SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : C P Pokphand (CPPKY) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:08:48 AM
From: VivB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 276
 
Wren,

There seem to be a lot of foreword thinking managers within the CP Group. They were early adopters of a Thai web directory link and have been featured recently in several articles about "Business to Business" usage. The new US trade treaty with China granting them "most favored nation" status should have a positive impact on China and thus I would hope, the China investments by the Group. So, why is the stock price going down? Is it something specific to CPPKY or just the overall lack of enthusiasm for investing in Asia?

I would feel a lot better about commenting on CPPKY's prospects if I could figure out exactly what these ADRs represent. Initially, I was under the impression that CPPKY was primarily the "China/Hong Kong" portion of the conglomerate, CP Pokphand. Several months ago, I got a hard copy of the financial statements for 1998 from the Bank of NY. I went directly to the footnotes trying to figure out the significance of the company's "investments," "subsidiaries, " and "associated" companies. I ended up with more questions than answers.

Does CPPKY benefit indirectly from the "Telecom Asia" investment by virtue of its holding in CPF (Charoen Pokphand Feedmill Public Company Limited)?

Does CPPKY get a "slice" of the 7-Eleven Investment Pie by virtue of its holding in CPF?

How much does the poultry market really impact the CPPKY portion of the conglomerate? I don't remember exactly when I heard the news report that Tyson Chicken's earnings for the quarter were down due to an oversupply of chickens. I remember wondering what, if any, impact that might be having on CPPKY. I even wondered if the CP Group might actually be part of the 'cause' of the oversupply.

What about those insurance companies? Will CPPKY benefit from that? It seems likely since the CP Pokphand Finance Co. Ltd. is 100% owned (in 1998 anyway) by CPPKY.

Footnote 17 mentioned the November 17, 1998, restructuring of CPF which reduced CPPKY's holding from 25% to 19.2%. This means that CPF is now classified as a long term investment. However, what exactly is this company? The "main" Thai Parent? The Thai Agribusiness? How does Charoen Pokphand Feedmill Public Company Limited relate to Charoen Pokphand Foods PLC which recently issued new shares (see article excerpt below):

<<COMPANY REPORTS: The Nation (Thailand); 07-06-2000

CHAROEN POKPHAND FOODS PLC informed the Stock Exchange of Thailand
(SET) that it has sold Bt1.9 billion capital increase shares to its shareholders.
A further 1.6 million shares will be offered later for private placement.>>

Even if this sale had a dilutive effect on CPPKY's holding in CPF, it happened almost a month ago so one would think that any "impact" would have been factored into the stock price by now. There have been several favorable articles recently on the CP Group activities so I don't think the stock price is down because of anything directly related to the company.

Perhaps it is hard to be optimistic about a recovery in Asia when the Federal Reserve keeps raising interest rates in the US? I have some IRA shares in the Asian mutual fund, GFASX. They are down 15% since April so I haven't been too surprised that CPPKY was heading in a similar direction. Many of these Asian companies have US debt. I expect that the major banks & the government also have US debt. If the cost of this borrowing increases due to the rise in US interest rates, wouldn't that weaken their currency? If the US economy cools, will that throw the 'recovering' Asian economy into a recession? Is it really the Asian government's fault or is it the US Federal Reserve policies which are to blame? What do you think?

Viv



To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:14:30 AM
From: VivB  Respond to of 276
 
May 16, 2000 Article on the Thai Telecommunications Industry mentioning Telecom Asia as part of analysis--

TAC clinches Telenor tie-up,
The Nation (Thailand)
by Usanee Mongkolporn; 05-16-2000

The tieup between Telenor AS and Total Access Communication Plc (TAC)will lead to fiercer competition in the Thai telecoms market before full deregulation in 2006 since all leading operators are now on an equal footing.

Yesterday, Telenor, a leading telecom, information technology and media company based in Norway, said it would enter into a strategic alliance with TAC, the second biggest local mobilephone operator.

The deal - worth about US$720 million, including investment in TAC as well as its parent United Communication Industry Plc - makes TAC the first
local major telecom to hook up with a European partner and the last to find a foreign partner.

