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China’s Tencent Reports First Revenue Drop

Gaming giant suffered its first quarterly sales fall on Wednesday and has been hit hard by Beijing’s clampdown on game approvals and playing time, not to mention Covid lockdowns


Tencent posted smaller than expected 2nd quarter revenue on Wednesday.
Tencent's second quarter revenue reached $20.45 billion for the three months to the end of June, which was seen as soft by the tech giant's previously strong record. Photo: Reuters.

 

Tencent Holdings, still China’s most valuable company despite losing over half its market value in the past 18 months, suffered its first-ever quarterly sales fall on Wednesday.

Tencent has been hit hard by Beijing’s clampdown on game approvals and playing time, not to mention Covid lockdowns and the drop in ad sales caused by the weaker economy.

The latest contraction marks a nadir for the gaming giant and owner of the WeChat messaging platform, which has reported double digit growth almost every quarter since it went public in 2004, as Beijing’s crackdown on big tech companies that began in late 2020 puts the brakes on its expansion.

Tencent plans to sell all or a bulk of its $24 billion stake in food delivery firm Meituan to placate domestic regulators.

The company said on Wednesday revenue declined 3% to 134 billion yuan ($19.78 billion) for the three months ended June 30 from 138.3 billion yuan a year earlier. It has fallen for two straight quarters and analysts were anticipating the decline.

 

‘Exiting Non-Core Businesses’

“During the second quarter, we actively exited non-core businesses, tightened our marketing spending, and trimmed operating expenses,” Tencent chairman and CEO Ma Huateng said.

Net profit attributable to equity holders tumbled 56% to 18.6 billion yuan, below analysts estimate of 25 billion yuan.

China cut key lending rates on Monday to revive demand as data showed a slowdown in July, indicating the world’s second-largest economy is struggling to shake off the second quarter’s hit to growth from strict Covid restrictions.

Earlier this month, e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding also reported flat quarterly revenue growth for the first time in its history.

Tencent has been reducing holdings in portfolio companies partly to appease the Chinese regulators and partly to book its hefty profits on those bets, according to sources.

The Shenzhen-based giant has lost nearly 60% of its market value since it peaked in February 2021 following Beijing’s regulatory crackdown to rein in the influence of large internet firms. However the $373 billion company has held onto its crown as China’s most valuable company.

Revenue from online games, Tencent’s big profit driver, decreased both at home and abroad, with each declining by 1%. Tencent has yet to receive a new game licence from Chinese regulators after they temporarily halted approvals.

Its social network services reported a 1% increase in revenue as WeChat earned more from its video content.

“In the short-term, that may be its biggest growth driver,” Shawn Yang, manager director of Blue Lotus Capital Advisor said, referring to WeChat video revenue.

Tencent reported 18.6 billion yuan ($2.74 billion) in revenue for ads in the second quarter, down by 18%, as advertisers remain cautious with their budgets, but not as bad as some analysts had anticipated, according to Yang.

Revenue growth from the company’s fintech and business services, slowed to 1% to 42.2 billion yuan ($6.22 billion) due to the impact of lockdowns on business activities.

Shares in Prosus NV, Tencent’s largest shareholder, shed 0.54% in Europe.

“Results are quite weak, but an even worse scenario had been priced into the stock price prior to the earnings,” Charlie Chai, an analyst with 86Research, said.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

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Beijing Fines Alibaba, Tencent for Disclosure Violations

 

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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