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						Tencent Music presses play on $1.2 billion U.S. IPO
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		 [December 03, 2018]   
		By Julia Fioretti and Julie Zhu 
 HONG KONG/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tencent 
		Music Entertainment launched its hotly-anticipated U.S. initial public 
		offering (IPO) of up to $1.2 billion on Monday after global stock 
		markets were boosted by a truce brokered by U.S. and Chinese leaders in 
		their trade conflict.
 
 The music arm of tech giant Tencent Holdings is looking to raise between 
		$1.07 billion and $1.23 billion in a New York Stock Exchange IPO, 
		according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
 The company originally planned to launch its offering in mid-October, 
		Reuters previously reported.
 
 But it then decided to delay the IPO over worries the steep global stock 
		market sell-off in the past few months would affect the pricing.
 
 The decision by China and the United States to call a 90-day hiatus on 
		their trade war over the weekend sent Asian shares soaring on Monday as 
		markets breathed a sign of relief that tensions would ease, at least 
		temporarily.
 
		
		 
		
 The music streaming giant is selling 82 million American Depositary 
		Receipts (ADRs) in a range of between $13 and $15 each, according to the 
		filing.
 
 Tencent Music could sell an additional 12.3 million shares if an 
		over-allotment option is exercised.
 
 The $1.23 billion figure is smaller than the $2 billion that was earlier 
		mooted as a fundraising target, though the company never confirmed such 
		a number.
 
 A source close to the deal said Tencent Music was keen to get itself 
		listed this year because it was worried U.S.-China trade tensions would 
		worsen, not because it desperately needed fresh money.
 
 “It’s not worth waiting any longer for a potentially higher valuation if 
		they have to deal with so many uncertainties,” said the source.
 
		
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			Visitors are seen at a booth of Tencent Music Entertainment at the 
			Beijing Music and Life Show in Beijing, China, May 7, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo 
            
			 
At $1.23 billion, the IPO would still be one of the largest by a Chinese company 
in the United States this year, behind the $2.4 billion raised by video 
streaming company iQiyi in March and the $1.6 billion garnered by online group 
discounter Pinduoduo in July.
 In total, Chinese companies have raised $7.8 billion from U.S. IPOs so far this 
year - the biggest amount since 2014 - according to Refinitiv data.
 
 Tencent Music owns streaming apps QQ Music, Kugou and Kuwo as well as karaoke 
app WeSing, and claims more than 800 million monthly active users.
 
The company is targeting a valuation of between $22 billion and $25 billion, 
according to a source close to the deal, roughly on par with that of its Swedish 
music streaming counterpart Spotify Technology, which went public in New York in 
April and has a market value of $24.3 billion.
 Tencent Music, which has a cross shareholding deal with Spotify, offers more in 
the way of socially interactive services that makes it profitable.
 
 It reported a 244 percent jump in profit in the first nine months of this year 
to $394 million from $114 million in the same period in 2017. By comparison, its 
Swedish peer posted a net loss of $520 million over the first nine months of the 
year.
 
 The company will open its books on Dec. 4 and shares will begin trading on Dec. 
12, according to the source.
 
 Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley are 
the lead sponsors of the deal.
 
 (Reporting by Julia Fioretti and Julie Zhu; Editing by Mark Potter)
 
				 
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