A telecom analyst pointed out that for a local operator it is a must to forge a partnership with a foreign telecom that can leverage its successful experience accrued in a highly competitive and advanced market to benefit
the Thai partner.

For example, USbased Bell Atlantic has helped its metropolitan phone company partner, TelecomAsia Corporation Plc, to improve its management and marketing strategy.

"The extensive experience of Bell Atlantic in a fiercely competitive market such as the US is very valuable for TelecomAsia," the analyst said.

He added that like Bell Atlantic, Telenor would optimally parlay its successful strategies in the European market to enhance TAC's operation.

"When all local telecoms team up with overseas partners, they'll be on a level playing field. Unlike earlier, there'll be no big competitive gaps among them. This will definitely prompt an intense battle before full market liberalisation in 2006," the analyst said.

Advance Info Service (AIS), the biggest local mobilephone operator, took Singapore Telecommunications (SingTel) as its partner.

Digital Phone Company (DPC), which was recently taken over by Shin Corporations Plc, the largest telecom company and a parent company of AIS, teamed up with Telekom Malaysia.

Two telecom companies are left without a foreign strategic partner. Ailing provincial telephone company, Thai Telephone & Telecommunications Plc, is still undergoing its debtrestructuring process.

The other telecom is 1800MHz wireless operator Bangkok Telecom Holding, formerly known as Wireless Communications Service.

Bangkok Telecom is a newly acquired subsidiary of Chareon Pokphand,one of the country's largest conglomerates and a parent company of TelecomAsia.

However, the analyst questioned the potential of SingTel to forge tenable strategies in a free market, compared with stateowned Telenor. SingTel had enjoyed a long monopoly in Singapore before being exposed to
real competition in the past two years.

"It's doubtful how much the company can contribute to AIS in the new landscape with Telenor coming on the scene," the analyst said.

So far AIS, with 1.3 million subscribers, has secured a share of about 50 per cent share of the cellular market, while TAC has 45 per cent with 1.1 million subscribers. But the halcyon days of AIS are likely to fade
away if it moves clumsily to safeguard its slice of the pie.

But Boonklee Plangsiri, chairman of Shin Corps, looks optimistically at the advent of foreign players taking stakes in his business rivals, saying they would help Thai telecom operators to whittle away their debts.

"From an overall perspective, it is more of a boon than a bust for the telecom industry and Thailand as a whole. The overseas partners will indirectly help Thailand bring down the gigantic amount of nonperforming loans," Boonklee said.

He remarked that telecoms would inevitably follow the same path as the banking industry by opening their doors to newcomers.

"When all telecom operators have secured a foreign partner, this would mark the real beginning of deregulation when an operator from every country can participate in the domestic market directly or indirectly," Boonklee
said.

But no matter who comes in, he pointed out, it is the local telecom operators that will determine their own fate and the direction of the market.

"What the foreign partners will do is inject money and bring in technology support. But where we will go depends on our own decisions," Boonklee said.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES,INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.



To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:31:23 AM
From: VivB  Respond to of 276
 
July, 2000, 3 articles mentioning B2B potential and quoting CP Group. The use of the "7-Elevens" was originally announced with the visit by Microsoft Executives and the investment in Microsoft Software in May, 1999. Looks like they are making progress with that idea.

Suppliers told to meet Net standards, NATION
( The Nation (Thailand) )
NOPHAKHUN LIMSAMARNPHUN; 07-31-2000

THE country's 400,000 small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are being urged to jump on the business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce bandwagon now instead of later because US-led global markets have begun to require suppliers to meet new Internet-based standards on sourcing, procurement
and social accountability.

Only 2.5 per cent of Thailand's SME suppliers are ready to meet the new standards, according to a panel discussion organized by The Nation
last week.

Meanwhile, companies will have to learn more about e-commerce standards while developing projects to create sustainable Internet-based businesses, said Phanu Limmanont, assistant vice president of Counter Service
Co Ltd and Retail Link (Thailand), the e-commerce units of Charoen Pokphand Group.

"We used to have about 500,000 SMEs but some 100,000 went under (because of the economic crisis). Of the remaining 400,000, only 10,000 can now meet global e-commerce standards. We cannot wait for B2B to start.
We have to push.

"The (next) government will have to help. So far, we've not heard any substantial policies on this important issue."

Phanu said Thai businesses will have to find out how to leverage what they have been doing in terms of both products and services if they are going to stay competitive in the global marketplace driven by the Internet.

Kartchai Jamkajornkeit, president of Apparel Avenue Co, an exporter of ready-made garments, said major buyers now want more information about the production process so they can quickly respond to the needs of importers and retailers.

"This means our production operation will be on the web. After keying in the password, they can check the production status of their orders.

"In supply chain management, this e-sourcing trend is coming. Instead of sending people to Thailand, China or other producer countries, they will source on the web using new standards. They don't have to fly here, but can cut deals on the Net. Factories that pass these criteria will be
allowed to enter the e-source network.

"We're among the first in the industry with ISO 9200 and first in Asean with ISO 14100 and Social Accountability 8000 on human rights, which is sought after by the US market. We hope to be among the sources that
meet the criteria," Kartchai said.

However, if the real sector or smaller Thai suppliers aren't ready, e-sourcing won't be possible. Even some of Apparel Avenue's own suppliers are still lacking an awareness and understanding of the system, he said.

"These factories still have one hand on the keyboard and the other hand speaking on the phone shouting to their clients in the traditional manner. But there are also SMEs that find it necessary to upgrade rapidly
to meet requirements in foreign markets. The government sector needs to help educate them and give them incentives to follow up on this trend."

Trin Tantsetthi, president of Internet Thailand Co Ltd, said B2B should lead e-commerce in Thailand, even though his company decided to try its hand at B2C e-commerce first.

"Earlier we thought B2B would need a high investment to automate all back-end operations," he said. "But we still don't expect our B2C venture,
which was launched on May 1, to grow to Bt100 million or Bt1 billion in turnover yet. This will simply help educate the market. Since May 1, there have been 20,000 hits on Thai.com's shopping site."

For Pichet Durongkaveroj, director of Electronic Commerce Resource Centre, National Electronic and Computer Technology Centre (NECTEC), said e-commerce is also important for Thailand's tens of thousands of farm and
other rural cooperatives.

"E-commerce can benefit villagers who will be able to sell their crops and other products with more bargaining power via the Internet ," he told the Nation panel, adding that government ministries such as those of the interior, agriculture, and industry have yet to respond to this initiative.

The concept is based on the idea of grouping the cooperatives and their output together, giving the villagers much stronger bargaining power in the market. This market will also not be limited to the producers' own
villages, towns or cities, but a much wider interprovincial or nationwide or even export markets. Villagers can also share resources such as logistics.

Pichet told the panel that e-commerce cooperatives do not require a big investment. The government only needs to equip cooperatives with the basic Internet tools.

"The villagers do not even need to know about the Internet, but cooperative operators do have to know. We simply need one or two successful cases or schemes to kick off the idea."

"Some people are also worried that rural villagers won't have access to phone lines. The fact is that if we adopt the policy for e-commerce coops it is not going to be an issue since we'll have a manageable size which is attractive for telecom operators and ISPs to provide services. It's the demand side approach. There will also be business opportunities for ASPs (application service providers) and web designers etc"

Pichet suggests the government start with a pilot project for one or a few cooperatives to do e-commerce for handicrafts, another for the food business and a third for herbal products. "In fact, the e-commerce cooperative
project is a good idea for the next election. It may sound difficult for those who cannot visualise it. But e-cooperatives will satisfy existing demand."

Pichet said NECTEC has also adopted a sectoral approach to promote e-commerce, starting with tourism and the country's top-10 export products. It also aims to tap other companies with the critical mass such as Board
of Investment-promoted firms and the 6,000 enterprises that are members of the Department of Export Promotion (DEP).

"No big plan is required. The DEP only needs to facilitate these enterprises with a little push to start doing some e-commerce. From the strategic point of view, we need to do b2b e-commerce before b2c (business to consumers) because b2b are masses and b2c will follow naturally," he said.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES,INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.


E-BUSINESS: A B2B boom may over take B2C, The Nation (Thailand); 07-26-2000

The Internet evolution in Thailand will likely see a boom in business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce ahead of the business-to-consumer (B2C) mode due to a number of factors now favorable to B2B.

