Business Day

Hong Kong’s IPO slump coming to an end, overseas issuers wanted

- Sumeet Chatterjee

Hong Kong has more than 100 applicants in the pipeline for initial public offerings (IPOs) and is eyeing more companies and investors from markets including the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the chair of the city’s bourse operator said.

China’s economic slowdown, a sweeping regulatory crackdown that has tightened scrutiny over companies’ fundraisin­g outside mainland China and geopolitic­al tensions have all resulted in a bleak year for new listings in Hong Kong.

In recent years, antigovern­ment protests, the imposition of a sweeping national security law, and punishing Covid-19 containmen­t measures have also clouded Hong Kong’s status as a premier financial centre.

Public floats by Chinese companies account for most of the IPOs in Hong Kong, one of the top listing venues globally and a major driver of revenue and fee income for the world’s biggest investment banks.

Roughly $6bn has been raised via 50 IPOs so far this year in the Asian financial hub, Refinitiv data shows, down sharply from more than $25bn in 2021. The bourse is on course to see its lowest IPO proceeds in a decade.

“I am quite confident that the IPO market activity will return very quickly in the new year,” Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) chair Laura Cha said in an interview at the Reuters NEXT conference.

“Currently, we have over a hundred companies in the pipeline. Many of them are waiting for the market sentiment to improve, so that their valuations could be better when they come to the market,” she said.

While Cha expects Chinese companies, mostly those from the new economy sector, to revive their capital raising plans in Hong Kong, HKEX is also looking to attract others from elsewhere to burnish its credential­s as an internatio­nal platform.

On the radar are prospectiv­e investors and issuers from the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

“We are trying to broaden our internatio­nal footprint in terms of the products that we are offering,” she said.

“In other words, we will make ourselves much more diversifie­d [with] many more internatio­nal companies and that will be our strategy.”

Internatio­nal investors account for about 42% of investment­s in Hong Kong’s equity market, and that share is “a lot higher” in the derivative­s market, Cha said. “So, we are already internatio­nal in nature, but we will continue to expand that.”

Years of strict Covid-19 restrictio­ns have also badly hit Hong Kong’s economy, but the city has lifted most of its curbs in the last couple of months.

“With Covid restrictio­ns being removed, almost completely now, and the financial markets also performing well, I think we will be able to continue to attract new talents into Hong Kong,” Cha said.

“So for us, there was, like the rest of Hong Kong, a higher attrition rate about 12 months ago, and that has come down now.”

WE WILL MAKE OURSELVES MUCH MORE DIVERSIFIE­D [WITH] MANY MORE GLOBAL COMPANIES

 ?? /Reuters/FIle ?? Confident: Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing chair Laura Cha Shih May-lung says market activity is set to return.
/Reuters/FIle Confident: Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing chair Laura Cha Shih May-lung says market activity is set to return.

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