HK
pips New York as world's biggest IPO capital, 2016
outlook strong
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[December 23, 2015]
By Denny Thomas and Elzio Barreto
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong replaced
New York this year as the world's biggest IPO market by the amount of
funds raised, buoyed by Chinese banks and other financial firms, with
the deal pipeline pointing to a stronger year ahead.
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Companies raised $25 billion via initial public offerings (IPOs) in
Hong Kong so far this year, higher than the $19.4 billion raised in
New York, preliminary data from Thomson Reuters data shows.
Many Chinese brokers and banks had rushed to raise funds to finance
their margin loan business and boost core capital amid a stock
market rally earlier this year. Big Hong Kong IPOs in 2015 included
the $4.8 billion deal by Guotai Junan Securities Co Ltd and a $2.5
billion capital raising by China Huarong Asset Management Co Ltd.
For New York, which was the world's biggest IPO market for the past
three years, IPO proceeds slumped 73 percent this year after surging
to $71.7 billion in 2014, helped in part by Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd's record $25 billion deal.
The funds raised in Hong Kong accounted for more than a third of the
total amount for the entire Asia Pacific region, but were 13 percent
lower than a year ago, according to the data.
Overall, investment banks in Asia earned an estimated $5.74 billion
in fees from equity capital markets deals in 2015, with IPOs making
up 36 percent of the total, the data shows, a larger share than the
20 percent of bank revenue in the United States.
Next year, more Chinese companies are set to raise funds through
IPOs, the financial sector leading the pack, bankers said.
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Companies expected to issue IPOs next year include state-backed
Postal Savings Bank of China, which recently completed a $7 billion
pre-IPO financing round, Chinese online lending platform Lufax,
backed by China's second largest insurer Ping An Insurance Group Co
Ltd and Sinopec Sales, the marketing arm of China Petroleum and
Chemicals Corp (Sinopec). "The financial services sector will still
be one of the key drivers, because the size of those deals are much
larger than in consumer and manufacturing," said Louis Lau, partner
at the Capital Markets Advisory Group at KPMG China.
(Reporting by Denny Thomas and Elzio Barreto; Editing by Miral Fahmy)
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