Netease seeks $300m IPO of Youdao arm

Bloomberg

Netease Inc is planning an initial public offering in the US of its Youdao arm that could raise at least $300 million, people familiar with the matter said, propelling its expansion into a crowded online education arena.
The company is working with Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc on the share sale with a goal to list as early as in the third quarter, said the people, asking not to be identified as the information is private.
A deal could value Youdao at about $2 billion, one of the people said. The firm could file confidentially as soon as in coming weeks.
Netease — Tencent Holdings Ltd’s closest competitor in the world’s biggest mobile gaming market — is delving deeper into adjacent sectors from e-commerce to media content. Its Youdao arm, founded in 2006, explored several business models before settling on becoming an internet education platform about five years ago.
It now offers everything from online dictionaries to math courses and prep classes for important certification-tests.
The company completed its first round of financing in April last year at a post-money valuation of $1.12 billion, according to its website. Deliberations are at a preliminary stage and details of the share sale including fundraising size and timeline could still change, the people said. Representatives for Netease, Morgan Stanley and Citi declined to comment.
Netease is trying to court investors during a volatile time for capital-raising, roiled by US-Chinese trade tensions and worries about a global downturn. But it wants to grab a bigger slice of a market that’s projected to boom in coming years, and make headway against rivals from New Oriental Education & Technology Group to VIPKid and iTutorGroup. Online revenue from children at nurseries and students attending kindergartens up to high school, also known as the K-12 group, could rise 38 percent a year through 2022, Bloomberg Intelligence cites iResearch as saying.
“Revenue contribution from online courses will likely increase for reputable tuition providers as more students from lower-tiered Chinese cities pay for access,” Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Catherine Lim and Sheng Tan Zhu said. “New digital teaching technology may raise the efficiency of online students and increase their academic performance, fuelling stronger demand.”

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