Global Times

Nongfu Spring soars in HK debut as investors bet on consumptio­n power

- By Xie Jun Page Editor: zhanghongp­ei @globaltime­s.com.cn

Investors welcomed Chinese bottled water giant Nongfu Spring’s debut at the Hong Kong stock market, with its shares rising about 80 percent at the opening and closing more than 50 percent higher, as investors bet on China’s burgeoning consumptio­n market.

Shares of the Hangzhouba­sed company opened 85.3 percent above the IPO price on

Tuesday, the first day of trading. At the close, the price was HK$33.1 ($4.27), up 53.95 percent, pushing its market valuation to over HK$370 billion.

Nongfu priced its IPO at HK$21.5 to raise about HK$8.4 billion. The funds raised in the IPO will go to brand building and equipment purchases.

The market response to Nongfu’s IPO was overwhelmi­ng. According to public informatio­n released by the Hong Kong exchange, the shares were heavily sought, with the retail component about 1,148 times over-subscribed.

Leading global investment institutio­ns reportedly competed to buy the shares. New York hedge fund Coatue, Singaporea­n fund GIC and ORIX Group, a financial services corporatio­n in Japan, were among the five cornerston­e investors in Nongfu Spring’s IPO.

The hot market response to Nongfu’s IPO is another sign that the Hong Kong capital market is roaring ahead with the help of Chinese mainland commercial giants, after the IPOs of Chinese mammoths like Alibaba and JD.com on the Hong Kong bourse set off similar trading frenzies.

It also shows global investors’ confidence in China’s market, which has huge potential despite disruption­s like the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Overseas investors are clear that China’s huge consumer market can’t be replaced, with its 1.4-billion population base. Besides, a sizable portion of the population is middle class, and this buying power means that China’s consumptio­n market can still expand,” Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

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