Workflow
王健林,再割肉

Core Viewpoint - Wang Jianlin is selling assets again, this time in the internet finance sector with the sale of Kuaiqian Financial [2] Group 1: Transaction Details - On July 22, China Ruyi announced that its indirect wholly-owned subsidiary Shanghai Ruyi Xingchen Enterprise Management Co., Ltd. signed a share transfer agreement to acquire 30% of Kuaiqian Financial for 240 million yuan, payable in three installments, valuing Kuaiqian Financial at approximately 800 million yuan [3][4] - After the transaction, China Ruyi will become the largest single shareholder of Kuaiqian Financial, but Kuaiqian will not become a subsidiary of China Ruyi [4] - Kuaiqian Financial is primarily owned by Shanghai Wanda Network Financial Services Co., Ltd., which is part of Dalian Wanda Group [5][7] Group 2: Historical Context - In late 2014, Wanda acquired a controlling stake in Kuaiqian for 315 million USD (approximately 2.257 billion yuan), marking Wanda's first acquisition in the internet finance sector [10] - Kuaiqian had a transaction volume exceeding 2 trillion yuan in 2014, ranking fourth after UnionPay Business, Alipay, and Tenpay [10] - Wanda had previously expressed ambitions to integrate Kuaiqian's extensive partner network to become the largest O2O enterprise in China [11] Group 3: Value and Risks of Kuaiqian - According to industry analysts, Kuaiqian's core value lies in its full licensing qualifications and the scarcity of such licenses in the current regulatory environment, allowing China Ruyi to acquire national payment qualifications at a low cost [15] - However, Kuaiqian has faced over 10 million yuan in penalties in the past three years, indicating weaknesses in its risk control system, which China Ruyi will need to address [15] - The payment industry is heavily reliant on scenarios, and while China Ruyi may provide resource synergies, Kuaiqian's revenue is primarily from offline transactions, which are currently in decline [15]