Baidu’s bid to acquire Joyy’s live-streaming business for China has lapsed, dealing a blow to the search engine and AI giant’s attempt to advance into the digital video arena.
The Beijing-based company said its US$3.6 billion deal for Joyy’s YY Live has expired three years after it was unveiled because regulators did not approve the transaction by December 31, according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing on Monday. The deal was previously slated to close in the first half of 2021.
Moon SPV, an affiliate of Baidu, terminated its share purchase agreement with Joyy because certain conditions had not been met, including “obtaining necessary regulatory approvals from authorities”, the statement said.
Baidu first announced the acquisition in November 2020 as part of a strategy to broaden its content offerings to better diversify its revenue.
That approach has become less relevant over the past year as the tech industry’s focus has turned to generative artificial intelligence, in which Baidu has been seen as an early domestic leader.
Baidu sees limited short-term impact from US AI chip curbs
Baidu sees limited short-term impact from US AI chip curbs
The setback marks another challenge for Baidu’s efforts to catch up with companies like ByteDance in the online entertainment arena, after its relatively late start in newer spheres such as live streaming.
Joyy was one of the pioneers of Chinese live streaming and its networks for live-streaming games and sharing videos attracted 1.61 million paying users globally. The company’s China-based revenue reached US$236 million in the first nine months of 2023.
Beijing in recent years has clamped down on multibillion-dollar deals, as it seeks to rein in a private sector that it says has been subject to an “irrational expansion of capital” in some areas. The government has since signalled an easing of its crackdown on the tech industry in part to revive spluttering growth in the world’s second-largest economy.
Regulators were seen as unlikely to approve Baidu’s deal with Joyy given President Xi Jinping’s efforts to combat gaming addiction, including controls for minors with regard to video gaming.
China’s top gaming regulator rolled out draft rules designed to further curb time and money spent on games last month, only to appear to soften its stance after a market rout that pummelled game publishers like Tencent Holdings and NetEase.