Tencent to take China's Sogou private in $3.5 billion deal

Reuters

Published Sep 29, 2020 07:53AM ET

Updated Sep 29, 2020 08:55AM ET

(Reuters) - Sogou (NYSE:SOGO) Inc said on Tuesday shareholder Tencent Holdings (OTC:TCEHY) Ltd would take the web search firm private in a $3.5 billion deal, making it the latest Chinese company to exit U.S. markets as tensions mount between the world's two largest economies.

U.S.-listed shares of Sogou were up about 3% in premarket trading.

The move comes a day after Chinese social network Weibo (NASDAQ:WB)'s owner Sina (NASDAQ:SINA) Corp said it would be taken private in a $2.6 billion deal. Rival e-commerce firms Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) and JD (NASDAQ:JD).com have also sought to return to equity markets closer home by making secondary listings in Hong Kong.

The offer price represents a premium of 56.5% to Sogou's close on July 24, the last trading day before Tencent offered to take it private.

Controlling stakeholder Sohu (NASDAQ:SOHU).com Inc said it would receive about $1.18 billion in cash from Tencent as part of the deal, sending its shares up about 14% in premarket trading.

Tencent currently owns a 39.2% stake in Sogou, according to a letter it sent to Sogou shareholders in July.

Sogou, which was founded in 2005 and debuted on the U.S. market in November 2017, generates revenue mainly through search advertising services.