Investors revive interest in CK Hutchison despite deal delay
Shares of CK Hutchison, which oscillated between gains and losses since the company first announced the deal on Mar 4, reached its highest this year on Friday (Jul 25) after state-owned China Cosco Shipping emerged as a potential new member of the buyer consortium that includes American asset manager BlackRock.
Although a 145-day exclusivity window for talks between CK Hutchison and the buyers' group lapsed on Sunday, the possible involvement of China Cosco is boosting expectations that it would nudge the transaction forward. Beijing has so far viewed the deal as a threat to its interests because it would transfer two ports along the strategically important Panama Canal to the BlackRock-backed group, which China sees as a proxy for American influence.
'Ongoing negotiations and the reported inclusion of Cosco Shipping in the consortium have likely eased concerns over Chinese regulatory hurdles, strengthening investor confidence in the deal's viability,' according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Denise Wong.
China separately warned the parties involved not to bypass antitrust reviews, so as to prevent them from rushing into a deal. As at last week, the buyers' group was considering China Cosco's demand for veto rights to secure Beijing's interests, Bloomberg News reported.
CK Hutchison's shares, which shot up 37 per cent in the days following the sale announcement in March, saw political pressure wipe out all the gains in the space of a month. The stock started rallying again last month as investors flocked back after China Cosco came into play.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The share price recovery shows investors are increasingly betting on Li Ka-shing, the 96-year-old founder of CK Hutchison, to seal the deal of his lifetime. If it goes through, the sale will net the group more than US$19 billion in cash. The renewed optimism is largely due to China Cosco's interest in playing a role in the buying consortium, alongside BlackRock and Italian billionaire Gianluigi Aponte's Terminal Investment.
Smart move
Initially hailed as a smart move by Li to exit a business caught up in global trade tensions, the deal quickly drew the ire of Beijing. With US President Donald Trump billing the transaction as the return of Panama Canal back to American influence, that did not help.
Challenges remain even as Cosco enters the discussions, David Blennerhassett, an analyst at Quiddity Advisors, wrote on financial analysis platform SmartKarma. That could reverse the current rhetoric and upset Trump, who has a handful of issues already on his plate, he said. CK Hutchison's share price could also be under pressure should talks on the sale drag on, he added.
Even with an extended timeline, revised terms or a partial agreement, uncertainty around the deal's value and timing would increase, said Bloomberg Intelligence's Wong. The delay may also fuel concerns about regulatory and policy challenges, she said.
Investors will be watching out for more answers to questions surrounding the deal, including what role the Chinese side will play in the consortium, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis.
The controversial deal has also weighed on Li and his family's other businesses. Younger son Richard's talks to expand his insurance business into mainland China have stalled after the ports deal upset Beijing, Bloomberg reported earlier this month. That followed another Bloomberg report in March that China told its state-owned firms to hold off on any new collaboration with businesses linked to the Li family.
The original structure of the buyer consortium was designed to give the Aponte family-controlled Terminal Investment ownership of all the ports except the two in Panama, whose control will go to BlackRock's Global Infrastructure Partners unit. BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
a minute ago
- Business Times
McDonald's to sell eight Hong Kong retail spaces valued at HK$1.2 billion: JLL
[HONG KONG] McDonald's is planning to sell eight prime retail properties in Hong Kong with a total market value of around HK$1.2 billion (S$196 million), JLL, which has been appointed as the sole agent of the sale, said on Monday (Jul 28). The McDonald's outlets in the locations will remain operational, JLL executive director of capital markets Eunice Tang said. Hong Kong Economic Times reported earlier on Monday that McDonald's planned to sell all of its 23 retail spaces – valued at nearly HK$3 billion in total – in batches, but it would continue operating in existing locations as tenants, and the sale would not affect its operations in the city. McDonald's has around 256 restaurants in Hong Kong, the report said, many in rented spaces. McDonald's could not be immediately reached for comment. In 2017, Chicago-based McDonald's sold an 80 per cent stake in its mainland Chinese and Hong Kong operations to a group that included Citic, its investment arm Citic Capital, and Carlyle Group for up to US$2.1 billion. But the assets remain under McDonald's. The sale of the eight retail properties is offered through a public tender that ends on Sep 16. JLL said it had already received significant interest from a wide pool of potential investors. All the properties are secured with long-term McDonald's leases, and they are available for purchase either individually or as a portfolio, it added. Overall prime street rents in the first quarter have fallen back to 2003 levels, as Hong Kong's retailers battle shifting consumer habits that have led to a wave of store closures. REUTERS