According to a report by US investment bank Goldman Sachs, B2B transactions (in which a firm does business with another via the Internet)in the Asia Pacific region are forecast to reach US$440 billion by 2005, representing 10 per cent of the world's total B2B transactions of US$4.5
trillion.

While it is still early days in Internet use for Thailand and other countries in the region, there are already a number of corporate leaders, including Hong Kong's Hutchison, Li & Fung and Hong Kong Shanghai Banking
Corp. as well as Thailand's Siam Cement plc.

Siam Cement, a newcomer on the B2B scene, plans to implement an e-commerce system that will link its manufacturing operations of cement and other building materials and industrial products with its vast network
of distributors and dealers. This will enhance its competitiveness in the New Economy which is arriving here. Siam Cement is on the list of recommended regional stocks of Goldman Sachs.

Besides this traditional brickS-and-mortar company, Thailand has also seen a number of pure Internet start-ups such as Point Asia Dotcom of the Loxley Group, Samart Exchange of the Samart Group and Shin Group's e-commerce
units which want to tap the potentially lucrative B2B industry.

At this stage, B2B appears to have a better chance to succeed than B2C. B2B will cater to the business community which is keen to increase its efficiency with Internet technology in the globalised marketplace in
order to stay ahead of the competition, whereas B2C aims to capture individual consumers, especially those aged from 15 to 35.

The needs of the business community should be much less diverse than those of individual consumers. For instance, Point Asia Dotcom wants to remove inefficiencies in the oil and other industries. Its Point Asia Oil
recently signed an MOU with the Bank of Asia to provide B2B solutions to the petroleum industry via a system in which oil buyers and sellers will use the Internet to improve logistics and speed up transactions with e-pricing, e-production, e-invoicing, and e-payment.

Point Asia has also set its sights on financial services, the automobile industry, building materials, and medical supplies.

The Loxley Group has a shareholding in the Singapore-based Bex.com, the regional e-marketplace, also partly owned by Shin Group.

As for the Samart Group, its Samart Exchange wants to enter into B2B e-commerce for the jewelry and rice industries.

Second, the income model of B2B is more encouraging for investors since businesses have more money than young consumers, many of whom are still financially dependent on their parents.

Third, business firms already have good logistics and other forms of infrastructure to facilitate e-commerce whereas B2C will still need a higher PC penetration rate than the current 1.2 million PCs in the country. Businesses
can also turn to mobile commerce via the new generation of cellular phones using wireless application protocol (WAP) technology.

The success of B2C also hinges upon the liberalization of the ISP (internet service provider) industry, due later this year, as well as other
cost reductions, especially in logistics that allow operators to deliver goods purchased on the Net to individual buyers in a cost-effective manner.
The Thai postal service is still a long way from achieving a high level of efficiency for e-commerce.

As a consequence, some pundits now believe that B2C e-commerce, which has gained much popularity lately, will not take off until 2003. The recent collapse of US Internet stocks also has dampened the hopes of investors for an early takeoff since even giants like Amazon.com now face questions of whether they will survive.

In the meantime, B2B will likely establish itself here sooner and overtake B2C.

This scenario probably led to last week's launch of vLinx, a San Francisco-based B2B and door-to-door e-commerce service - with co.- investment
by Hutchison Whampao's Li Ka Shing of Hong Kong - to tap the surplus consumer-goods market of Thailand, Malaysia and China. The Asean market of surplus goods alone is estimated to be worth US$3 billion while the Chinese market is
estimated to be US$10 billion.

The innovative vLinx will allow Thai suppliers of 29 product categories from baby and health care products to jewelry and furniture to reach buyers directly in the US and Canada - where Internet penetration is the highest in the world. Transactions will derive from competitive
bidding that removes the middleman. The US market is currently Thailand's largest export outlet.

In a following stage, vLinx will move into made-to-order goods to be sold at fixed prices. This network provides comprehensive services from banking (including payment guarantees) to buyer verification, insurance,
shipping and delivery just like in traditional international trade.

