LeEco drops its Vizio purchase plans

The Chinese tech firm's decision has been influenced by regulatory headwinds.

Update: 2017-04-11 02:36 GMT
Coolpad has repeatedly delayed reporting the results because of audit issues since March, when the annual report was due. Trading in its shares have been suspended since then.

Cash-strapped Chinese tech firm LeEco on Monday abandoned its effort to buy US television maker Vizio, citing "regulatory headwinds."

Tech giant LeEco led by billionaire Jia Yueting last year announced  a deal to buy Vizio for $2 billion, but the acquisition had to be approved by regulators. "The merger agreement to acquire Vizio will not proceed due to regulatory headwinds," LeEco Global Group Ltd. and Vizio said in a joint release. "We continue to believe that there is great synergy between the two companies, and are pleased to announce that LeEco and Vizio have reached an agreement that is a win for both companies."

LeEco and Vizio will look into ways to incorporate the Chinese company's app and content into Vizio's offerings and work together to bring Vizio products to the China market, according to the new agreement. Early this year, LeEco secured a $2.2 billion investment from a group led by property developer Sunac China Holdings, after it had to suspend trading in shares. Hong Kong-listed Sunac said it would plough 15.04 billion yuan into the sprawling LeEco empire, which has interests in various sectors including self-driving cars, smartphones, film making, and TV-set manufacturing.

Originally a video-streaming provider, LeEco has expanded rapidly with investments in sectors as wide-ranging as self-driving cars, sports broadcasting rights, smartphones, film production, and television manufacturing. LeEco's diverse ventures pit the company against Apple, Netflix, and Tesla and homegrown Chinese champions Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba. But the company's relentless expansion has put a strain on its cash flow, and in November Jia told employees the company grew too quickly and was short of funds.

LeEco last year opened a North American headquarters in San Jose, California. The facility was also to become the home for a LeEco autonomous driving research center.

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