China-based companies sold
shares worth $32.1 billion in January-June including multi-billion-dollar
secondary listings in Hong Kong.
Firms in China brought in half of equity capital raised globally this year so far, setting a record that highlights the economy's earlier revival from the COVID-19 pandemic, plus the degree to which soured U.S. relations are turning Chinese firms homeward.
China-based companies sold
shares worth $32.1 billion in January-June including multi-billion-dollar
secondary listings in Hong Kong, equivalent to 49.8% of worldwide offerings,
showed data from Refinitiv. The total for U.S. firms was $15.8 billion.
"With massive
liquidity injections by various governments (supporting virus-hit economies),
I'm not surprised by the size of Chinese capital raised this year - and the
trend may continue," Li He, capital markets partner at Davis Polk, said of
China firms taking advantage of their early lockdown emergence.
China was hit by the novel coronavirus
in December and was the first country to impose virus-prevention lockdown
measures on individual movement and business activity in late January. Markets
began their return to normality in April.
Chinese fundraising has
been helped by the popularity of Shanghai's year-old growth-focused STAR
Market, as well as well-received initial public offerings (IPOs) in Hong Kong
and the massive secondary listings - including the $3.9 billion raised by
e-tailer JD.com Inc this month and $3.1 billion by games developer NetEase Inc
"For Chinese
companies, both the Hong Kong and U.S. markets are getting back to
normal," said Houston Huang, head of global
investment banking for China at JPMorgan. "Market activity (deal
volume) is much better than anybody expected at the beginning of the
year."
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