While the B2B model may thrive ahead of B2C due to favorable factors, other forms of e-commerce still have a good potential here and can converge with B2B. Take Saha Group, Thailand's major producer of consumer goods
for example. It has initiated the business-to-employee (B2E) model that allows the conglomerate to experiment in e-commerce with its 60,000 employees.

The B2E model has its merits in that there can a period of trial and error after which mistakes can be corrected to ensure a better chance of success. In this model, the operator has a good track record of its employees
and their income, so credit risk is relatively low.

The Charoen Pokphand Group is another conglomerate that will likely thrive in this B2E model. More importantly, it controls a network of more than one thousand 7-Eleven convenience stores nation-wide that can serve as the point of delivery for goods and services when it enters deeper into B2C e-commerce in following stages.

Despite its clear benefits, e-commerce will bring a new era of intense competition to Thailand and the region due to cheaper and faster information and transactions. According to US investment bank Goldman Sachs, Asia's
larger economies with Internet-savvy operators should benefit greatly.

A recent Goldman Sachs report shows that South Korea and Australia are leading in the B2B Asia Pacific race, followed by Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong. China is emerging while Asean countries, including Thailand,
are lagging behind.
WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES, INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.

Middlemen face online crunch; The Nation (Thailand;
by NOPHAKHUN LIMSAMARNPHUN; 07-18-2000

MIDDLEMEN, wholesalers, and agency businesses in Thailand may soon be swept aside by e-commerce trends unless they begin to offer additional value-added and consultant services, according to an executive at IBM Thailand.

Large enterprises have begun to execute e-commerce strategies to combine the strengths of their existing businesses with that of Internet technology, said Jadesada Kraisingkorn, IBM Thailand's country manager for the software solution market.

For middlemen and the like, the future is gloomy if they do not change with the times, Jadesada said. She cited travel agents as an example, saying their businesses may soon disappear as airlines have begun to sell directly
to consumers over the Internet.

"In Japan, you get a 25-per-cent discount when buying tickets from JAL (Japan Airlines) on the Internet. This has displaced the middlemen, who will likely have to find new value-added services to offer.

"Some other businesses may also simply disappear. This is why we see people flood into e-business seminars here. They want to know what the impacts will be on their existing businesses.

"Thai Airways International is aware of this trend. When the time is right, it will happen. It should not be too early or too late. Stockbrokers are another obvious example. They will be extinct unless they make a shift
to new value-added or consulting services."

The ongoing business expansion to the Internet, seemingly inevitable due to economic globalisation trends, should take place at the right pace so everyone has time to prepare and implement their e-commerce plans, she said.

Jadesada recommended that small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)buy Web-hosting and related services as the first step to prepare for e-commerce. After building on this foundation, they will eventually be able to carry out e-commerce transactions.

Hampering Thailand's agile private sector, the country's political leadership was reticent about participating in the Internet-based revolution
at the outset, resulting in slower adaptation to the New Economy than in neighboring countries such as Malaysia and Singapore.

"Our leaders have long been aware of the importance of information technology, but they could not (visualize the end results)," she said.

As a result, the country still has a poor online infrastructure that cannot yet fully support e-commerce. The lack of English proficiency among the majority of the population has been another hindrance, she said.

Jadesada said the existence of monopolies, government concessions and other remnants of the Old Economy were also delaying Thailand's adoption of e-commerce.

On the private sector's initiatives, she said large enterprises such as banks and telecoms giants , Siam Cement plc, Saha Group and Charoen Pokphand Group have been executing their plans. They are the key foundations
for the New Economy, as they must serve other enterprises, Jadesada said. Currently, however, their online facilities are not adequate to meet the growing demand for e-services from prospective clients.

For example, as the use of cheques will soon be outdated, some businesses want e-banking and e-settlements without using the traditional cheques, but banks cannot yet serve them due to regulatory hindrances.

Jadesada added that a former cheque-printing company in Malaysia diversified into an Internet-based bill payment service after it had realized that its business would soon disappear.

In Thailand, she said Siam Cement plc, for instance, is implementing its plan that will electronically link all suppliers and distributors/dealers to enable e-commerce, while Saha Group will test the business to-employee market due to its huge workforce of 60.000 .

