Exclusive: China's Ant aims for $200 billion price tag
in private share sales - sources
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[January 17, 2020] By
Julie Zhu, Kane Wu and Zhang Yan
HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) - Ant Financial
[ANTFIN.UL] shares are being offered privately at levels which value the
Chinese financial giant at $200 billion, two people with knowledge of
the discussions said, lifting it up the ranks of the most valuable
unlisted companies.
Alibaba affiliate Ant, which had an implied valuation of $150 billion
during a 2018 fundraising, is preparing to step up plans for eventually
going public in Hong Kong and mainland China, three other sources told
Reuters.
Speculation has grown that Ant, the world's largest so-called "unicorn"
-- a newly-formed unlisted tech firm valued at $1 billion or more -- is
working toward an IPO this year.
Its advisers have recently approached potential buyers of the unlisted
shares, the first two people said, as Ant seeks to tidy up its
shareholder base ahead of any listing.
An Ant Financial spokesman said the company does not have a plan or
timetable for an intial public offering (IPO).
Small holdings of Ant shares were traded in the secondary market at a
$200 billion valuation late last year, another person familiar with the
situation said. All of the people declined to comment due to
confidentiality restrictions.
Investors worldwide are scrutinizing valuations for "unicorns" more
closely after last year's collapse in value of the once-hyped office
space provider WeWork.
Some Ant investors packaged their shares into wealth management products
so may not technically still hold them all, potentially complicating
regulatory approval for an IPO.
Some executives are also selling some of their shares which are held via
limited partnership schemes controlled by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, one
of the first two sources said.
Under listing rules for domestic IPOs, the controlling shareholder or
the actual controller of a company is subject to a three-year lock-up
period.
Hangzhou-based Ant runs Alibaba's payment business Alipay and offers
savings and credit products to Alipay users. Last year Alibaba switched
its rights to 37.5% of Ant's pre-tax profits for a one-third
shareholding.
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An employee stands next
to the logo of Ant Financial Services Group, Alibaba's financial
affiliate, at its headquarters in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China
January 24, 2018. REUTERS/Shu Zhang/File Photo
Alibaba says Alipay and its local e-wallet partners have about 1.2 billion
annual active users, of which 900 million were in China.
In the first nine months of 2019, Ant paid Alibaba 4.35 billion yuan ($634
million) in royalty fees and software service fees, regulatory filings show.
Based on Alibaba's profit sharing arrangement with Ant prior to the swap, Ant's
pre-tax profit for those months would be roughly 11.6 billion yuan.
FLUID PLANS
Ant has quietly brought back together many of its corporate finance team, some
of whom had moved to other roles in recent years. The moves are seen as a sign
it wants to progress with preparations for a float, two people close to the
company said.
And during a recent meeting with the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC),
China's market regulator, Ant discussed its IPO prospects along with other
matters, two people with knowledge of the matter said.
But any plans are still extremely fluid, seven sources with knowledge of the
process said.
China has essentially blocked quasi-financial companies from going public as
part of a broader crackdown on financial risks for the past three years - a rule
that also applies to Ant, according to a source with direct knowledge of the
matter.
Ant had not yet made progress in getting approval from the CSRC for an IPO, the
source added.
The CSRC did not respond to a request for comment.
Ant, which has applied for a Singapore digital banking license, has been
expanding its payment business internationally and investing in similar
businesses in Southeast Asia and Europe.
(Reporting by Julie Zhu and Kane Wu in Hong Kong and Zhang Yan in Beijing;
Additional reporting by Yingzhi Yang and Cheng Leng in Beijing; Editing by
Jennifer Hughes and Alexander Smith)
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