Hisense, one
of China's leading white goods manufacturers, has signed an
agreement with Kelon's chairman
to buy a 26.43 percent stake in the group for 900 million yuan
(US$111 million), according to Xinhua News agency report, citing a
top managerial source at Hisense.
Gu Chujun, the chairman of Beijing-based Greencool and Guangdong
Kelon Electrical Holdings Co, agreed to transfer Greencool's stake
in Kelon to Hisense on Friday, the manager disclosed. Greencool,
Kelon's largest shareholder, holds 262 million shares.
Despite recent corporate scandals, alleged dubious dealings,
plunging sales and embezzlement allegations, potential investors
lined up to take control of crisis-ridden Kelon, one of China's
more established makers of refrigerators and air-conditioners.
A dozen leading domestic and foreign electrical appliance firms
including Hisense, Midea and Electrolux have been queuing up to
take over Kelon after the company's six senior executives were
detained by authorities during a probe into the company's finances
by the China
Securities Regulatory Commission in early August.
Hisense eventually won the bid.
"It is really a good buy," said Dong Chen, an analyst with China
Securities. "Kelon's brand name and marketing channels are
particularly attractive to potential buyers, especially in the
electrical appliance industry, where competition is red-hot."
More important, Kelon fell into dire straits not because of its
product line or marketing skills but because of its controversial
chairman, Gu, and the financial scandal.
Dong says: "Kelon is a good company, but it chose a bad
investor."
After Gu acquired 26.43 percent of Kelon to become its
controlling shareholder in 2001, he allegedly started siphoning
capital to fuel his merger-and-acquisition spree, resulting in a
cash drain and production setbacks.
According to Dong, 900 million yuan (US$111 million) is a good
price.
Kelon's A-shares (state-owned shares) traded on Friday at 2.78
yuan (34 US cents). This means Greencool now has 728 million yuan
(US$98.8 million) worth of Kelon shares.
A top manager at Hisense says there are various reasons why they
agreed to the comparatively high price.
"Hisense wants to make a breakthrough in refrigerator and
air-conditioner manufacturing both of which are Kelon's strong
points," he told China Daily. "Besides, Kelon is a
household name and has quality assets."
Moreover, for Hisense, as a Shandong-based company, taking over
Kelon could strengthen its presence in South China.
Hisense, which started out as a maker of "black" goods such as
TV sets, has recently turned its attention to the white-goods
business. However, it has only two air-conditioner production lines
in Qingdao, east China's Shandong
Province, and Huzhou, east China's Zheijiang
Province.
It acquired two refrigerator production lines in the last two
years; Beijing Xuehua Refrigerator and Nanjing Bole
Refrigerator.
"After Hisense takes over Kelon's large-scale production line in
Guangdong
and capitalizes on its purchase, distribution and export strengths,
Hisense's white goods will become China's market leaders very
quickly indeed," Zhu Shuqin, director of Hisense's brand marketing
department, said.
(China Daily September 12, 2005)