|
China Mobile changes in assets strategy
BEIJING—China Mobile
Communications Corp, owner of the world’s most valuable phone company,
has dropped its policy of only pursuing investments that result in
management control, after competition for phone assets drove up share
prices.
“In the past, the only policy was: we have to get majority shares,”
Chief Executive Wang Jianzhou said. “But now, we are changing the
policy.”
The strategy shift widens the number of possible investments for China
Mobile Ltd’s State-owned parent, which made its first international
acquisition last year through the purchase of Pakistan’s Paktel Ltd.
Investors seeking to profit from developing nations have pushed up the
MSCI Emerging Markets Telecommunications Services Index 29 percent in
the past 12 months, compared with a 6.5 percent drop globally.
“The change in strategy by China Mobile could accelerate acquisitions by
the company,” Francis Cheung, a telecommunications analyst at CLSA Ltd,
said. “It is a better long-term approach for China Mobile, which has
been slow to make acquisitions overseas.” The company is keeping its
focus on emerging markets in Asia, Africa and the Middle East for
possible stake purchases, Wang said at the Boao Forum For Asia
conference in Hainan, southern China. The Chinese company doesn’t have a
target investment for now, he said. “Many operators are chasing the same
assets in emerging markets, so they are very expensive,” Wang said.
China Mobile, which bought Paktel for about $460 million, is competing
with carriers including Singapore Telecommunications Ltd and Hutchison
Telecommunications International Ltd for assets in emerging markets,
where operators are adding subscribers at a faster rate than in
developed economies because of lower mobile penetration. An attractive
investment for China Mobile could be Telekom Malaysia Bhd, which has
assets in emerging markets including Ghana, Sri Lanka and Indonesia,
Cheung said.—Xinhua |