JD.com's finance unit raises US$2 billion, doubles valuation
Updated 15:20, 14-Jul-2018
CGTN
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JD.com Inc’s finance arm has raised at least 13 billion yuan (1.96 billion US dollars) in fresh equity from Chinese investors, doubling its valuation ahead of an expected initial public offering, people with direct knowledge of the matter said.
The fundraising underscores investor enthusiasm for big, privately-held Chinese technology companies even as public valuations falter. This week, smartphone maker Xiaomi completed the world’s largest tech IPO in almost four years, but saw its shares fall on debut in Hong Kong even after pricing its deal at the low end of its offered range.
JD Finance’s fundraising round, which kicked off late last year, establishes its valuation at 120 billion yuan, according to the sources.
The valuation is double the roughly 60 billion yuan JD Finance was estimated to be worth after it was split from JD.com, China’s second-largest e-commerce firm, in mid-2017.
More investors could yet join the fundraising, said one of the sources, meaning that JD Finance’s final valuation may rise further.
File photo: a JD.com sign is seen during the fourth World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province, China./Reuters Photo

File photo: a JD.com sign is seen during the fourth World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province, China./Reuters Photo

Big investors in this round include CICC Capital, a unit of investment bank China International Capital Corp (CICC), brokerage China Securities, private equity firm Citic Capital and BOCGI, Bank of China’s investment arm, the sources said.
JD Finance said the fundraising has yet to be completed and declined to comment further. CICC and China Securities declined to comment. Citic Capital and BOC didn’t respond to requests for comment.
JD Finance’s fundraising follows that of Ant Financial, the affiliate of its arch rival Alibaba, which last month was valued at 150 billion US dollars when it raised 14 billion US dollars in the world’s largest-ever single fundraising by a private company.
The investments suggest investors remain keen to put money into online payments and lending services in China, especially those backed by large companies such as Alibaba and JD.com which already have stable user traffic. JD.com itself is backed by US retail giant Walmart Inc and Chinese gaming behemoth Tencent.
Earlier this year another tech heavyweight, Baidu Inc, raised 1.9 billion US dollars from a consortium led by US private equity firms TPG and Carlyle Group in the spin-off of its finance unit.
JD Finance, whose financial offerings include consumer credit and wealth management products, is expected to seek a domestic initial public offering at some point although there is no firm time table for a listing, according to the sources.
JD Finance said it currently doesn’t have an IPO plan.
The firm plans to use proceeds from the fundraising to invest in domestic financial institutions and buy securities and banking licenses, among other areas, sources with knowledge have previously told Reuters.
In mid-2017, JD.com spun off the unit, making it a fully Chinese-owned entity, a criterion needed to obtain licenses to manage certain financial products in China.
Under that deal, it sold 28.6 percent for 14.3 billion yuan (2.3 billion US dollars) to undisclosed investors. JD.com receives 40 percent of the restructured entity’s pre-tax profit and has an option to convert that back to a 40 percent equity stake should the regulatory environment change.
Source(s): Reuters