Meituan co-founder cashes out US$44.3 million amid Chinese stock rally

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A co-founder of Chinese food delivery giant Meituan sold 2 million of his Hong Kong-listed shares in the company on Monday, cashing out about HK$344 million (US$44.3 million) amid a recent rally in Chinese stocks.

Mu Rongjun, an executive director and senior vice-president at the Beijing-based on-demand delivery firm, sold the shares at a price of HK$171.8, according to a disclosure filed to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday. His Meituan stake now stands at 1.02 per cent, down from the 1.06 per cent previously. Mu is worth US$3.4 billion, according to Forbes.

Meituan shares rose 3.3 per cent to HK$211.8 in Hong Kong on Friday morning. The stock has rallied 240 per cent since hitting a low in early February.

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Mu cut his holdings three months after Meituan announced a plan to buy back shares valued up to US$2 billion. The company said the buy-back was not guaranteed in terms of timing, quantity or price.

Meituan's second-quarter revenue surged 21 per cent year on year, reaching 82 billion yuan (US$11.6 billion), bolstered by steady growth in its core local commerce operations focused on food and grocery delivery. Profit jumped 142 per cent to 11 billion yuan for the quarter.

On Thursday, the company announced the issuance of US$2.5 billion in senior notes to professional investors. This includes US$1.2 billion in notes with a 4.5 per cent coupon due in 2028 and US$1.3 billion in notes with a 4.625 per cent coupon due in 2029.

Meituan is seen as one of the Chinese tech stocks to benefit the most from a rebound in domestic consumer spending.

A new exchange-traded fund nicknamed "China Dragon", which tracks major Chinese tech stocks, landed on the US stock market on Thursday. The fund's components include Meituan, along with other Chinese tech giants such as Tencent Holdings, PDD Holdings and Alibaba Group Holding, owner of the South China Morning Post.

Separately, Alibaba said on Wednesday that it bought back 414 million ordinary shares in the quarter ending September 30 for US$4.1 billion. It had US$22 billion remaining in its buy-back programme as of September 30.

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright ? 2024 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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