Alibaba
to pay about $3.7 billion for 'China's YouTube'
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[November 07, 2015]
By Anya George Tharakan and Devika Krishna Kumar
(Reuters) - Alibaba Group Holding Ltd
<BABA.N> agreed to buy Youku Tudou Inc <YOKU.N> - popularly known as
"China's YouTube" - for about $3.7 billion, slightly more than it had
offered in October.
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The deal announced on Friday will give the e-commerce giant access
to more than half a billion online video users, accelerating its
push into the Chinese digital media market.
It is also a vote of confidence in China's economy by Alibaba
Chairman Jack Ma, who has said investors should not overreact to his
country's slowing growth.
Youku Tudou's American Depositary Shares rose 10 percent to $26.80
in premarket trading on Friday, below Alibaba's offer of $27.60 per
ADS.
Alibaba held 18.3 percent of Youku Tudou as of Oct. 16, when it made
its initial offer of $26.60 per ADS. The new offer values the rest
of Youku Tudou at about $4.8 billion.
The new offer represents a premium of 35.1 percent over Youku
Tudou's closing price on Oct. 15.
Any deal would include the $1.1 billion of cash held by Youku Tudou,
Alibaba's chief financial officer, Maggie Wu, said in October.
Based on this, Alibaba will end up paying about $3.7 billion under
its revised offer.
Unprofitable Youku Todou needed the partnership with Alibaba, Summit
Research analyst Henry Guo said.
Youku Tudou Chief Executive Victor Koo, a Bain & Co alumnus who owns
about 18 percent of Youku Tudou, will remain CEO of Youku Tudou
after the deal closes in the first quarter of 2016.
"With Alibaba's support, Youku Tudou's future as the leading
multi-screen entertainment and media platform in China has been
firmly secured," Koo said in a statement.
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Formerly bitter rivals, Youku - which means "what's best and what's
cool" in Chinese - merged with Tudou ("potato") in a deal worth over
$1 billion in 2012.
Alibaba has made a number of sizeable investments in digital media
in China in the past couple of years.
In March 2014, it agreed to buy a controlling stake in ChinaVision
Media Group Ltd for $804 million to get access to TV and movie
content. The company is now known as Alibaba Pictures.
A month later, Alibaba said it would pay about $1 billion for a 20
percent stake in Wasu Media Holding Co Ltd <000156.SZ>.
In March 2015, TV program producer Beijing Enlight Media Co Ltd
<300251.SZ> said Alibaba had invested $383 million.
Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd advised Alibaba, while J.P. Morgan
Securities (Asia Pacific) Ltd advised Youku Tudou's special
committee.
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