Xiaomi last week filed for a debut in Hong Kong that will value the company at $50 billion to $100 billion.
When Xiaomi’s founders were eating
millet congee at an office in Beijing’s Zhongguancun neighborhood
in 2010, they decided to create a smartphone
brand selling handsets at “honest” prices.
Eight years later, Lei Jun and the
seven other Xiaomi co-founders have created a company that wants to
challenge the global industry dominance of Apple and Samsung
Electronics. It’s also targeting an initial public offering that’s
expected to be the largest since 2014, and which could create five
new billionaires.
Xiaomi
last week filed for a debut in Hong Kong that will value the company
at $50 billion to $100 billion, according to six analysts surveyed by
Bloomberg. Lei, the chairman and chief executive officer, is the
biggest shareholder with a 31.4 per cent stake, while his fellow
founders control 27 per cent of the company, according to the
prospectus.
While Lei and Lin Bin, Xiaomi’s
president, are already billionaires, a $50 billion valuation would
create three new billionaires. A market value of $100 billion would
see five of Lei and Lin’s co-founders reach that mark, an example
of how rapidly the world’s second-biggest economy is forging the
mega-wealthy. Among the world’s 500 richest people, there are 40
Chinese — the second most after the US — with a combined wealth
of $464 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
The company declined to comment on the
net worth of its founders.
Just how big these fortunes will be may
hinge in part on how many new shares are issued, with estimates of
the public float ranging from 15 per cent to 25 per cent.
However, the market’s continuing
appetite for tech companies is in doubt. Online health-tech service
provider Ping An Healthcare and Technology Co. dropped below the
offer price on its first day of trading in Hong Kong last week.
“During the past few quarters,
post-IPO listing performance has been mixed," said Sundeep
Gantori, equity analyst at UBS Global Wealth Management, commenting
on the surging number of IPOs from Chinese tech companies.
A valuation at the higher end of
Xiaomi’s expected range depends on investors accepting the company
as an internet darling and not just a maker of cheap phones, said Mo
Jia, an analyst at Canalys in Shanghai. Even if Xiaomi achieves that
lofty valuation, “it’s hard to say how long it can last.” A $50
billion valuation with a 25 percent public float comprising only
newly-issued shares would value Lei’s stake at $11.8 billion, while
a $100 billion market cap with a 15 percent float would boost his
stake value to $26.7 billion.
That would also bring his total net
worth to $28.3 billion, including investments in Kingsoft and YY
Inc., making Lei China’s fourth-richest person after Alibaba Group
Holding Ltd.’s Jack Ma, Pony Ma of Tencent Holdings Ltd., and Hui
Ka Yan, chairman of China Evergrande Group. If Lei and the others
decide to sell some of their existing holdings in the offering, that
could affect the final valuation.
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