Tencent hit by revalued yuan By Vincent Lam (China Daily) Updated: 2005-11-24 06:31
HONG KONG: The mainland's largest instant messaging (IM) service provider
Tencent yesterday posted a worse-than-expected profit growth for the third
quarter of this year, as the yuan appreciation and a lower tax rebate ate away
at the company's bottom line.
Tencent's
exhibition booth at a recent telecom fair in Nanjing, East China's Jiangsu
Province. [newsphoto] |
Its net profit fell by 58.4 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 78 million yuan
(US$9.6 million) in the July-September period, Tencent said in a statement.
Despite net profit drops the company's revenue continued to rise, amounting
to 362.8 million yuan (US$45 million), up 8.7 per cent quarter-on-quarter. Some
204.7 million yuan (US$25 million) came from Internet valued-added services and
121.1 million yuan (US$15 million) from mobile and telecommunications
value-added services.
The profit decrease does not live up to an earlier estimate by Nomura
Securities, which predicted Tencent would post a net profit of 111.6 million
yuan (US$14 million).
Hong Kong-listed Tencent, which offers IM and online game services,
attributed July's yuan appreciation and a lower tax rebate as the major factors
behind the fall in profits.
The Chinese Government appreciated its currency by 2.1 per cent in July.
A 42.4 million yuan (US$5.2 million) loss was recorded from foreign exchange
due to this renminbi appreciation, the company said in the statement.
The yuan revaluation reduced the value of the company's US dollar-denominated
proceeds from the initial public offering in 2004, Tencent added.
Also, tax rebates for the third quarter were reduced to 12.9 million (US$1.6
million) from 88.6 million (US$11 million) in the previous quarter.
However, the company's operations remain on good track, a Tencent spokesman
said.
Total registered IM user accounts climbed to 474.1 million, representing an
8.1 per cent growth quarter-on-quarter. Active IM user accounts increased by 6.8
per cent from the second to third quarter to 184.8 million.
The companies two core businesses - online instant messaging services and
simultaneous online game services - saw revenue growth of 20.4 per cent to 30.3
per cent in the third quarter on a quarterly basis respectively.
Tencent shares dropped by 2.44 per cent to close at HK$8 (US$1.02) after the
results were announced yesterday.
Following the announcement, the CLSA China World Index suggested that the
mainland's Internet market is still immature and thereby maintained an
"underperform" rating for Tencent with a target price of HK$6.22 (80 US cents).
(China Daily 11/24/2005 page11)
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