Beauty app Meitu produces second billionaire as stock surges

The Meitu Inc. MeituPic application is displayed on the company's M6 smartphone in an arranged photograph taken in Hong Kong, China, on Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2016. Meitu, the Chinese maker of selfie apps, will start trading in Hong Kong on Thursday in the biggest debut since the start of a link with the Shenzhen stock exchange that makes it easier for mainland investors to access stocks. Photographer: Anthony Kwan/Bloomberg via Getty Images

 

Bloomberg

Wu Xinhong, co-founder and chief executive officer of Meitu Inc., became the second billionaire at the Chinese beauty-enhancing selfie app developer after the stock rose for nine straight days.
The shares extended gains since it was added to a second equity-trading link between China’s Shenzhen exchange and Hong Kong on March 6, and jumped 11 percent to a record HK$14.22 at the close on Tuesday. That gave Wu a net worth of $1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
The company said Wu declined to comment and referred to the CEO’s previous statement on how he’s seeking to turn virtual beauty into real-life experiences through its artificial intelligence.
The link offers foreign investors more access to mainland China-listed technology shares, and gives mainland investors access to Hong Kong-traded stocks such as Meitu. The company became a household name in China by tapping a cyber-savvy generation’s growing desire to look attractive online. Its apps, with more than 456 million monthly
active users, help peo-ple slim their faces, lengthen their limbs and even apply virtual make-up in photos.
Meitu’s shares clim-bed after it was added to the Hong Kong-Shenzhen link because “Chinese investors have a more positive outlook on its ability to make money,” Yu Jianpeng, a Hong Kong-based analyst at ICBC International Research Ltd. said in an email. Wu joins co-founder and chairman Cai Wensheng in the billionaire ranks. Cai, who is also an angel investor in China’s technology sector, has a fortune of more than $2.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg index.

REVENUE OUTLOOK
Meitu generates 95 percent of its revenue from selling its branded mobile phones and has yet to turn a profit, though it hopes its beauty-conscious loyalists can be turned into a lucrative base for e-commerce and advertising. Meitu, which is set to announce 2016 earnings on March 24, expects further losses in 2017, according to its IPO prospectus.
“As it’s more of a functional app, Meitu’s cash generation ability isn’t strong,” Yu said. “But it’s trying hard to monetize its large user base, and if it can achieve a breakthrough in social, e-commerce, content or other aspects, then it will help its monetization greatly.”
The surge in the stock price came after Meitu’s muted debut on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in December, when it fell as much as 10 percent following its first day of trading. The company raised $629 million in what was the city’s largest technology initial public offering in almost a decade.
“Meitu’s IPO is a milestone for the transition of Hong Kong’s capital market from the traditional to the new economy,” Cai said in a statement on Tuesday, declining to comment on his net worth. He added that the surge in its shares will encourage “more startups to list their shares in Hong Kong.”

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