The Charoen Pokphand Group, meanwhile, has announced business to consumer (B2C) Internet-based plans for its 7/Eleven convenience store chain of more than 1,000 outlets nationwide.

From the Asean perspective, she said Thailand appears to stay in the middle path among 10 Asean countries in terms of ecommerce readiness.

"We have a certain degree of IT readiness and large natural resources whereas Singapore and Malaysia , which have smaller natural resources, are better prepared in terms of infrastructures and personnel," she said,
adding that the Malaysian leadership has had a strong vision on IT for years so they could prepare better for the New Economy

The Asean grouping, which also includes Indonesia, Philippines, Brunei, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Burma, now has a combined consumer market of 520 million.

She said Asean should find more effective and collective ways to capitalize on its economies of scale in the New Economy.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES, INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.



To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:34:15 AM
From: VivB  Respond to of 276
 
CP expects to boost food sales by 30 per cent, The Nation (Thailand); by ACHARA PONGVUTITHAM; 06-29-2000

THAILAND'S food export industry is well-poised to achieve global success - but only if manufacturers and exporters concentrate on market demand and maximize their e-commerce potential, Prasit Damrongchitanont, president of CP International Trading Group, says.

Prasit's comments came as Charoen Pokphand Intertrade, a unit of CP International Trading Business Group, said its total sales excluding meat products were expected to grow by 30 per cent to Bt1.1 billion this year,
thanks to a higher demand for food products on the world market.

CP Intertrade became the export and import arm of CP International Trading Business Group after CP consolidated its 11 companies under Charoen Pokphand Foods.

CP Food Storage is the marketing arm for the domestic market responsible for distributing products and serving customer demands.

"We still have many things to do after consolidation, and boosting sales and IT development will be our most important strategies," said Prasit.

He said the company's marketing strategy would focus more on exporting brand name products, product varieties and services.

The brand name products include CP brands as well as Oriented Equipment Manufacturer products.

Main export products include rice, canned foods, food products, non-food products such as kitchenware, plasticware and garments, and services. Non-food products account for 10 per cent of the company's total sales.

The company's service business will concentrate on providing more convenience for purchasing agents, as well as boosting service networks to cope with higher demand.

He added that information technology such as the Internet would play a key role in helping the company achieve its sales targets.

Moreover, the company's Internet network link with CP's overseas offices would help provide better and faster services to clients.

To boost services and export markets, the company is seeking an opportunity to establish new office bases in major exporting markets. Currently, CP has more than 30 offices in overseas countries.

Prasit said the company was planning to launch a business-to-business marketing strategy soon to expand trade via Internet networks.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES, INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.



To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:37:54 AM
From: VivB  Respond to of 276
 
CP gets German partner, The Nation (Thailand);
by ACHARA PONGVUTITHAM; 06-26-2000

CHAROEN Pokphand Group's two insurance companies will be renamed next month to welcome new strategic partner Allianz Group, which completed the joint venture deal by acquiring 25 per cent of CP's life and general insurance businesses.

CP Life Assurance Co. Ltd. will become Allianz CP Life Assurance Co. Ltd. and CP Insurance Co. Ltd. Allianz CP Insurance Co. Ltd.

The German-based group has completed a strategic partner deal to purchase a 25 per cent stake, worth Bt330 million, in CP Life Assurance, said an informed CP source.

However, he declined to disclose the value of the acquisition.

CP Group wants a foreign insurance partner in order to strengthen its operations, network, marketing and technology. And insurance is Allianz's diversified business.

CP received an answering book from the Insurance Department to acknowledge the group's joint venture deals.

The German group will take top management control in the life insurance firm due to a lack of experience at CP, the source said.

The parent company will send its chief executive officer to run the life insurance firm and its chief operational officer will join high-level management in the general insurance business in Bangkok, he said.

CP previously recruited general insurance experts to help devise a strategy to ensure business success, he added.

"Our German partner will help engineer the group's life insurance business in terms of technology, network and reinsurance," he said.

The life insurance firm is recruiting manpower to smooth operations in the long run. CP Life Assurance started selling products this year, initially
concentrating on the group's employees.

