Bottom line: Didi Kuaidi’s IPO could come as early as the fourth quarter, with Hong Kong, China and New York standing equal chances of winning what could be the year’s biggest China Internet listing, worth up to $2 billion.
Didi Kuaidi to list in Q4
Just days after launching a massive promotion to attract new customers to its private hired car services, Didi Kuaidi is reportedly starting the process that could end with a major IPO for China’s largest taxi app operator by year end. Such a development wouldn’t come as a huge surprise, following the company’s formation earlier this year through the merger of 2 bitter rivals to create a Chinese market leader reportedly valued at up to $9 billion.
But equally interesting will be where this fast-driving company chooses to list. Just a year ago the answer would have almost certainly been New York, which is where most of China’s top Internet companies are traded. But a recent boom in China’s own stock markets and a new program that allows mainland investors to buy Hong Kong stocks have made Chinese Internet companies start to seriously consider both of these markets for IPOs as well. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Linekong’s IPO should price in the middle of its range and post modest gains on its trading debut, while Dalian Wanda will price near the bottom of its range and debut flat to down slightly.
Linekong aims for December 19 trading debut
The year-end rush of IPOs is steaming ahead in Hong Kong, with online game operator Linekong popping back into the headlines for a year-end listing, as property giant Dalian Wanda starts to sell its own IPO story to investors. The former deal is relatively large for an online game company, aiming to raise nearly $200 million. Meantime, the latter could become the biggest IPO Hong Kong has seen in several years, with the potential to raise nearly $4 billion. Frankly speaking, neither of these deals looks too exciting to me as both come in sectors plagued by overcapacity and stiff competition. But that said, at least Dalian Wanda could be a good longer-term bet due to its status as one of China’s best-run and biggest commercial property developers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Feiyu’s weak IPO isn’t surprising and its shares will keep trading down, while Momo’s New York listing could get a slightly better reception but will open flat to up slightly in its trading debut this week.
Feiyu listing aims to raise up to $100 mln
The usual flurry of offshore Chinese IPOs has materialized as we head into the end of 2014, capping a banner year for such offerings. But the year-end rush has been surprisingly devoid of tech names, though we’ve just seen what could be one of the final such IPOs of the year with the Hong Kong debut late last week of mobile game developer Feiyu Technology. Feiyu’s weak debut comes as mobile social networking (SNS) firm Momo also gets set to make its New York trading debut this week, in what could well be the last 2 tech offerings in a banner year for the group. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 6-8. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) Resumes Trading After Clarifying Up 3 Issues (Chinese article)
Anta’s (HKEx: 2020) Fall Shows Fragile Support For China Companies (English article)
Club Med (Paris: CU) Contest Takes New Turn With $1.1 Bln Bonomi Bid (English article)
Game Developer Feiyu Technology Raises HK$570 Mln Yuan in HK IPO (Chinese article)
Fluor (NYSE: FLR) Signs MOU With China National Nuclear Corp (Businesswire)
In the absence of big company news so far this week, I’ve decided tolook at the scorecard for the flood of technology IPOs over the last 12 months and what it might say about what’s ahead into next year. The record so far looks quite good in general, especially for companies that made a flurry of New York offerings at the end of last year and whose shares have mostly doubled or more since then.
But one notable exception to the trend is mobile games, as 2 of the 3 major players to make recent listings are now squarely in negative territory. That doesn’t bode well for a 3 upcoming similar listings, 1 in New York and 2 in Hong Kong, which appear to be stalling due to the cool investor sentiment. Read Full Post…
Much of the world is fixated on the upcoming IPO of e-commerce giant Alibaba in New York, but a far smaller new listing plan by mobile game developer Feiyu Technology is shining a low-key spotlight on a recent jump for such listings in Hong Kong. Many have said that Hong Kong should be the most attractive offshore listing ground for Chinese venture-backed IPOs, since the former British colony is closer geographically and culturally than the currently favored site of New York. But strict listing rules on profitability and ownership structure have kept most Chinese venture-backed tech firms looking to New York instead. Read Full Post…