China International Development's Semiconductor Gambit After Blockchain Deal Fizzled

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
The struggling leather goods maker is taking another swing at transformation, this time pursuing a HK$9 billion deal for power semiconductor maker Lonten. But with a failed blockchain investment fresh in investors' memories and questions about financing, will this reverse takeover actually close?

When your leather goods business is circling the drain and your blockchain pivot falls apart, where do you turn? Power semiconductors, apparently.

That's the latest strategy from China International Development Corp. Ltd. (0264.HK), which announced Friday it plans to acquire a company roughly nine times its own size. The target is Lonten Semiconductor Co. Ltd., a Xi'an-based maker of power semiconductors, in a deal valued between HK$4.5 billion and HK$9 billion. According to the company's announcement, China International Development would acquire 100% of Lonten's shares, including the roughly 25% stake held by chairman and largest shareholder Xu Xichang.

Let's be clear about what's happening here: this is almost certainly a reverse takeover dressed up as an acquisition. China International Development has a market cap of about HK$1 billion ($128 million) and held just HK$1.31 million in cash at the end of June. So unless they've got a very generous banker lined up, this deal will happen through a massive issuance of new shares that hands control to Lonten. It's a backdoor listing, plain and simple.

The market reaction on Monday, the first trading day after the announcement, suggested investors are skeptical. The stock spent the morning session bouncing around its previous close before finally settling up about 5% at the midday break. Not exactly a vote of confidence for a supposedly transformative deal.

A Company Desperate for Reinvention

You can understand why China International Development is hunting for a new identity. The company mainly sells leather goods and accessories, and that business has been shrinking fast. Revenue fell by more than half from HK$56 million in 2022 to HK$22 million last year, though it did manage some growth in the first half of this year.

The financials look even grimmer when you dig deeper. The company has been bleeding money since at least 2021, including a HK$7.6 million loss in the first half of this year. Its current liabilities of HK$63.5 million are about triple its current assets of HK$21.7 million. Over the past year, the company has gone to investors four times to raise around HK$70 million through discounted share sales just to keep the lights on.

In the announcement, China International Development said it has been "seeking to expand its business" and that the memorandum of understanding gives it three months to reach a final agreement with Lonten. "The group believes the proposed transaction will enable the group for further expand its business scope," the company stated.

Remember That Blockchain Deal?

Here's where things get interesting. This isn't China International Development's first attempt at a dramatic transformation. Back in August, the company announced plans to invest HK$100 million in cash and stock for a 20% stake in NVTH Ltd., whose main business was Hangzhou Keshan, described as a "blockchain-based technology infrastructure platform for real-world asset tokenization."

The stock jumped 68% the day after that announcement and more than doubled in the following days as investors piled in on the cryptocurrency hype. Never mind that Keshan was even tinier than China International Development, with just HK$2.46 million in revenue for 2024.

Then came September. China International Development announced the deal was unlikely to close by the Sept. 30 deadline, though it tried to keep the dream alive by saying it was still "actively considering the commencement of the Web3 and digital assets business." Surprisingly, the stock didn't crash. It still trades about 90% higher than before the Keshan announcement, perhaps because investors figured the company was seriously hunting for an exit from its dying leather business.

Is Lonten Any Better?

To be fair, power semiconductors are a legitimate growth sector, unlike some blockchain tokenization platform that barely generates revenue. Power semiconductors control electricity flow to reduce power loss in electronic devices, handling energy conversion and efficient power management. They're critical components in electric vehicles and green power plants, two areas poised for strong growth.

But Lonten looks like a minnow swimming with sharks. Global giants like Infineon (IFX.DE), Texas Instruments (TXN.SU), and Broadcom (AVGO.US) all compete in this space. According to its website, Lonten began operating a production line using 8-inch wafer technology last year and received government permission to start building the second phase earlier this year. The company claims more than 600 employees and 1,000 customers, with R&D facilities in Xi'an, Shanghai, and Germany, though most of its business appears to be in China.

Data from Pitchbook.com tells a different story, listing just 135 employees, though that information could be outdated. Pitchbook shows Lonten has raised $62.5 million across five funding rounds since its 2009 inception. That's a surprisingly small amount for the capital-intensive semiconductor business.

Nobody seems to have Lonten's financial statements, though we'll almost certainly see them if China International Development actually signs a merger agreement. And that's a big if.

What Are the Odds?

The memorandum of understanding gives the parties three months to hammer out a final deal, but there's plenty of reason for skepticism. The blockchain deal collapsed just months ago. The financing for this transaction remains murky at best. And while power semiconductors beat blockchain vaporware, Lonten appears to be a small player in a highly competitive, capital-intensive industry.

That said, this deal has something the blockchain investment didn't: mutual desperation. China International Development clearly needs a new direction before its leather business finishes its slow-motion collapse and creditors come calling. Lonten, meanwhile, would gain access to global capital markets through this backdoor listing, potentially opening doors to the funding it needs to compete with much larger rivals.

Call it 50-50 odds. But in the world of struggling Hong Kong small-caps hunting for transformation, those might be better chances than usual.

