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China party mouthpiece's website plans Shanghai IPO

by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 5, 2011
The People's Daily, the official mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party, is planning a 121-million-dollar Shanghai listing for its website early this year, state media reported Wednesday.

People.com.cn is on track to be the first of 10 government-backed news websites -- including Xinhuanet.com and Cntv.cn -- to go public as part of a state media restructuring drive, the China Daily newspaper said.

"People's Daily Online is now at the final stages of bringing in strategic investors," the newspaper quoted an unidentified source with direct knowledge of the deal as saying.

People's Daily Online Co Ltd, which operates People.com.cn, plans to issue 40 million shares at 15-20 yuan (2.27-3.02 dollars) each in a Shanghai initial public offering at the beginning of this year, the report said.

The company has been in talks with more than 10 potential domestic investors and has reached agreements with China Mobile, China Unicom, China Telecom, China Life Insurance and domestic private equity firms, it added.

"We aim to build People.com.cn into an internationally recognised website," People's Daily president Zhang Yannong was quoted as telling a news briefing.

People's Daily Online earned a net profit of 22 million yuan in 2009, with revenue of 190 million yuan, mainly from advertising, the report said.

Its net profit for 2010 is estimated to be 70 million yuan and is expected to rise to 100 million yuan this year, the report said, citing CITIC Securities, which will underwrite the IPO.

The company plans to expand into wireless value-added services, online video and opinion polls to boost revenue, the report said.

The website lags behind rival commercial news portals such as qq.com and 163.com -- ranking 47th in terms of traffic, the report said, citing the latest figures from Internet traffic tracker Alexa.com.

earlier related report
Russian Internet venture builds social networking empire
Moscow (AFP) Jan 4, 2011 - The Russian investment company, DST Global, which The New York Times reported on Tuesday had invested a further 50 million dollars in Facebook, is headed by low-profile Internet tycoon Yury Milner.

Milner is also the chairman of the rapidly expanding Mail.Ru Group, which has grown into the biggest Internet firm in the Russian-speaking world with stakes in e-mail and social networking sites.

The shaven-headed businessman trained as a physicist in Moscow before starting out as a manager at the World Bank. He began investing in the Russian Internet in the late 1990s and founded Mail.ru in 2001.

The sister companies Mail.Ru and DST Global have built major stakes in social networking sites.

Mail.Ru owns 100 percent of Russian networking site Odnoklassniki, and also has a significant stake in the country's other major networking site, Vkontakte.

The group owns 2.38 percent of Facebook, while DST Global, the investment vehicle, also has an undisclosed stake of its own in Facebook which unconfirmed reports last year put at a total holding of 10 percent.

The report in The New York Times said that if DST has invested 50 million dollars (37.5 million euros) more in Facebook, its combined stake with Mail.ru would be worth about 500 million dollars.

Spokesmen for Mail.Ru Group did not answer phone calls in Moscow on Tuesday, a public holiday.

In a rare interview with business daily Vedomosti late in December, Milner said that Mail.Ru had "chosen a strategy to have a global expertise in a very narrow sector."

He said that in every Internet sector, there was a tendency for one single firm to become dominant, and that the company had picked Facebook as the leader in English-language social networking.

"On the Internet there is a tendency for 'winner takes all' and a leader emerges in every niche with surprising consistency," he said.

"This is the main issue that we look at. When we made our first investment in Facebook, it was not obvious that it was a winner."

Mail.Ru Group made its debut on the London stock exchange in November and was valued at 5.71 billion dollars on flotation.

Milner told Vedomosti in December that he planned to invest the proceeds of the IPO in Internet projects, whcih he called "one of the most promising areas for the next 10 years."

Mail.Ru Group and DST are part owned by Alisher Usmanov, a Russian billionaire of Uzbek origin who first invested in DST in 2008 and is also a major shareholder in Arsenal football club.



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INTERNET SPACE
Russian Internet venture builds social networking empire
Moscow (AFP) Jan 4, 2011
The Russian investment company, DST Global, which The New York Times reported on Tuesday had invested a further 50 million dollars in Facebook, is headed by low-profile Internet tycoon Yury Milner. Milner is also the chairman of the rapidly expanding Mail.Ru Group, which has grown into the biggest Internet firm in the Russian-speaking world with stakes in e-mail and social networking sites. ... read more







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