Xiaomi's weak debut signals trouble for upcoming Hong
Kong tech listings
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[July 09, 2018]
By Julie Zhu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Xiaomi Corp made a
weak debut in Hong Kong on Monday, with the Chinese smartphone maker's
shares sliding as much as 6 percent on valuation concerns, in an ominous
sign for its technology sector peers lining up listings in the city.
A packed initial public offering (IPO) calendar in the coming months
will include a $4 billion deal from online food delivery-to-ticketing
services platform Meituan Dianping and an up to $10 billion IPO from
China Tower, the world's largest mobile tower operator.
"Given the targeted high valuations of many new-economy IPO hopefuls and
the number of IPOs going forward, it will be challenging for the market
to digest all of them," said Hong Hao, chief strategist at brokerage
BOCOM International.
Xiaomi shares closed at HK$16.80, having touched a low of HK$16 in early
trade, compared to the IPO price of HK$17 per share. The main Hong Kong
stock market index ended 1.3 percent higher.
Xiaomi priced the IPO at the bottom of the range it offered, in a deal
worth $4.72 billion - the world's biggest technology float in almost
four years.
The listing came, however, as escalating trade tensions between the
United States and China have shaken markets over the past several weeks.
The spat pushed Hong Kong's benchmark index to a nine-month low last
week.
51 Credit Card, a Chinese online credit management company, raised
HK$1bn ($127 million) from a Hong Kong IPO after pricing it at the
bottom of an indicative price range, Thomson Reuters publication IFR
reported on Monday.
Asked at the listing ceremony on Monday if the low pricing of Xiaomi and
some other tech firms will weigh on upcoming IPOs, Hong Kong stock
exchange CEO Charles Li said it was not up to the exchange to have a
view: "The market is always open. It's open to everybody...If you don’t
like the price, you can stay away."
VALUATION
Xiaomi's IPO valued the firm, which also makes internet-connected home
appliances and gadgets, at $54 billion, almost half the $100 billion it
had initially hoped for and below its more recent target of at least $70
billion.
At Monday's closing price the company had a market value of $53.3
billion.
Xiaomi's IPO had been expected to raise up to $10 billion, split between
a Hong Kong and a mainland offering, which was postponed last month in a
surprise move.
[to top of second column] |
Xiaomi founder, Chairman and CEO Lei Jun (L) greets a guest as he
attends the listing of the company at the Hong Kong Exchanges in
Hong Kong, China July 9, 2018. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
The HK$17 price valued the company at 39.6 times its forecast 2018 earnings,
while iPhone maker Apple is trading at 16 times and Chinese social media and
gaming giant Tencent Holdings at 36.
Mo Jia, a Shanghai-based analyst with industry consultancy Canalys, said the
weak debut was to be expected.
"The market environment is getting conservative. Most recent floats in Hong Kong
dropped below IPO prices. Xiaomi's self-positioning as an internet company also
needs some convincing," he added.
While the company makes more than 90 percent of its revenues from selling
smartphones and other devices - through which it offers online services - it has
pushed to be viewed as an internet-based company. Such firms tend to carry far
higher valuations than device makers.
"We are an internet firm," Xiaomi's founder and chief executive Lei Jun told the
listing ceremony at the Hong Kong stock exchange.
"From day one, we've set up a dual-class share structure. Without the innovation
of Hong Kong's capital markets, we wouldn't get a chance to go public in Hong
Kong," he said.
Xiaomi's float was the first under the city's new rules allowing firms to weight
voting rights in favor of company founders, as part of efforts to encourage more
tech groups to choose Hong Kong over New York, its arch-rival.
Xiaomi sold 2.18 billion shares in its IPO, 1.4 billion of which were new
shares. The deal was led by CLSA, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
The company is now the biggest smartphone vendor in India and is pushing into
European markets including Spain and Russia, though it has lost share in China
recently to lower-cost rivals.
(Reporting by Julie Zhu; Additional reporting by Donny Kwok and Sijia Jiang;
Writing by Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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