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Northcom Group

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Northcom Group Co., Ltd.
SZSE: 002359
Company typePublic
IndustryManufacturing; Wireless broadband
Founded2002; 22 years ago (2002)
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsTransmission line towers, Telecom towers, Parking systems, Substation structures and Steel structures
Owner
Websitewww.sdqxtt.com
Northcom Group Co., Ltd.
Simplified Chinese北讯集团股份有限公司
Transcriptions

Northcom Group Co., Ltd. (formerly known as Shandong Qixing Iron Tower Co., Ltd.) is a Chinese company with two main lines of business in the manufacturing towers for power transmission and communications and other industrial products and the provision of wireless broadband services.

History

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The company was founded in 2002 as a part of the Qixing Group, a private industrial group based in Shandong with diversified holdings.[1] In February 2010, the company became listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.[1]

Financial troubles and sale to Longyue

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The parent company, Qixing Group, experienced financial difficulties due to overborrowing and rapid expansion in the 2010s. At the peak of its expansion in 2012, the parent company had added capacity to its core business of aluminum production and entered into new lines of business.[2] Years later the president of the China Aluminum Association would say "Qixing expanded blindly".[3]

Throughout 2014, the parent company and its subsidiary Qixing Iron Tower engaged in intracompany lending transactions that were not adequately disclosed according to the listing rules of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.[4] The Shandong provincial bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission launched an investigation into Qixing Iron Tower into the intragroup lending activity. The securities regulator found the company had violated its disclosure obligations and imposed penalties.[5]

Amid the financial troubles, the Qixing Group would sell almost its entire stake in Qixing Iron Tower to Longyue Investment in December 2014.[6] After the sale, Longyue Investment became the controlling shareholder of Qixing Iron Tower was a 31.87% share and Qixing Group only retained a 3.07% share.[6]

Stonewall takeover bid

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The company attempted to move into mining in a takeover bid extending from 2013-14. Qixing Iron Tower made a preliminary offer in May 2013 for Australian-based Stonewall Resources, an Australian Securities Exchange listed miner with assets in Australia and South Africa.[7] After due diligence was completed, the sale of Stonewall Resources was announced in November 2013.[8]

The proposed transaction required necessary approvals in China, South Africa, and Australia, prolonging the duration of the deal process. The parties worked throughout 2014 to obtain the approvals to close the deal.[9][7] However, the deal was terminated by Qixing Iron Tower in November 2014, 10 days before the deadline for completion.[10]

Diversification into wireless broadband

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After the purchase by Longyue Investment, the company was the vehicle for the 3.55 billion RMB acquisition in 2015 of Beixun Telecom, provider of wireless broadband services.[11] The company raised funds for the acquisition via a private placement worth 6.3 billion RMB with the amount raised going towards the purchase consideration and an expansion of Beixun's wireless broadband data network in nines cities.[11] After the acquisition the company changed its name to Northcom.

Products and market

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The company is involved in providing wireless broadband services and manufactures a range of steel products including communications and power transmission towers.[1] Its primary clients in the manufacturing segment are utilities and telecom companies including the two major Chinese utilities China State Grid and China Southern Power Grid, Reliance Group of India and ZTE.[1] The company is the major Chinese exporter of towers.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Qixing leads the way in iron tower construction". China Daily. June 29, 2011.
  2. ^ "Debt distress in Shandong province illustrates risks of interlocked credit guarantees". South China Morning Post. April 9, 2017.
  3. ^ "Debt Crisis Shakes Chinese Town, Pointing to Wider Problems". New York Times. April 25, 2017.
  4. ^ "关于对山东齐星铁塔科技股份有限公司相关当事人给予公开谴责处分的公告". 金融界. May 8, 2015.
  5. ^ "齐星铁塔(002359)2015年年度报告". 万隆证券网. January 25, 2016.
  6. ^ a b "齐星集团欠债上百亿,山东邹平再临区域金融风险". 第一财经日报(上海). March 28, 2017.
  7. ^ a b "Cutting through a Chinese trade minefield". The Australian. September 14, 2015.
  8. ^ "Shandong Qixing to Buy Australian Gold Miner Stonewall Assets". Wall Street Journal. November 21, 2013.
  9. ^ "Stonewall Resources granted halt pending Shandong Qixing update". Proactive Investors Australia. November 14, 2014.
  10. ^ "Qixing Iron Tower Claimed for USD110mn". Sinocast Metals, Mining & Chemicals Beat. March 9, 2015.
  11. ^ a b "Qixing Iron Tower to venture into wireless broadband business". Xinhua. July 2, 2015.
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