Temasek and GIC, recently invested in talent agencies CAA and WME-IMG, respective­ly.

These funds are selective and cautious in their investment­s. “It’s an industry where you have to know what you’re doing to make money in it,” said Michael Maduell, president of the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute, a research firm. “They [sovereign wealth funds] are getting an inside look at what’s working and not working.”

Billionair­es from other industries remain a major source of capital.

“High-net-worth individual­s tend to play a bigger role now,” De Chalendar said. “We’re seeing films made because a particular highnet-worth individual wants a particular project to be made.”

Those wealthy individual­s, however, have seen mixed results. FedEx founder Fred Smith backs Alcon Entertainm­ent, which produced hits including “The Blind Side” for Warner Bros., but most recently made a huge bet on the pricey disappoint­ment “Blade Runner 2049.”

Gulf States Toyota owner Dan Friedkin in 2014 launched production company Imperative Entertainm­ent, which has become embroiled in the sexual abuse scandal surroundin­g actor Kevin Spacey, the former star of its movie “All the Money in the World.”

Hollywood has a long track record of attracting colorful and controvers­ial investors.

Red Granite Pictures, cofounded by Riza Aziz, the stepson of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, was swept up in a U.S. federal corruption probe for more than a year. Prosecutor­s seized rights to films including “The Wolf of Wall Street,” alleging they were financed with money embezzled by Malaysian government officials. Red Granite reached a settlement with the U.S. government in September. Aziz has said he had no knowledge of receiving ill-gotten funds.

Alwaleed bin Talal, who helped bail out Walt Disney Co.’s Euro Disney theme park in the 1990s and invested in 21st Century Fox, was arrested Nov. 4 in an apparent power consolidat­ion by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. He has sold his holdings in Fox, according Bloomberg data.

As for China, many experts predict investors will return once the government eases restrictio­ns on banks that fund the overseas transactio­ns.

“While Chinese money is indeed restricted and has been for the last year, it doesn’t mean the spigot has stopped,” said John Burke, an attorney at Akin Gump who handles film financing deals.

“Studios have to worry about who their next partners are going to be, but it’s not like, ‘Oh my God, where do I finance my next film?’ They have capital,” he said. “The question is, what’s going to be the next wave? We haven’t seen it yet.”

 ?? Fred DuFour AFP/Getty Images ?? DALIAN WANDA Group, chaired by Wang Jianlin, above, canceled its $1-billion acquisitio­n of Dick Clark Production­s. China has tightened control on money leaving the country, fearing that the outflow of capital could weaken its economy.
Fred DuFour AFP/Getty Images DALIAN WANDA Group, chaired by Wang Jianlin, above, canceled its $1-billion acquisitio­n of Dick Clark Production­s. China has tightened control on money leaving the country, fearing that the outflow of capital could weaken its economy.
 ?? Sean Gallup Getty Images ?? ALIBABA Executive Chairman Jack Ma speaks in Germany in 2015. His firm’s film and TV production unit, Alibaba Pictures, entered a deal last year to co-produce and co-finance movies with Steven Spielberg’s entertainm­ent company Amblin Partners.
Sean Gallup Getty Images ALIBABA Executive Chairman Jack Ma speaks in Germany in 2015. His firm’s film and TV production unit, Alibaba Pictures, entered a deal last year to co-produce and co-finance movies with Steven Spielberg’s entertainm­ent company Amblin Partners.
 ?? Jasin Boland Universal Pictures ?? DALIAN WANDA Group has abandoned plans to integrate Burbank-based Legendary Entertainm­ent into its publicly traded film company. Chinese investment in the U.S. entertainm­ent industry has fallen sharply this year. Above, Legendary’s “The Great Wall.”
Jasin Boland Universal Pictures DALIAN WANDA Group has abandoned plans to integrate Burbank-based Legendary Entertainm­ent into its publicly traded film company. Chinese investment in the U.S. entertainm­ent industry has fallen sharply this year. Above, Legendary’s “The Great Wall.”

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