The listing comes as Hong Kong works to lure overseas-listed firms
to conduct secondary share offerings in the financial hub. It is
also the second listing under new rules for early-state drug
developers.
Hong Kong's stock exchange is seeking to establish itself as a
financing center for the growing number of pre-revenue drug
developers. Its efforts will pit it against Nasdaq, currently the
biggest center for biotech listings, with $2.4 billion worth of such
shares sold last year, Thomson Reuters data showed.
BeiGene, which develops molecularly targeted and immuno-oncology
drugs to treat cancer, is selling 65.6 million new shares, or 8.55
percent of its enlarged share capital, at HK$108 ($13.76) each,
close to the top of a price range of HK$94.4 to HK$111.6, the people
said.
The price of its secondary listing represents a discount of 1.6
percent against its closing price of $181.74 in the U.S. on
Wednesday.
BeiGene has seen its shares jump more than seven times since raising
$158 million in its 2016 Nasdaq IPO. Each American Depository share
(ADS) represents 13 ordinary shares.
BeiGene declined to comment on the pricing. The people declined to
be identified as the information was not public.
Four cornerstone investors - Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte
Ltd [GIC.UL], U.S. hedge fund Baker Brothers Advisors and Chinese
investment firms Hillhouse Capital Group and Ally Bridge - have
committed $276 million for the offering.
Under Hong Kong's new rules, in place since April 30, biotech firms
without revenue or profit can apply to list.
The first listing by Ascletis Pharma Inc under the new listing
regime saw shares close flat with their IPO price on their debut on
Wednesday.
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More than 10 biotech firms - mostly Chinese and including Innovent
Biologics, backed by Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings (Pte)
Ltd [TEM.UL], and Shanghai Henlius Biotech - plan to list in Hong
Kong and some have dropped U.S. IPO plans in favor of listing closer
to home.
"There are a lot of global investors that are specialists in
biotech, but they know very little about China. And there are a lot
of investors (here) that know a lot about China, but they know very
little about biotech. The dual-listing that we're doing is helping
educate both ways," John V. Oyler, founder and chief executive of
BeiGene, told a news conference in Hong Kong on Sunday.
The China and U.S.-based BeiGene was founded by Oyler and Wang
Xiaodong in 2010. It has a portfolio of six internally developed
clinical drug candidates including three near commercial stage, its
prospectus showed.
It plans to use proceeds from its secondary listing for developing
and commercializing the three late-stage drug candidates, expanding
its product portfolio and for general working capital, the
prospectus showed.
The company recorded a net loss of $105 million in the first quarter
of 2018, a loss twice as wide as in the same period a year prior.
Its shares will start trading in Hong Kong on Aug. 8.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are joint sponsors for the deal.
(Reporting by Fiona Lau of IFR and Julie ZhuEditing by Christopher
Cushing)
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