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China dominates global IPO market as Wall Street fails to rebound, Chinese companies raised more money than rest of the world combined

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China dominates global IPO market as Wall Street fails to rebound, Chinese companies raised more money by IPOs than rest of the world combined

April 30 2023

Initial public offerings have dwindled in the US and Europe. Companies are holding off with all this economic and financial uncertainty.

In China, though, it’s a very different story. Pandemic restrictions are over. There are new streamlined rules for listings in Shanghai and Shenzhen. And so far this year, Chinese IPOs have raised five times as much money as IPOs in the US.

Chinese companies have raised about $20bn in new stock market listings, according to Dealogic. That’s more than half of all the funds raised by IPOs around the world.

 
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China IPOs put US and UK in the shade so far in 2023​

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Oliver Haill

15:54 Tue 02 May 2023

Initial public offerings in China have eclipsed the rest of the world in the first four months of 2023, with more than five times the money raised as in the US and many times more than the UK.

While London has seen just six IPOs so far, there have been 79 Chinese IPOs, with fundraising topping US$19.5bn so far this year, according to Dealogic data, down around US$4bn or nearly 17%.

China, where some listings in Shanghai and Shenzhen have utilised a new US-style IPO mechanism designed to make public share sales more market-oriented, has accounted for just over half of the global total in the first third of the year, the data shows, with a US$3708bn raised from 385 IPOs so far.

Asia has outperformed generally, as India has chipped in with 45 IPOs, Japan 26 and Hong Kong 18, while the European market has been aneamic.

Looking at New York, there have been 56 IPOs raising just over US$3.8bn, which is down 40% from a year ago.

If excluding US listings for special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), the total is US$2.35bn, down about 22%.

This time a year ago, US$12.3bn had been raised in the US, while in 2021 there had been a massive US$130bn drummed up in the first third of the year.

UK flotations have raised just £109mln from six deal so far this year, the Dealogic data shows, down from £713mln from 22 a year ago.

Rising interest rates over the past year, the war in Ukraine, recent banking sector wobbles and a looming US recession have all been factors limiting IPO demand in the west.

UK listings have included World Chess PLC, which holds events and promotes the board game; and Fadel Partners Inc, which handles automated rights management for Marvel Entertainment and other big brands.

 

China Floats to the Top​

The surge in IPOs on domestic markets is a win for Chinese policy makers and local investment banks.​

BY ELIOT CHEN — MAY 7, 2023

Chinese companies are dominating the global market for initial public offerings, as listings in the West continue to drag in 2023. So far this year, new Chinese flotations have raised almost five times as much money as those in the United States.

For China’s policymakers, that’s good news. Beijing has sought to encourage private companies — particularly those in strategic sectors — to pursue IPOs at home, while at the same time making it harder for them to list abroad. Data on listings since the start of 2022 suggest that that plan may be working.

This week, The Wire looks at IPOs in China: how much money is being raised, which are the largest companies going public, and how the country’s competitors are faring.

LISTING LISTINGS


China IPOs
Data: Dealogic

Both the number and total volume of Chinese public listings in the first four months of the year has outpaced those in the U.S. So far this year, Chinese companies have raised close to $20 billion on mainland bourses, including a $1.1 billion IPO by Shaanxi Energy Investment, a state owned utility firm, and $663 million IPO by Yuneng New Energy Battery Material Co., a battery cathode manufacturer. By comparison, firms in the U.S. raised just $4 billion in the first four months of the year, according to data from Dealogic, a financial data provider.

High inflation and rising interest rates led to a plunge in U.S. and European IPO activity in 2022. This year, additional uncertainty stemming from the crisis in the banking sector has stymied any recovery.

As a result, Chinese investment banks leapfrogged their American counterparts to dominate the rankings of top IPO banks in 2022, with that trend continuing in the first four months of this year. State-owned CITIC Securities was the top IPO underwriter of 2022, and continues to lead the rankings this year, followed by China Securities1 and China International Capital Corporation (CICC). Six of the top 10 underwriters so far this year are Chinese.

“China has closed its markets to foreign competition when its own companies were weak,” says Fraser Howie, co-author of Red Capitalism: The Fragile Financial Foundations of China’s Extraordinary Rise. “Now they’ve opened up 100 percent [foreign] ownership of brokerages, but the domestic brokers are much stronger, and the playing field is so tilted that it frankly doesn’t matter what the foreigners do, it’s all become such a domestic insiders game.”

China IPOs
Data: Dealogic

In February, China’s securities regulator announced it would make it easier for companies to go public on domestic stock exchanges by simplifying listing requirements and paring back the amount of regulatory oversight needed for firms to pursue listings. Those changes went into effect last month, with new IPOs under the streamlined system seeing a surge of investor interest.

Through government guidance funds — similar to public-private investment funds — the authorities have also channeled money and attention towards strategic industries, such as semiconductors and renewable energy.

The list of China’s largest public listings over the last 12 months reflects these priorities. Seven of the top ten largest listings were companies involved in energy and renewables.

 
I do enjoy the Chinese IPOs in the US. Easy money catching them on the way up and selling out on the dump going down.
 

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