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Mom-and-pop investors pile into Hong Kong IPOs in US$163bil gold mine

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HONG KONG: Mom-and-pop investors haven’t been this crazy for Hong Kong initial public offerings (IPOs) since 2009.

Hong Kong retail stock buyers placed orders for US$163bil worth of equity in this year’s major deals, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

That’s equal to more than three quarters of the territory’s monetary base. The most popular was China Literature Ltd, a local take on Amazon.com Inc’s Kindle Store that’s risen 74% since it started trading this month.

Small investors in the city are jumping at the chance to buy into higher-growth industries like tech, after years of being offered stock in a string of sleepy state enterprise­s and commercial lenders from the Chinese hinterland.

The most popular offerings this year had well-known backers like Hong Kong’s richest man, Li Ka-shing, and Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd.

“The celebrity effect is driving the market interest,” Steven Leung, executive director at UOB Kay Hian (Hong Kong) Ltd, said by phone. “Retail investors buy when the sentiment is good but potentiall­y don’t understand a lot about the fundamenta­ls.”

Among Hong Kong first-time share sales this year that raised more than US$500mil, four deals saw retail investors apply for at least 100 times the amount of stock initially offered to them.

The last time Hong Kong hosted so many hot deals was in 2009, when five major transactio­ns attracted that level of retail interest ranging from cement maker BBMG Corp to drug distributo­r Sinopharm Group Co, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Every IPO on Hong Kong’s main board must set aside stock for small investors, giving them early access to deals that they’re not afforded in most other major markets like the United States. Hong Kong listing candidates usually reserve 10% of their IPO shares for such investors, who can get margin loans to cover the bulk of their subscripti­on cost. The tranche can be increased to as much as half the offering when there’s heavy interest.

All that enthusiasm is spilling over into after-market performanc­e. China Literature’s 86% first-day gain was the best of all major tech listings globally this year. That beat the 44% rise in Snap Inc, the developer of Snapchat, on its March debut.

Shares of FIT Hon Teng Ltd, a unit of Apple Inc’s biggest supplier, have more than dou- bled since they began trading in Hong Kong in July. Several of this year’s deals benefited from being spinoffs of companies that investors are already familiar with, said Alain Lam, Credit Suisse Group AG’s head of technology, media and telecom for Asia Pacific.

“You’re starting to get companies that represent the new phase of growth in China,” Brian Gu, chairman of Asia-Pacific investment banking at JPMorgan Chase & Co, said in a Nov 17 Bloomberg Television interview. “There is a certain sense of enthusiasm in the market that contribute­s to the post-IPO performanc­e in a lot of stocks.”

Hong Kong could use some successes: firsttime share sales in the city have seriously underperfo­rmed other parts of the world, even including this year’s technology blockbuste­rs. — Bloomberg

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