Advertisement
Advertisement
Li Ka-shing
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Li Ka-shing with his son Victor Li Tzar-kuoi, who runs CK Asset Holdings and CK Hutchison Holdings. Photo: Dickson Lee

Li Ka-shing, Victor Li buy US$490 million worth of CK Asset, CK Hutchison shares, but investors are not interested

  • Despite a series of purchases, CK Asset’s stock is sinking towards last March’s record low, while CK Hutchison is nearing its lowest level since 2015
  • CK Asset, the Li family’s property development arm, is losing appeal among investors who have a dim outlook on Hong Kong’s real estate market, says analyst
Li Ka-shing
Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong’s richest man, is known to his admirers as “superman” for his knack for picking assets on the cheap. But that magic touch has not been working on his own companies lately.
Li and his elder son Victor Li Tsar-kuoi – who now runs the ports-to-property empire – have spent about HK$3.8 billion (US$490 million) since August last year to buy the flagging shares of CK Asset Holdings and CK Hutchison Holdings. Despite the series of purchases, CK Asset’s stock is sinking towards last March’s record low, while CK Hutchison is approaching its lowest level since a group revamp in 2015.

The reasons for the stock declines are many. The conglomerate’s retail and port operations have been pommeled by political turmoil arising from Beijing’s tightening grip over Hong Kong, the outbreak of Covid-19 and a slowdown in global trade. In August, the group pointed to the difficulty in foreseeing a rebound in earnings. Adding to the woes, mounting tensions between the US and China are posing a new threat, with overseas deals facing increasing scrutiny and regulatory hurdles.

“To investors, being cheap alone is not a good reason to buy a stock,” said Raymond Cheng, an analyst at CGS-CIMB Securities. “People feel there are uncertainties in Hong Kong with the pandemic and the political environment. There are concerns about the market in the short term.”

People walk past flags of CK Hutchison Holdings and CK Asset outside the company’s headquarters in Hong Kong. Photo: AFP

Although the purchases represent only about 1 per cent of the combined market value of the two firms, the move is more of a show of confidence by the controlling family as they raise their holdings when prices dip. That prompted CGS-CIMB analyst Cheng to briefly raise CK Asset’s stock rating between March and April to a buy from neutral, but he flipped to reduce last month after the company’s first-half results and 35 per cent dividend cut.

CK Asset, the Li family’s property development arm, is losing appeal among investors who have a dim outlook on Hong Kong’s real estate market, Cheng said. Representatives for CK group did not respond to a request for comment.

Li, 92, and his son bought more than a combined 83 million shares in the two companies over 79 days in the past year, almost all of which were CK Asset. Purchases have occurred every month this year since March, when stocks bottomed in the wake of initial Covid-19 fears. CK Hutchison’s stock is down 38 per cent this year, while CK Asset is down 32 per cent, compared with a 17 per cent decline for the benchmark Hang Seng Index.

The Kwok family, which control Sun Hung Kai Properties, have been adding to their holdings in the city’s largest developer. Photo: SCMP
While it’s rare for controlling families to buy shares of their own firms as frequently as the Lis, they are not alone. The Kwoks, who control the city’s largest developer, have been adding to their holdings in Sun Hung Kai Properties since May, according to filings to the Hong Kong stock exchange. That’s when shares hit their 2020 low.

Apart from the challenging political and economic environment, CK Hutchison’s structure also appears too complicated to many investors who favour companies focusing on one specific sector, said Hong Kong-based Vincent Lam, chief investment officer of VL Asset Management. CK Asset’s recent diversification effort into utilities and aviation has put off some investors who used to be interested in the company, he said.

“Globally investors have become less and less interested in conglomerates,” said Lam, whose fund does not hold CK stocks. “Some investors tend to give more weightage to companies with a development plan in mainland China.”

Post