Allianz has been developing its presence in the Thai market since 1990when it formed a joint venture with Navakij Insurance. The German company at that time held 18.5 per cent of Navakij.

Navakij in March reported to the Stock Exchange of Thailand that Allianz would be terminating its business relationship with the company. The departure of Allianz was to end a conflict of interest, as Allianz was concluding a joint-venture deal with CP Group, the company said.

The German partner promises to end any problems with Navakij before joining with CP. "We don't want to have business conflicts with Navakij;we are friends," the source said.

Allianz wants to establish its own network for both life and non-life insurance in Thailand. But Navakij holds only one license for general insurance, so it could not satisfy the group's desire.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES, INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.



To: Wren who wrote (258)8/4/2000 12:59:40 AM
From: VivB  Respond to of 276
 
Wren,
Currently, I don't think CPPKY would have much of a stake in any CP Group wireless venture in Thailand (see article below) since I believe Thai law limits "foreign" investment to 25%. However, if the CP Group is successful in the wireless arena in Thailand, will they try for China? If they decided to branch out into China, it is likely that one of the CPPKY subsidiaries would be used.

I wonder if they are they going to try and market their Thai wireless service as "prepaid" in the 7-Eleven outlets? They don't have a "built in" distribution system like that in China that I'm aware of so I guess that makes the China wireless market a real long shot.

Viv

CP units in mobile-phone tie-up,The Nation (Thailand);
by USANEE MONGKOLPORN; 05-30-2000

CHAROEN Pokphand subsidiary TelecomAsia Corporation Plc (TA) is to buy a stake in CP's 1800-MHz mobile-phone subsidiary Wireless Communication Service to bring WCS into its telecoms empire, CP chairman Dhanin Chearavanont
says.

In February CP moved the fixed line business into the mobile-phone business for the first time by taking over the dormant WCS from the latter's shareholders in a deal worth Bt3 billion.

Because CP's flagship telecom subsidiary TA was restructuring its debts it could not initiate the takeover itself lest it draw criticism from its creditors, so CP had another of its subsidiaries, Bangkok Telecom Holding (BTH), proceed with the takeover deal. BTH now holds a 98-per-cent
stake in WCS.

Dhanin said that WCS was now looking for a strategic partner and the best mobile-phone equipment suppliers to install its telecom network.

"WCS will have as its first partner TA, which will then be joined by another dynamic company. But TA will not be the major shareholder," the tycoon said.

After TA acquires the stake in WCS, Bell Atlantic, which holds an18- per-cent share in TA, will automatically become its partner. Bell Atlantic may increase its capital to buy a larger stake in the company.

WCS expected to launch its service this October after losing its subscriber base when it closed down owing to the economic crisis.

However, the launch will now be postponed to early next year because BTH has not yet completed either the supplier-selection process or its financial plan for WCS.

"We have to wait for the completion of WCS's telecom network installation before it makes its debut," Dhanin said.

Initially WCS will limit its coverage to the Bangkok area, where it plans to invest approximately Bt5 billion.

The world's leading telecom network equipment suppliers are racing to woo WCS after the announcement of its urgent requirement for a telecom network solution.

To provide services in provincial areas, WCS is expected to link up with the roaming system of Total Access Communication Plc, the country's second largest mobile-phone operator.

CP wants its first mobile-phone service to be a low-cost alternative for consumers who are unhappy about the high charges demanded by existing mobile-phone operators.

But at the end of this year the domestic market will be flooded with lowcost mobile-phone services apart from that provided by WCS.

One of them is City Mobile, which will be launched by Digital Phone Company (DPC), an 1800-MHz mobile-phone operator controlled by Shin Corporations Plc, and the company plans to provide the service at a monthly charge of
only Bt300.

The government also wants part of the action. The Transport and Communications Ministry next week is to submit for consideration by the Cabinet, its own 1900-MHz mobile phone project, which aims to provide a low cost alternative for consumers.

WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC., A JOINT VENTURE OF FDCH, INC. AND WORLD TIMES, INC. NO PORTION OF MATERIALS CONTAINED HEREIN MAY BE USED IN ANY MEDIA WITHOUT ATTRIBUTION TO WORLDSOURCES ONLINE, INC.