The Edge Singapore

Tech tycoons flood Hong Kong with $20 billion of stock listings

- BY VENUS FENG

China’s tycoons are flooding Hong Kong’s exchange with US$20 billion ($27.8 billion) worth of new listings. While the city’s rich are preparing for a worst-case scenario amid a controvers­ial national-security law, major mainland billionair­es are coming in. The latest to do so are William Ding of NetEase Inc and JD.com Inc’s Richard Liu, whose companies completed secondary listings there last month. They follow Jack Ma, whose Alibaba Group stock issuance in November was the city’s largest since 2010.

Together, the three moguls’ firms have raised US$20 billion from share sales in the former British colony, and that may be just the start of a new wave of listings by mainlander­s.

“Chinese billionair­es’ tech companies are helping the capital market in Hong Kong for a pivotal change and secure its Asia financial hub status,” said Edward Au, managing director of the southern region at Deloitte China. “The city’s stock exchange is also trying to make it a more appealing destinatio­n for new–economy companies.”

The national–security law that was approved on June 30 is threatenin­g to erode Hong Kong’s judicial independen­ce from the mainland, a key part of the city’s appeal to internatio­nal companies and investors. The US has already started to make it harder to export sensitive American technology to Hong Kong, and the House of Representa­tives passed a bill imposing sanctions on banks that do business with Chinese officials involved in cracking down on pro–democracy protesters.

While Chinese billionair­es have myriad reasons for pursuing listings there — including a less welcoming political environmen­t in the US — their choice of the city over alternativ­es on the mainland may help ease concerns that the former British colony risks losing its status as a financial center.

Chinese tech tycoons with companies trading in the city now have a combined net worth of US$182 billion, more than the 10 richest people in Hong Kong, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. For them, Hong Kong is becoming increasing­ly appealing as Chinese companies listed in the U.S. face growing scrutiny and potential delistings following an accounting scandal at Luckin Coffee Inc and mounting tensions between the world’s two largest economies. E

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore