ADVERTISEMENT

Chinese Phone Giant Hasn't Lived Up to Its Mega-IPO Hype

Xiaomi raised $5.4 billion by selling investors on its promise as a high-growth internet company. Some are starting to lose faith.

Chinese Phone Giant Hasn't Lived Up to Its Mega-IPO Hype
The Xiaomi logo is displayed behind a reception desk at the company’s headquarters in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Xiaomi Corp. raised $5.4 billion by selling investors on its promise as a high-growth internet company. Some are starting to lose faith.

The Beijing-based purveyor of mostly cheap smartphones has sunk 19 percent from its post-IPO peak despite a spate of positive ratings -- mostly from the same banks and outfits that sponsored its coming-out party. On Wednesday, Xiaomi reports earnings for the first time as a public company, offering a close-up of two of its most important initiatives: an international expansion and its evolution beyond hardware and into online services from music to video, a la Apple Inc.

Chinese Phone Giant Hasn't Lived Up to Its Mega-IPO Hype

Lei Jun, Xiaomi’s billionaire co-founder, has consistently pushed the internet-giant narrative. That helped the company price its IPO at multiples far higher than celebrated tech names such as Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Facebook Inc. But even then the market balked, and the company ended up valued at around half the $100 billion price tag touted just months prior. Analysts preach caution at a time investors are fleeing tech stocks, spooked by trade tensions and a backlash against the industry’s outsized clout. The stock was largely unchanged Wednesday, hovering barely above its IPO price.

“We don’t think it’s worth a pure internet company because it’s not the same as Alibaba or Baidu or Amazon. They can only get a new subscriber by selling a smartphone,” said Mark Newman, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein who said investors he’d spoken to harbored mixed to negative views. “I like the business model, I think it is good. The problem is just what it’s worth.”

Chinese Phone Giant Hasn't Lived Up to Its Mega-IPO Hype

By any measure, Xiaomi’s come a long way since 2016, when growth flat-lined and Lei penned a heartfelt missive to rally his troops.

Now, the 10 of 16 analysts plugging the stock advise investors to again look beyond transient hiccups. Xiaomi’s busy building stores that’ll serve as beach-heads for expansion into emerging markets like India and Russia. Its estimated 190 million monthly active users are a rich pool of buyers for high-margin services. That base should grow as Xiaomi pushes gadgets to users for what it calls ‘‘honest prices.” As Goldman Sachs analysts led by Piyush Mubayi put it, it’s “building a mountain one grain at a time.”

“The internet services growth is highly related to their smartphone sales, especially in China,” Elinor Leung, CLSA Ltd.’s head of Asian telecoms and internet research, told Bloomberg Television. “The good thing is that we’re still seeing good momentum in China although the shipment number is not going up a lot.”

Chinese Phone Giant Hasn't Lived Up to Its Mega-IPO Hype

But to the five analysts who rate Xiaomi a hold, the company faces no shortage of challenges, particularly in the smartphone business that yields 70 percent of its revenue.

Local rivals are directing precision attacks against the company overseas, a key area for growth given a saturated Chinese market. Oppo created the Realme brand for India, selling budget phones online to try and topple Xiaomi from its leading position. At the other end of the spectrum, Huawei is shifting its focus back to Europe, a critical market for Xiaomi’s more expensive devices.

“Xiaomi is expensive in the short term no matter what,” said James Wei, an analyst with Yuanta Securities. “Xiaomi needs to restructure its businesses over the next year, because China is saturated. Re-adjustments will be unavoidable so we need to be relatively cautious.”

Even if Xiaomi fends off its rivals, the real battle revolves around growing services income -- its main source of profit. While it’s made advances in China with its own video, music and finance apps, those businesses barely exist elsewhere. Its ecosystem partners -- the ones that make everything from air purifiers to toy robots -- are mostly domestically oriented. Global smartphone demand itself is on the wane, threatening the device sales that Xiaomi depends on to grow and engage its user base.

“The overseas smartphone business is the key driver for growth. But many headwinds are expected, such as resistance from local governments and competition from other brands,” said Fu Tianzi, an Everbright Securities analyst with the lone sell rating on Xiaomi. “In areas like self-operated gaming and content creation, the company still lags behind.”

--With assistance from Amanda Wang.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Gao Yuan in Beijing at ygao199@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan, Reed Stevenson

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Editorial Board