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The Tencent of Southeast Asia Isn't Really Like Tencent at All

Singapore’s Sea is seeking to raise about $700 million as it goes public in New York.

The Tencent of Southeast Asia Isn't Really Like Tencent at All
Residential buildings stands along a road in Singapore. (Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore’s Sea Ltd. initially modeled itself on Chinese internet colossus Tencent Holdings Ltd. and is often called the Tencent of Southeast Asia. Now that Sea has filed for an initial public offering and given a peek at its financials, the resemblance is starting to break down.

The company, seeking to raise about $700 million as it goes public in New York, does offer games and digital entertainment like Tencent. In fact, the Chinese company licenses hit games like League of Legends to Sea, and owns about 40 percent of the smaller firm’s stock.

But where Tencent is immensely profitable, Sea is immensely unprofitable -- with signs that losses may grow deeper. Tencent’s net profit margin in the first half of the year was 31 percent, with net income of $4.76 billion on revenue of $15.5 billion. Sea has a negative net margin of 84 percent, with a loss of $165.2 million on revenue of $195.5 million.

Of course, startups often lose money before they hammer out lucrative business models. Think Google or Facebook. But Sea is losing more money as it grows. In 2015, the company lost 37 cents for each dollar of revenue. That rose to 65 cents in 2016 and 84 cents in the first six months of this year. All that spending isn’t buying faster growth: Revenue growth slowed from more than 80 percent in 2015 to 17 percent in the first half of this year.

That may make it a stretch for Sea to hit the $4.45 billion valuation it’s seeking at the top of the IPO range, up from $3.75 billion in its 2016 fundraising. The offering will be a test case for startups in the region looking to go public one day, including the ride-hailing service Grab.

“This is one of the challenges of these big, high-profile private companies, including Grab and Uber,” said Nicholas Teo, trading strategist at KGI Securities Singapore Pte Ltd. “Once they are subject to public market scrutiny, it’s possible they will be sold down below their private market valuations.”

The Tencent of Southeast Asia Isn't Really Like Tencent at All

Sea was founded by Forrest Li as an online gaming company in 2009 and originally named Garena. He rebranded the company to reflect its regional ambition and diversification. Sea branched out with a digital payments service called AirPay in 2014 and the mobile shopping business Shopee in 2015. The services are similar to Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s e-commerce platform and payments business, Alipay. 

Sea’s games business, which retained the Garena name, still accounts for more than 90 percent of total revenue. Like Tencent, the company offers games for free, then collects money when players buy virtual items like armor, weapons or special skills. It makes money in e-commerce from commissions and advertising, while collecting fees from payments.

The Tencent of Southeast Asia Isn't Really Like Tencent at All

With Tencent’s support, the startup has attracted marquee backers. They include the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund and several Asian billionaires. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse Group AG are leading the public offering.

“You don’t buy a company like this because of its financials; you’re buying the dream of what it can become,” said Keith Pogson, global assurance leader for banking and capital markets in Hong Kong at consultant EY. The company’s market value could rise to about $5.5 billion if options, restricted stock and convertible securities are included.

Sea has ways to go before it looks anything like its role model. When Tencent went public in 2004, it had already proven it could make money: it reported net income of about $39 million in 2003 on revenue of $89 million.

Tencent has also been able to promote its games business through messaging services with more than a billion users. Sea set up Beetalk Private Ltd. as an operating entity of its online messaging business in 2012, but it hasn’t caught on. 

Li is aiming to reignite Sea’s growth with its expansion in e-commerce and payments. The online gaming business that generated 92 percent of total revenue in the first half of this year slowed to a 12 percent increase in the first half of the year. The still-nascent e-commerce business is growing faster, but the firm’s sales and marketing expenses consumed 71 percent of total revenue.

E-commerce is fiercely competitive in Southeast Asia. Alibaba acquired control of Singapore’s Lazada Group to draw more consumers in the region, while Indonesia’s Tokopedia just raised $1.1 billion.

Lazada poked fun at Sea for claiming that it’s the No. 1 e-commerce in “Greater Southeast Asia,” a far from standard term because it includes Taiwan.

The Tencent of Southeast Asia Isn't Really Like Tencent at All

“This is the first time I heard about the "Greater" Southeast Asia,” said Lazada Group Chief Executive Officer Maximilian Bittner, adding that his company is the leader in “actual” Southeast Asia. “Why did they not call themselves Gsea?”

In the end, Sea’s prospects may depend not on how much it resembles Tencent, but how well it can work with the Chinese partner. EY’s Pogson points out the larger company could strike deals with Sea to promote its own messaging and payment services, and it could boost its stake if it wants more influence in the region.

“There are plenty of opportunities for Sea and Tencent to benefit each other,” he said.

--With assistance from Sterling Wong

To contact the reporter on this story: Yoolim Lee in Singapore at yoolim@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Peter Elstrom