Explainer: Ant Financial's $150 billion valuation, and
the big recent bump-up
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[April 18, 2018]
By Kane Wu and Julie Zhu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Ant Financial's rapid
climb to become the world's biggest super unicorn valued by some
investors at around $150 billion showcases investor enthusiasm for the
biggest Chinese tech companies and also how quickly valuations can
shift. Just two months ago, bankers and investors were tentatively
talking of a figure closer to $100 billion.
WHAT IS ANT FINANCIAL, EXACTLY?
Ant's biggest and best-known business is Alipay, the biggest player in
China's $17 trillion online payments market. Ant also sells wealth
management products and offers small loans and credit scores, among
other ventures. Jack Ma, founder of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba
Group Holding <BABA.N> controls Ant.
Analysts at Barclays estimate that online payments accounted for 55 per
cent of Ant's $8.9 billion revenue last year, but they expect that to
fall to one-third by 2021 as the company focuses on encouraging its 600
million customers to use more of its other, higher-margin services.
WHY THE BIG JUMP IN VALUATION?
At a valuation of around $150 billion, Ant will trail only the big four
state-controlled banks and insurer Ping An among financial-focused firms
in China. It will also be about 50 percent more valuable than Wall
Street titans Goldman Sachs <GS.N> and Morgan Stanley <MS.N>.
Much of the rapid rise in its valuation is being attributed to the
company's disclosure of additional performance data, which although by
no means its full financials, included some 2017 full-year figures that
showed faster-than-expected growth. That helped investors and analysts
tweak their financial models.
Ant's status as one of the biggest tech groups in China is also boosting
demand.
"It’s not very often to get a chance to invest in super unicorns like
Ant, even in China where you’ve seen a tech boom for years,” said one
existing investor in Ant. "If you miss this one, you don’t know when the
next one comes."
HOW ARE PEOPLE GETTING TO $150 BILLION?
Robert Kapito, co-founder of U.S. asset manager BlackRock, this week
described himself as "shocked" at Ant's likely valuation but many
analysts are not blinking.
Barclays analysts this month valued the company at $155 billion, based
on multiplying their estimate of Ant's 2019 net operating profit less
adjusted tax (NOPLAT) by what they said was its conservative
price/earnings ratio of 28.
NOPLAT is often used by analysts to measure companies' operating
efficiency because it strips out the impact of interest payments and
other financing costs.
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A logo of Ant Financial is displayed at the Ant Financial event in
Hong Kong, China November 1, 2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
Other groups have used alternative means of valuing Ant. Jefferies analysts, who
believe up to 70 per cent of Ant's 2017 business came from online payments, used
Paypal <PYPL.O> as a comparison and valued Ant at $133 billion, equivalent to
seven times their estimate for its 2019 sales - in line with the multiple
implied by PayPal's share price.
Based on traditional price-earnings measures, $150 billion implies a price 71
times Ant's 2017 pre-tax profits or 85 times its net profits, assuming a tax
rate of 16 per cent - the average paid by Alibaba in recent years. Ant does not
disclose actual profits and its pre-tax earnings of 13.2 billion yuan ($2.1
billion) are calculated from disclosures in filings by Alibaba, which is set to
become Ant's one-third owner soon.
Alibaba itself trades at 43 times last year's profits as does rival Tencent
<0700.HK>, home of Alipay rival WeChat Pay.
WHAT CHALLENGES DOES ANT FACE?
Ant, expected to go public in the next two years, has vowed to reach 2 billion
users worldwide in the next decade and it has been investing overseas, buying a
stake in Indian payment firm Paytm and Thai financial technology firm Ascend
Money, among others.
"Ant has taken a very strategic view of international expansion - with
highly-targeted investments, joint ventures, and partnerships across the
region," said James Lloyd, Asia-Pacific Fintech leader at EY. "While mainland
China remains core, I wouldn't underestimate the potential upside of their
international endeavors."
But it could be China itself that causes Ant problems. While Alipay holds 54 per
cent of the country's fast-growing mobile payments market, WeChat Pay holds 38.2
per cent, according to Jefferies. Both are keen to increase their dominance.
Beijing also has a history of unexpected rule changes which can derail business
plans. Last year regulators suddenly took steps to rein in the online lending
market - a key growth engine for Ant - as part of its wider crackdown on easy
credit.
"These things that Ant is doing are quite innovative and new. They may work this
year, but stop working next year, depending on China's regulations," said a Hong
Kong-based equity analyst with a Japanese asset manager. "It's hard to analyze
their value."
(Reporting by Kane Wu and Julie Zhu in HONG KONG; Editing by Jennifer Hughes and
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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