Shares of Kuaishou-W (ASX: 1024) opened sharply lower, falling nearly 7% on July 7th, with losses deepening to as much as 13% in the afternoon session. The stock closed at HK$40.46 per share, marking a single-day decline of 12.04% that erased approximately HK$23.97 billion from its market capitalization.
The sell-off followed the company's disclosure the previous evening that its significant shareholder, Tencent, had reduced its stake. According to the announcement, Tencent sold approximately 273 million Kuaishou Class B shares via an off-exchange block trade to several independent third-party buyers on July 6th. Following this transaction, Tencent's shareholding decreased from about 15.68% to 9.37%, meaning it is no longer classified as a major shareholder of Kuaishou.
Tencent's Exit Strategy
Tencent's investment in Kuaishou spanned nearly a decade, beginning with its lead role in a $350 million Series D funding round in 2017. The technology giant continued to invest in subsequent rounds, becoming the largest institutional investor prior to Kuaishou's listing. When Kuaishou went public on the Hong Kong exchange in February 2021, Tencent held a 21.567% stake.
The recent reduction marks a continuation of Tencent's strategy to scale back non-core investments and realize gains. This mirrors its previous moves to reduce stakes in companies like JD.com and Meituan in 2021 and 2022. The decision comes as Kuaishou's own growth momentum has slowed noticeably. For the first quarter, Kuaishou's revenue growth decelerated to single digits year-over-year, while adjusted net profit fell by 26.3%. Since a peak in October 2023, its share price has been halved.
For Tencent, divesting from Kuaishou serves a dual purpose: it is a routine portfolio adjustment and a move to free up capital for strategic investments in artificial intelligence. The company has signaled its intent to ramp up AI spending significantly this year. Based on Kuaishou's closing price of HK$46 on July 6th, the divested shares were worth approximately HK$12.56 billion.
Pivoting to AI with Ke Ling
Shortly before announcing the stake sale, Kuaishou finalized a plan to spin off its AI video generation platform, Ke Ling AI, through a funding round aiming to raise up to $3 billion. The investor lineup is notable, featuring a rare joint investment from Tencent, Alibaba, and Baidu, alongside state-backed capital, top private equity firms, and overseas investors. Tencent invested approximately RMB 1.363 billion through two entities for a roughly 1.12% stake.
While the investment amount is modest relative to the total round, it secures Tencent a strategic position in the high-growth generative AI video sector. Ke Ling AI presents a stark contrast to Kuaishou's core business, reporting revenue exceeding RMB 650 million for the first quarter, a surge of over 300% year-over-year and a 90% increase from the previous quarter.
Tencent's capital reallocation—reducing exposure to Kuaishou while investing in Ke Ling AI—signals a fundamental shift in its investment focus toward high-growth generative AI. This move also supports Tencent's cloud computing and large language model businesses by providing a key application for AI deployment.
Industry observers note that high-quality investment targets in the AI video space are scarce, making a platform of Ke Ling's scale a must-have for major tech firms. The investment is seen not merely as financial but as a step toward potential resource integration and ecosystem synergy among the participating giants.
Kuaishou has stated that its strategic partnership with Tencent will continue despite the reduced stake, and the company's operations are not expected to be materially affected. Concurrently, Kuaishou is continuing its commitment to shareholder returns through an ongoing share buyback program, under which it has already repurchased HK$8.35 billion worth of shares.
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