A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 17, 2011

US Firm Buys Control of Largest Chinese Digital Cinema Provider

Willie Sutton said he robbed banks because that was where the money was. The US-based Carlyle Group, a private equity firm, has bought control of the Hong Kong company that has the largest share of the digital cinema server market, in hopes of following Sutton's lead.

China is adding is adding more screens than any country on earth and the majority of them are digital. Since they also have the largest population on earth, Carlyle is hoping that their control of this technology will enable them to profit from that market as it expands.

The combination of financial acumen, technology and entertainment is the core strength of the American economy these days, each representing a source of expertise, exceptional profit margins and global growth. The challenge in China is two-fold. First, the government wants control of any industry it considers strategic, frequently demanding intellectual property rights in return for market access. Second, the Chinese leadership gets propaganda and its uses better than anyone nation on earth. Therefore, this is not a free market in any sense. The government may decide to limit growth in order to better control content - and it will certainly favor Chinese product over others.

But as Hollywood has understood for years, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. All they want is a piece of the gross. JL

Jamil Andelini reports in the Financial Times:
US private equity firm the Carlyle Group has taken an 80 per cent stake in Asia’s largest provider of cinema digital servers in an attempt to cash in on the explosive growth of the Chinese film-going market.

China has about 7,000 commercial cinema screens across the whole country, or around one-seventh the number in the US, but it is adding an average of three screens a day, by far the fastest growth rate anywhere in the world.
Carlyle’s latest acquisition is Hong Kong-based GDC Technology, which holds about 54 per cent of the market for the digital cinema servers at the centre of the current wave of cinema digitalisation.

In China, the digitalisation rate of cinemas is as high as 70 per cent, compared with a global rate of about 25 per cent.

The Chinese cinema industry has been able to leapfrog technologies because so many multiplexes are newly built and can directly install digital players rather than having to make costly upgrades to old analogue equipment.

Carlyle did not disclose financial details of its acquisition but people familiar with the deal said it paid about $75m to buy the 80 per cent stake in GDC Tech from its previous shareholders, which included Beijing Capital Steel and Li Ka-Shing, the Hong Kong tycoon widely regarded as Asia’s richest man.

Carlyle was joined in the investment by Yunfeng, a Chinese private equity fund backed by Jack Ma, the founder of Alibaba, the internet company.

Man-Nang Chong, GDC Technology founder and chief executive, said his company’s net profits grew roughly 25 per cent in the first nine months from the same period a year earlier as the company grabbed market share in places such as Japan and China.

The company’s main competitors are Dolby, Sony and US-based Doremi.

“We are really well placed to catch two waves right now – the global wave of digital cinema conversions and a second wave of new screens in China,” Mr Chong told the Financial Times.

Fox Studios has said it will now provide only digital copies of its films in the Chinese territories of Hong Kong and Macao and Mr Chong believes this trend will quickly spread to other studios and regions.

Of the estimated 150,000 movie screens in the world 25 per cent were digitalised by the end of the first quarter this year, up from just 11 per cent of total worldwide screens at the end of 2009.

Mr Chong expects more than 85 per cent of the Chinese cinema industry will be digitalised by 2012.

Possibly the biggest obstacle to the development of the Chinese box office is the Communist party’s strict censorship regime, which bans anything considered politically sensitive, making many topics off-limits for moviemakers and distributors.

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