Business Times
a minute ago
- Business Times
McDonald's to sell eight Hong Kong retail spaces valued at US$153 million: JLL
[HONG KONG] McDonald's is planning to sell eight prime retail properties in Hong Kong with a total market value of around HK$1.2 billion (S$196 million), JLL, which has been appointed as the sole agent of the sale, said on Monday (Jul 28). The McDonald's outlets in the locations will remain operational, JLL executive director of capital markets Eunice Tang said. Hong Kong Economic Times reported earlier on Monday that McDonald's planned to sell all of its 23 retail spaces – valued at nearly HK$3 billion in total – in batches, but it would continue operating in existing locations as tenants, and the sale would not affect its operations in the city. McDonald's has around 256 restaurants in Hong Kong, the report said, many in rented spaces. McDonald's could not be immediately reached for comment. In 2017, Chicago-based McDonald's sold an 80 per cent stake in its mainland Chinese and Hong Kong operations to a group that included CITIC Ltd, its investment arm CITIC Capital, and Carlyle Group for up to US$2.1 billion. But the assets remain under McDonald's Corp. The sale of the eight retail properties is offered through a public tender that ends on Sep 16. JLL said it had already received significant interest from a wide pool of potential investors. All the properties are secured with long-term McDonald's leases, and they are available for purchase either individually or as a portfolio, it added. Overall prime street rents in the first quarter have fallen back to 2003 levels, as Hong Kong's retailers battle shifting consumer habits that have led to a wave of store closures. REUTERS
Business Times
32 minutes ago
- Business Times
South Korea pitches Trump on shipyards for last-minute trade deal
[SEOUL] South Korea is pitching the US on a shipbuilding partnership as a key proposal to seal a last-minute agreement to avoid a 25 per cent tariff rate. While details remain unclear, Yonhap News reported that South Korea has proposed a multi-billion dollar project dubbed 'Make American Shipbuilding Great Again'. South Korea's Industry Ministry declined to comment. 'We confirmed the US side's strong interest in the shipbuilding sector and the two countries agreed to work together to develop mutually acceptable terms that include shipbuilding cooperation,' South Korea's presidential office said on Saturday (Jul 26). As countries across Asia clinched deals last week, Seoul's negotiators have been racing to stay engaged with their US counterparts as Washington shifted its focus to the European Union and China. The US and EU announced a pact on Sunday that will see the bloc face 15 per cent tariffs on most of its exports to the US, including automobiles. The latest agreement, which follows a Japan deal last week, adds to the pressure on Asia's fourth-largest economy to clinch a deal. South Korea, where negotiations have been slowed by internal political turmoil, is one of the biggest Asian economies to still be without a deal. Aside from China, other major exporters in the region that are in the thick of negotiations include India and Taiwan. South Korea's finance and foreign ministers are set to meet with their US counterparts this week in a last-minute bid to close the negotiations and the government in Seoul has said the two countries are committed to making a deal before US President Donald Trump's Aug 1 deadline. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Also on the table is increased access to South Korea's agricultural market, as well as a fund to invest in American projects similar to an agreement Japan struck. Under the deal, the two sides touted a US$550 billion fund as part of the agreement on the tariff rate dropping to 15 per cent. The South Korean talks are similarly focused on reaching a 15 per cent tariff rate, including for autos, and the recent proposals suggest a comparable structure. Putting agricultural imports on the table raises the stakes for South Korea's new government. Past efforts to open the country's beef market sparked nationwide protests and any shift on rice imports could face even stiffer resistance. Barring a deal, Bloomberg Economics estimates a 1.7 per cent hit to South Korea's gross domestic product, with market volatility and uncertainty threatening to push the GDP losses beyond that. Overseas shipments were equivalent to more than 40 per cent of South Korea's GDP last year. 'Japan's trade deal paints a positive backdrop but also sets a high bar for others,' Morgan Stanley economist Kathleen Oh said in a note last week. 'Korea and Taiwan may need to ramp up new investment schemes to increase agricultural and energy imports and expand market access, as seen in Japan's case.' BLOOMBERG