China International Development's Semiconductor Gambit After Blockchain Deal Fizzled

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
The struggling leather goods maker is taking another swing at transformation, this time pursuing a HK$9 billion deal for power semiconductor maker Lonten. But with a failed blockchain investment fresh in investors' memories and questions about financing, will this reverse takeover actually close?

When your leather goods business is circling the drain and your blockchain pivot falls apart, where do you turn? Power semiconductors, apparently.

That's the latest strategy from China International Development Corp. Ltd. (0264.HK), which announced Friday it plans to acquire a company roughly nine times its own size. The target is Lonten Semiconductor Co. Ltd., a Xi'an-based maker of power semiconductors, in a deal valued between HK$4.5 billion and HK$9 billion. According to the company's announcement, China International Development would acquire 100% of Lonten's shares, including the roughly 25% stake held by chairman and largest shareholder Xu Xichang.

Let's be clear about what's happening here: this is almost certainly a reverse takeover dressed up as an acquisition. China International Development has a market cap of about HK$1 billion ($128 million) and held just HK$1.31 million in cash at the end of June. So unless they've got a very generous banker lined up, this deal will happen through a massive issuance of new shares that hands control to Lonten. It's a backdoor listing, plain and simple.

The market reaction on Monday, the first trading day after the announcement, suggested investors are skeptical. The stock spent the morning session bouncing around its previous close before finally settling up about 5% at the midday break. Not exactly a vote of confidence for a supposedly transformative deal.

A Company Desperate for Reinvention

You can understand why China International Development is hunting for a new identity. The company mainly sells leather goods and accessories, and that business has been shrinking fast. Revenue fell by more than half from HK$56 million in 2022 to HK$22 million last year, though it did manage some growth in the first half of this year.

The financials look even grimmer when you dig deeper. The company has been bleeding money since at least 2021, including a HK$7.6 million loss in the first half of this year. Its current liabilities of HK$63.5 million are about triple its current assets of HK$21.7 million. Over the past year, the company has gone to investors four times to raise around HK$70 million through discounted share sales just to keep the lights on.

In the announcement, China International Development said it has been "seeking to expand its business" and that the memorandum of understanding gives it three months to reach a final agreement with Lonten. "The group believes the proposed transaction will enable the group for further expand its business scope," the company stated.

Remember That Blockchain Deal?

Here's where things get interesting. This isn't China International Development's first attempt at a dramatic transformation. Back in August, the company announced plans to invest HK$100 million in cash and stock for a 20% stake in NVTH Ltd., whose main business was Hangzhou Keshan, described as a "blockchain-based technology infrastructure platform for real-world asset tokenization."

The stock jumped 68% the day after that announcement and more than doubled in the following days as investors piled in on the cryptocurrency hype. Never mind that Keshan was even tinier than China International Development, with just HK$2.46 million in revenue for 2024.

Then came September. China International Development announced the deal was unlikely to close by the Sept. 30 deadline, though it tried to keep the dream alive by saying it was still "actively considering the commencement of the Web3 and digital assets business." Surprisingly, the stock didn't crash. It still trades about 90% higher than before the Keshan announcement, perhaps because investors figured the company was seriously hunting for an exit from its dying leather business.

Is Lonten Any Better?

To be fair, power semiconductors are a legitimate growth sector, unlike some blockchain tokenization platform that barely generates revenue. Power semiconductors control electricity flow to reduce power loss in electronic devices, handling energy conversion and efficient power management. They're critical components in electric vehicles and green power plants, two areas poised for strong growth.

But Lonten looks like a minnow swimming with sharks. Global giants like Infineon (IFX.DE), Texas Instruments (TXN.SU), and Broadcom (AVGO.US) all compete in this space. According to its website, Lonten began operating a production line using 8-inch wafer technology last year and received government permission to start building the second phase earlier this year. The company claims more than 600 employees and 1,000 customers, with R&D facilities in Xi'an, Shanghai, and Germany, though most of its business appears to be in China.

Data from Pitchbook.com tells a different story, listing just 135 employees, though that information could be outdated. Pitchbook shows Lonten has raised $62.5 million across five funding rounds since its 2009 inception. That's a surprisingly small amount for the capital-intensive semiconductor business.

Nobody seems to have Lonten's financial statements, though we'll almost certainly see them if China International Development actually signs a merger agreement. And that's a big if.

What Are the Odds?

The memorandum of understanding gives the parties three months to hammer out a final deal, but there's plenty of reason for skepticism. The blockchain deal collapsed just months ago. The financing for this transaction remains murky at best. And while power semiconductors beat blockchain vaporware, Lonten appears to be a small player in a highly competitive, capital-intensive industry.

That said, this deal has something the blockchain investment didn't: mutual desperation. China International Development clearly needs a new direction before its leather business finishes its slow-motion collapse and creditors come calling. Lonten, meanwhile, would gain access to global capital markets through this backdoor listing, potentially opening doors to the funding it needs to compete with much larger rivals.

Call it 50-50 odds. But in the world of struggling Hong Kong small-caps hunting for transformation, those might be better chances than usual.