Hong Kong

Brief Hong Kong: TRADE IDEA – Melco (200 HK) Stub: Lose a Little Sleep in Macau and more

In this briefing:

  1. TRADE IDEA – Melco (200 HK) Stub: Lose a Little Sleep in Macau
  2. China Three Gorges’ Rebuttable Presumption
  3. China’s New Semiconductor Thrust – Part 1: Why and How?
  4. Notes from the Silk Road: Xtep Int’l Holdings (1368 HK): Time to Run (Away) For Now
  5. Zhongliang (中梁地产) Pre-IPO Review – Incredible Growth Bogged Down by Related Party Transactions

1. TRADE IDEA – Melco (200 HK) Stub: Lose a Little Sleep in Macau

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Visitors to Macao will notice the gaudy designs of new properties like Studio City and the City of Dreams owned by Melco. Few will know that the Melco of today traces its roots back almost 100 years when it was named The Macau Electric Lighting Company. Melco was listed in Hong Kong in 1927 when it was still managing the electricity supply service for the island of Macau, which it had done since 1906. After the CEM was established in 1972 to supply power in Macau, Melco changed its name to Melco International Development Limited and became a subsidiary of Stanley Ho’s real estate holding company, Shun Tak Holdings (242 HK). With the burden of supplying electricity off its shoulders, the company did what any logical Hong Kong firm would do when its business disappears, it bought real estate.

To this day, Melco International Development (200 HK) still maintains ownership of one of these classic Hong Kong destinations which I will take a closer look at in my note. In the rest of this insight I will:

  • finish the historical overview of Melco
  • present my trade idea and rationale
  • give a detailed overview of the business units of Melco International
  • recap ALL of my stub trades on Smartkarma and the performance of each 

2. China Three Gorges’ Rebuttable Presumption

In my initial insight on China Power New Energy Development Co (735 HK, “CPNED”)‘s privatisation by China Power New Energy Limited (the Offeror) by way of a Scheme, I concluded China Three Gorges, CPNED’s largest shareholder with 27.10%, will likely be required to abstain at the Court Meeting as it is presumed to be a connected party to the Offeror as per the Takeovers Code.

But the announcement states that CTG has given an irrevocable undertaking to vote for the Scheme and to elect the share alternative.

It seems illogical to mention in the irrevocable CTG will vote for the Scheme when in actuality it cannot vote. So, which one is it?

The short answer is: CTG cannot currently vote. 

But understanding this requires diving into the minutiae of Hong Kong’s Takeovers Code. So I do.

3. China’s New Semiconductor Thrust – Part 1: Why and How?

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China’s current efforts to gain prominence in the semiconductor market targets memory chips – large commodities.  This three-part series of insights examines how China determined its strategy and explains which companies are the most threatened by it.

In the first part of this series we will see what motivated China to enter the market and how it plans to do so.

4. Notes from the Silk Road: Xtep Int’l Holdings (1368 HK): Time to Run (Away) For Now

Xtep International (1368 HK) has announced a placing and top-up subscription of new shares event, creating a capital base which is 9% larger. 

XTEP states that they have considered various ways of raising funds and consider that it would be in their best interests to raise equity funding through the placing and the subscription. 

With the share price down 16% since the placement, we examine what this means for the company’s fundamentals and shareholders. We believe the results will prove to be mixed for management and shareholders alike. We highlight how we expect the stock ranking to react, given we the placement was only a few days back and this is yet to reflect. This special situation analysis may surprise you with the conclusions.

5. Zhongliang (中梁地产) Pre-IPO Review – Incredible Growth Bogged Down by Related Party Transactions

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Zhongliang Holdings (ZLH HK) is looking to raise about US$800m in its upcoming IPO. 

ZLH is a fast-growing  real estate developer in China. Its completed projects are mostly in the Zhejiang Province but its projects under development are spread across the country.

It was highly leveraged in FY2016 as it ramped up its expansion efforts but had been able to reduce it significantly to about 260% net debt to equity levels while effective interest rates on debt has been falling every year.

In this insight, we will look at the company’s operations and financials, identify key corporate governance issues, and share our thoughts on peer valuation.

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