Good news for Naspers – Tencent discount “getting harder to justify”

The greatest private equity investment in history is looking even better this morning. When Naspers bought 46% of Hong Kong-based Tencent in 2001 (that’s since been diluted to 34%) it was part of a strategy akin to throwing mud at the wall and hoping some stuck. The Tencent investment has solidified into granite with the group now generating the fourth most revenue of any Internet company worldwide – only Amazon, Google and eBay are ahead of it. In this considered piece, Robyn Mak of Reuters Breakingviews argues that the discount at which Tencent trades to Facebook is unjustified. Thousands of South African shareholders in Naspers, who have watched the explosion of their investment in wonder, will be hoping Wall Street picks up on the theme. – AH  

By Robyn Mak

HONG KONG, April 7 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Tencent’s discount to Facebook is getting harder to justify. The Chinese social media giant brought in roughly the same amount of revenue as its U.S. counterpart last year and was more profitable. Yet it trades at a lower multiple of earnings. The valuation gap warrants a rethink.

Tencent Chairman & Chief Executive Officer Pony Ma attends a news conference announcing the company's results in Hong Kong March 18, 2015. Tencent Holdings Ltd , China's biggest social network and online entertainment firm, posted a 51 percent gain in fourth-quarter net income, missing estimates, as sharing and content costs took a bite out of healthy revenue growth.   REUTERS/Bobby Yip
Tencent Chairman & Chief Executive Officer Pony Ma attends a news conference announcing the company’s results in Hong Kong March 18, 2015. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

In China, where Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are banned, Tencent dominates the country’s social media networks. The Hong Kong-listed company boasts over 1.4 billion monthly active users on its Facebook-like QQ and QZone platforms. Its popular chat app WeChat, which combines messaging, games and payments, now has 500 million users each month. Though many users probably have multiple accounts, they generated $12.7 billion in revenue for Tencent last year, slightly more than Facebook’s $12.5 billion.

The similarities between the two end here. While advertising accounted for 92 percent of Facebook’s revenue, gaming is Tencent’s primary source of income. Games like League of Legends and Candy Crush Saga generated 57 percent of the company’s revenue. Membership fees from QQ and Qzone brought in an additional $3 billion. The Chinese group’s 30 percent net margin is also healthier than Facebook’s 23 percent. As a result, Tencent’s earnings last year were a third higher than at Mark Zuckerberg’s company.

How social networks make money

Yet investors place a lower value on the Chinese group’s earnings. Its shares trade at 33 times forecast net profit for the next twelve months, according Eikon. Facebook shares are on 39 times. Concerns about future growth may help to explain the gap: Tencent may find it hard to expand far beyond China’s borders. By contrast, just 15 percent of Facebook’s monthly active users are in North America. That may explain why its earnings are expected to grow faster in the future.

Even so, the difference may be harder to justify as the two business models converge. Facebook announced on March 25 that it would open up its Messenger app to become a platform for other services – similar to WeChat. Meanwhile Tencent is experimenting with advertising on its chat app, which Barclays estimates could generate more than $3 billion in revenue by 2017. Tencent shares have risen by more than 30 percent this year, while Facebook’s are up less than 5 percent. Expect the gap to narrow further. – Reuters

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