Tencent Posts First-Ever Sales Fall After China Economy Worsens
2022.08.17 12:15
Tencent Posts First-Ever Sales Fall After China Economy Worsens
(Bloomberg) — Tencent Holdings Ltd. (OTC:TCEHY) logged its first-ever decline in quarterly revenue, becoming the latest victim of a worsening Chinese economy.
Revenue dipped more than 3% to 134 billion yuan ($19.8 billion), compared with an average projection for 135.6 billion yuan. Net income plunged more than 56% to 18.6 billion yuan, versus the 25 billion yuan estimated.
China’s social media and gaming behemoth is grappling with a deepening downturn in the world’s No. 2 economy, the product of a property slump and ad-hoc coronavirus lockdowns from Shanghai to Shenzhen. The uncertainty is wreaking havoc on businesses from advertising to cloud computing and gaming. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (NYSE:BABA) this month reported its first quarterly revenue drop on record, though the results were better than feared.
Even before the macroeconomic turbulence, China’s giant internet industry had resigned itself to a new era of sedate growth after a decade of free-wheeling expansion. Companies like Tencent are focusing on profitability over the market-grab of years past, after a sweeping government crackdown wiped more than $1 trillion off their combined market value in 2021.
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Beijing remains a headache for Tencent. Although regulators resumed approving games in April after a months-long hiatus intended to curb addiction, China’s premier developer has yet to win a nod for a single title this year. For now, it’s counting on aging cash cows like Honor of Kings to spur its most lucrative business, while fighting newer hits like Genshin Impact and Diablo Immortal. The company, which once relied on a network of investments spanning hundreds of firms to create opportunities and new markets, has since last year signaled it will begin selling down stakes in major Chinese internet investee from e-commerce giant JD.com Inc.(NASDAQ:JD) to Meituan (HK:3690).
Given the new realities, Tencent executives have said that international games, cloud software and WeChat video will be their major strategic priorities. The TikTok-style feed inside Tencent’s super-app is the company’s latest hope of countering ByteDance Ltd., which is increasingly luring away users and marketing dollars.
What Bloomberg Intelligence Says
Alibaba, Tencent and other mainland China tech companies may face fewer penalties and lower fines in 2023 as they increase vigilance on following rules and work with regulators to avoid new violations. They might increase contributions toward Beijing’s “common prosperity” drive in the next 18 months to support domestic economic growth targets
– Catherine Lim and Tiffany Tam, analysts
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The fintech and business services segment — which includes cloud computing — is now Tencent’s fastest growth engine. But cloud revenue suffered a mild decline after the company cut loss-making contracts and ventured into services beyond infrastructure, executives said in May.
Just like Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta Platforms Inc., Tencent is staking its claim of a possible future of the virtual realm of the metaverse. The Chinese company has revamped its aging social app QQ with customizable 3D avatars and Unreal Engine graphics, and is hiring developers to make open-world titles. But such endeavors, along with a steady pace of investment in overseas game studios, could pressure margins before they come to fruition.
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