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Hong Kong leads the global IPO market since September

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s IPO market is making a huge comeback.

Defying the intensifyi­ng protests that have hurt the city’s economy from trade to tourism, Hong Kong has led the world in initial public offerings since the start of September.

The total value of first-time share sales at the Hong Kong stock exchange since Sept 1 is Us$7.9bil, overshadow­ing Nasdaq Inc’s Us$7bil and Us$3bil at the New York Stock Exchange, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Anheuser-busch Inbev NV’S Us$5.8bil IPO of its Asian unit and another billion-dollar-plus deal contribute­d to the lead held by the Asian financial centre.

“The market has been volatile and challengin­g this year but we are now in a good window for IPOS in Hong Kong, ” said Alex Abagian, co-head of Asia Pacific equity capital markets at Morgan Stanley. “We are seeing a significan­t amount of quality capital being deployed towards good assets, primarily companies that are market leaders in their sector.”

While summers are typically quiet for firsttime share sales in Hong Kong as bankers and investors go on holidays, the escalation of the pro-democracy protests and the Us-china trade war damped companies’ enthusiasm further this year. The total raised in IPOS plunged to Us$1.5bil for the July-august period from Us$11.6bil a year earlier, which was the busiest summer on record with listings of China Tower Corp and Xiaomi Corp..

Sentiment in Hong Kong’s primary market turned around as AB Inbev revived its IPO plan for Budweiser Brewing Company APAC Ltd last month. The world’s second-largest offering this year attracted Singapore’s sovereign fund GIC Pte Ltd, which committed Us$1bil. The sale was priced at the bottom of the marketed range and AB Inbev partially exercised a right to increase the number of shares sold. Two weeks later, Chinese sportswear retailer Topsports Internatio­nal Holdings Ltd priced its Us$1bil initial share sale.

ESR Cayman Ltd, a logistics real estate developer, is set to raise Us$1.6bil as it’s expected to price its IPO at the middle of a marketed range, people familiar with the matter said earlier. That deal could be the second-largest transactio­n in the territory.

The rejuvenate­d momentum is also evident among the retail investors in the city. Some small-cap IPOS saw heavy over-subscripti­ons and frenzied trading in their debuts. Ascentage Pharma Group Internatio­nal attracted orders for 752 times its initial retail tranche this week, while shares of software developer 360 Ludashi Holdings Ltd. more than tripled on Oct 10 on its first day of trading.

Elsewhere, Wework called off one of the year’s most hotly anticipate­d IPO in New York last month. In Australia, Latitude Financial Group Ltd shelved what would have been the country’s biggest share sale this year, citing worries about how the company would trade on its debut. That was followed by Propertygu­ru Ltd’s IPO withdrawal.

For the year, Hong Kong’s bourse could still come in third or even fourth in first-time share sales, trailing the exchanges in New York and Shanghai. So far in 2019, the city’s IPO volumes have dropped 43% from a year earlier to Us$18.6bil, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The city could still experience a late flurry, keeping bankers busy, Morgan Stanley’s Abagian said.

“On the back of the recent pick-up in activity, we remain reasonably optimistic for the rest of the year, with the coming five to six weeks expected to be busy in terms of IPOS and block trades,” he said.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Resounding IPO: Budweiser CEO Jan Craps (left) and executive director, general counsel and joint company secretary Frank Wang striking a gong during the company’s listing ceremony at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange recently. The Asia-pacific beer unit of Anheuser-busch Inbev NV gained as much as 4.8% in its trading debut, a positive for the lacklustre global market in initial public offerings and vindicatio­n for the beermaker in its second attempt at an Asian listing.
— Bloomberg Resounding IPO: Budweiser CEO Jan Craps (left) and executive director, general counsel and joint company secretary Frank Wang striking a gong during the company’s listing ceremony at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange recently. The Asia-pacific beer unit of Anheuser-busch Inbev NV gained as much as 4.8% in its trading debut, a positive for the lacklustre global market in initial public offerings and vindicatio­n for the beermaker in its second attempt at an Asian listing.

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