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Home Blog Page 5976

Alibaba, Ant Group, and China’s Ultimate Power Play

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As the scuffle between Ant Group and the Chinese government continues, the real intent of the antitrust probe is beginning to come to light. On Sunday, China’s central bank said it had asked Ant Group Co Ltd to shake up its lending and other consumer finance operations.

The development is coming at the heels of suspension of Ant’s $37 billion mega IPO scheduled for Shanghai and Hong Kong markets in November.

Regulators have been looking into the affairs of Alibaba’s Jack Ma, who heads a conglomerate of online technologies that include Ant. Ma owns one-third stake in Ant Group which has become a target in the latest Chinese attempt to regulate its online industry.

Ma became critical of many regulatory measures in China, especially the Basel Accord, a series of international regulations that require banks to hold a certain amount of capital, as outmoded for the modern era. Part of his complaints is about the inadequacies of the Chinese lending institutions.

He accused the institutions of having a “pawnship” mentality of using collateral instead of advanced credit ratings and watchdogs of not knowing the difference between regulation and supervision.

The criticism has sparked undue interest not only in Ma’s businesses, but other key investments currently commanding immense value, in some cases, above state-owned companies, including the central bank.

Regulators said Ant should rectify financial regulatory violations it has been accused of; in its subsidiaries that include credit, insurance and wealth management business, and overhaul its credit rating business to protect personal information.

The development has not only shattered the expectations of investors, it has also created future uncertainties for the shares of Ant. The company increased its buyback plan from $6 billion to $10 billion in effort to ease concerns of investors. The buyback program will be effective for two years through the end of 2022, but it failed to hold off the concerns of investors.

As a result, Alibaba’s shares slumped 9% to their lowest since June on Monday, knocking almost $116 billion off the tech giant’s Hong Kong-listed shares. That’s after its US stock had nosedived more than 15% last week Thursday, following the news that China has launched antitrust investigations into Alibaba’s chain of businesses, particularly the finance sector.

The company has lost more than $200 billion in market value since November, when Ant’s initial public offering was called off.

The concern of investors is based on the manner and weight of penalty the Chinese authorities will hand to Alibaba if it is found wanting in any area of the probe.

“The antitrust investigation into Alibaba has yet to specify the penalties, which is worrying investors a lot,” said Zhang Zihua, chief investment officer of Beijing Yunyi Asset, adding that the probe outcome could greatly change the company valuations.

While the Chinese authorities are not ignorant of the role of its online industry in its economy, the investigation has become a bitter pill they must give the players to show them who is calling the shots.

Ant was valued at about $315 billion before its IPO was halted. The company’s payment system commanded $17 trillion worth of transactions in one year, a market influence that would be severely undermined if Alibaba is penalized.

“The new regulations are hurting big internet platforms, so you see Tencent and other tech companies are also seeing their share prices going down,” said Li Chendong, a Beijing-based tech analyst, adding that Alibaba is the target of the regulators so the reaction is stronger.

The regulatory inquiry has been based on “choosing one from two”, a practice that forces merchants to sign exclusive cooperation pacts that prevent them from offering products on rival platforms. Alibaba had been warned earlier about the practice before the State Administrator for Market announced the probe on Thursday.

Founder of Alibaba

Bloomberg analysis noted that the worst case scenario would be for Ant to forgo its money management, credit and insurance business, halting its operations in the units that service half a billion people. Ant’s credit tech, which includes Huabei and Jiebei units, was the biggest revenue driver for the group, contributing 39% of the total revenue in the first six months this year, according to a report by Bloomberg.

The report noted that China’s private sector has maintained a delicate relationship with the Communist Party for decades, and has only recently been recognized as central to the nation’s future.

Analysts believe that the Communist party has become wary of the influence and freedom the tech billionaires in China have acquired, and wanted to make a statement by scapegoating Ant and Alibaba. It is also believed that Ma’s criticism bloated the “delicate relationship” that the Chinese authorities have been managing due to its economic value. Now they are ready to clip the wings of the tech giants to tell them who is in charge, even if it will come at a huge economic cost.

“That outcome would be underpinned by the idea that China’s leaders have grown frustrated with the swagger of tech billionaires and want to teach them a lesson by killing off their business – even it means short-term pain for the economy and markets,” Bloomberg noted.

This step may mean that investors’ confidence in Chinese online markets has been dampened, and big tech companies intending to go public will suffer the short term consequences. Ant’s IPO, which was going to be the largest in history, was halted, and there is no assurance it will be authorized in no distant future.

But the Chinese Communist Party doesn’t care, as long as the losses sound the “we are still in charge” warning to the tech companies and their billionaire owners.

“The Communist party is the end-all and the be-all in China. It controls everything. There is nothing that the Chinese Communist Party doesn’t control and anything that does appear to be gyrating out of its orbit in any way is going to get pulled back very quickly,” said Alex Capri, a Singapore-based research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation. He added that “we can expect to see more of that.”

Tekedia Mini-MBA Registration in East Africa

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An amazing video from our East Africa partner, CareerSpot, on Tekedia Mini-MBA. If you are in East Africa, make registrations via this company. Contacts.

  • Tel: +254 (0)110299197 (Safaricom)
  • Email: info@careerspot.co.ke
  • mini-mba@careerspot.co.ke
  • Web: www.careerspot.co.ke

Tekedia offers an innovation management 12-week program, optimized for business execution and growth, with digital operational overlay. It runs 100% online. The theme is Innovation, Growth & Digital Execution – Techniques for Building Category-King Companies. All contents are self-paced, recorded and archived which means participants do not have to be at any scheduled time to consume contents.

It is a sector- and firm-agnostic management program comprising videos, flash cases, challenge assignments, labs, written materials, webinars, etc by a global faculty coordinated by Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe.

“I will recommend [Tekedia Mini-MBA] to anybody who wants to change the world” – Temitope Farombi

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I share this testimonial from Temitope Farombi: “I have learnt a lot from the Tekedia Institute mini MBA and I will recommend this course to anybody who wants to change the world.” People, I approve this message because it is a good one for everyone! Join us today here.

I really find it difficult to put words together to express my profound gratitude to Prof. Ndubuisi Ekekwe. He is building an army of nation builders through participatory learning. I have learnt a lot from the Tekedia Institute mini MBA and I will recommend this course to anybody who wants to change the world.

Source: Linkedin

Before Nigeria’s Bank of Industry Begins Disbursing The New $1 Billion Loan

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Congratulations to Bank of Industry for closing the $1 billion loan: “The transaction is aimed at further improving the capacity of the bank to continue to effectively support Micro, Small, Medium and Large enterprises (across key sectors) of the Nigerian economy with affordable loans of medium to long-term tenor, alongside moratorium benefits…The facility will be disbursed in Naira at single digit interest rates to borrowers with bankable projects.”.

 Between 2015 and October 2020, the Bank of Industry with the support of its various stakeholders disbursed over ?945 billion to 3,013,087 enterprises, thus creating over 6.87 million estimated direct and indirect jobs.

With the successful conclusion of this deal, the Board and management of Bank of Industry is confident that the bank is now better positioned to catalyze domestic production and facilitate job creation on a transformational scale, enhance local industry competitiveness, attract domestic and foreign investments, integrate our local industries into domestic, regional and global value chains, grow our export earnings and positively impact the overall economic development of Nigeria in line with its mandate and especially in light of the planned commencement of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) in January 2021.

This is a good deal. I will add that BOI adds a new layer in its operations: keep $10 million of that money for venture funding where founders and entrepreneurs do not have to provide collaterals to get the funds. Rather, BOI takes equity in the companies on behalf of the Nigerian people. Israeli has done this venture playbook successfully. 

More so, BOI needs to deepen its interests in digital and web companies. The current model is biased for “physical” businesses. The fact remains that most great digital businesses begin online and over time go “physical”. So, we do not have to be fixated at what is happening during the early phases. 

Amazon is as meatspace as Walmart with Whole Foods. Konga and Jumia are  big physical businesses. These businesses might not have been qualified to access BOI’s funds when they were being started. That re-calibration is important.

 

The Nigerian Stock Exchange Goes Parabolic

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Time to open that Excel and check those unloved stocks in the Nigerian Stock Exchange. The Nigerian bourse has returned about 40% this year and it is closing as one of the best performing exchanges in the world. The curve is even going parabolic, and that is amazing. May it continue to rise as Nigeria does not want any stock-pulling gravitational force! 

Yet, looking at the NSE and NYSE (the American version), you see the soul of the world: massive wealth being created even when the broad citizenries are going through severe pains. One of the key winners in NSE is BUA Cement Plc.

The shares of BUA Cement Plc have gained N618 billion since the opening of trade on the Nigerian Stock Exchange for Q4 2020, as investors position for the shares owing to its relative valuation and impressive growth prospects.

This was uncovered by Nairametrics after tracking the performance of the shares of BUA Cement Plc on the floor of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, since October 2nd, 2020 when the market opened for trade for Q4 2020.

[…]

According to data tracked and analysed by Nairalytics, the research arm of Nairametrics, BUA Cement remains the fourth most capitalized company on the Nigerian Stock Exchange, with a market capitalization of N2.03 trillion.

The Cement manufacturer stands ahead of Nestle with a market capitalization of N1.2 trillion, and behind Airtel, a telecommunication behemoth that maintains a market capitalization of N3.2 trillion.

For valuation and profitability, the company stays ahead of Lafarge Africa Plc, another important player in the cement sector, and behind Dangote Cement Plc, the industry leader.

The US is battling coronavirus and economic paralysis, Nigeria has taken insecurity and lack of order to another level. Yet, the stock markets are rising! The world needs to be reshaped.