Corporate China | Alibaba raises cash; Tencent ties with Warner
Alibaba's new mega bond will pressure it to find good uses for its huge cash pile, while Tencent's Warner Music tie-up is part of a new wave of deals to monetize its SNS platforms.
The huge new bond would come just two months after Alibaba raised a whopping $25 billion in its New York IPO -- the largest public offering of all time. It's worth noting that much of the proceeds from that offering went to Alibaba's two largest stakeholders, Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) and Softbank (Tokyo: 9984). Still, the company is hardly in need of money right now, and said in its maiden quarterly earnings report last week that it had nearly $18 billion in cash at the end of September.
So, why is Alibaba doing this when it clearly doesn't need the money? The answer is: Because it can. The same is also true for Tencent and Baidu, which are able to attract big investor dollars due to the huge wave of positive sentiment towards the Chinese Internet. All three companies are playing on that sentiment to raise new money on very attractive terms, which looks like a smart move. But over the longer term, the raising of so much money will also put pressure on these companies to put the funds to use -- something that may become difficult due to the sheer size of their multibillion-dollar cash piles.