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BEIJING -- What will investors make of China Film Group, the true film
biz behemoth in the world's fastest-growing economy, when it
crystallizes its IPO plans this year?
An
increasingly intense focus on domestic pics, sharply rising B.O.
receipts in China and state approval means CFG -- the biggest importer
and the dominant force in domestic production and exhibition -- is
poised to become even stronger.
And yet, and yet. The legislative
minefield surrounding foreign investment in the Chinese film biz,
combined with a niggling suspicion that foreigners do not get a fair
shake of the stick in the booming Chinese market, may lead some
investors to hold back when, and if, China Film heads toward the bourse.
CFG
topper Han Sanping makes no secret of his ambitions to give the company
the extra financial muscle it needs to provide better domestic product
and also boost the performance of Chinese movies abroad.
"We want
the Chinese film industry to be of the same importance as its Internet
and telecommunications industries, which play an important role in the
world" is his stated aim.
The Chinese film biz is certainly on a
roll. China's B.O. surged 27% last year to $450 million. Two of 2007's
top-grossing films, "The Warlords" and "Assembly,"
were Chinese co-productions, and Chinese films brought in $273 million
from overseas sales last year, according to data from the State
Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT).
Meanwhile,
foreign, mostly U.S., pics constituted 46% of China's B.O. in 2007.
Hollywood movies made $158 million in China, up 38% from the 2006
total. Chinese B.O. for "Transformers"
was a boffo $38 million, making it the fourth-largest market in the
world for "Transformers" after the U.S., South Korea and the U.K.
Han
is confident the Chinese market will see annual growth of 30% over the
next five to eight years, which indicates a market worth $1.3 billion
by the end of 2011 if his predictions hold. A lot is riding on next
year's slate, which includes Chen Kaige's "Mei Lanfang," the John Woo blockbuster "Red Cliff" and "Nanking! Nanking!"
The
state-owned corporation's tentacles extend into every area of the biz,
from production to distribution, importing foreign films and
exhibition. It has the money, it owns the facilities, it reps most of
the talent, and it has a big say in deciding what movies get made,
either as stand-alone pics or as co-productions.
CFG controls the
Beijing and China Children's film studios, and it operates seven
circuits with 400 theaters, which constitute about half the country's
total B.O.
Naturally, it is the country's largest film
distributor, has the country's sole film import license and controls
national movie channel CCTV-6.
The group itself was established in 1999 after the State Council merged several state-owned film companies, including Beijing Film Studio and China Film Equipment Corp., into one entity.
CFG
also benefits from a policy of favoring domestic movies over foreign
pics for distribution during blackout periods at various times of the
year, such as Chinese New Year and the National Day holiday. The
blackout periods mean Chinese films do not have to compete with
Hollywood blockbusters.
Han is an avowed nationalist, urging
local filmmakers to make more patriotic and "ethically inspiring"
movies and does not accept criticism of China, the Communist Party or
his group.
When Han revealed in August that the group was
planning a public offering, 10 investment banks bid to act as
underwriters for the IPO, despite a failed 2005 plan for a partial
listing in Hong Kong.
This time around, the stage is set for it
to become China's first listed film company. In January, SARFT gave its
blessing to the IPO plan, and it is expected to happen before the end
of the year, once the go-ahead from the China Securities Regulatory
Commission is in place.
The amount CFG will seek to raise is not
clear. However, step one was a seven-year secured bond as the basis of
a fund worth 500 million yuan ($68 million). That made CFG the first
Chinese firm in the biz to issue corporate paper.
This war chest
will allow it to complete the construction of a digital movie
production base in Huairou, a northern suburb of Beijing. The facility,
when completed, will cover 84 acres and cost $127 million. One of the
first projects at the Huairou base is Chen's "Mei Lanfang," a biopic of
the legendary Peking Opera star.
China has lagged on the
exhibition front, and many cinemas are in sore need of refurbishing and
updating to new technologies; $98 million will be used for renovation
of facilities, an ongoing process that will run until 2010.
Many
companies are now busy building multiplexes around the country,
including U.S. niche player Imax, which signed a deal Jan. 10 to
install 10 Imax screens in China. It expects to have one or two ready
by the fall and plans to have 40 screens in China by 2012.
The
first three screens will use Imax's lower-cost MPX theater technology,
with the remaining seven employing its new digital projection
technology, and any screens rolled out after 2009 will use digital tech.
Big
cities like Shanghai, Beijing, Chongqing and Guangzhou have already
seen the arrival of plush multiplexes, but the second-tier market is
still largely untapped.
Warner Bros. dipped its toe in this
market but withdrew after legislative changes made it impossible for
Warners to operate in China. Those same rule changes benefited local
companies, and Han is keen to exploit the possibilities that expanding
the exhibition network has to offer.
China Film's digital
exhibition unit Digital Cinema Line can already boast 184 screens and
plans to increase the number to 1,000 by the end of 2008. The digital
movie project will account for $56 million of the funds raised.
The
big revenue streams for China Film are advertising and distribution,
accounting for one-half and one-quarter of income respectively. The
rest comes from equipment sales and developing and printing film,
agency services and production.
The group will face restrictions
on what parts of its business it can include in the IPO. The Chinese
government will not want any broadcasting assets to go into foreign
hands, so the TV business, including the CCTV movie channel, is
unlikely to be part of the package.
This could provide a
challenge for China Film when it does stage the IPO: how to convince
foreign investors that they will be able to have more than a symbolic
stake in the Chinese film biz.
HONG KONG FILMART
When: March 17-20
Where: HK Convention and Exhibition Center Runs concurrently with Hong Kong-Asia Film Financing Forum (March 17-19)
Web: hkfilmart.com/filmart/ & haf.org.hk/haf/
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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