Archive for ‘IPO’

05/02/2019

China to remain NYSE’s major contributor of int’l IPOs in 2019

NEW YORK, Feb. 4 (Xinhua) — China has been a major market for the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) when it comes to international initial public offerings (IPOs) over the past few years, and the trend will continue in 2019, according to the exchange.

The wholly-owned subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange finished 2018 with 125 billion U.S. dollars in proceeds raised from 356 transactions. In a year marked by elevated volatility in U.S. equity markets, NYSE issuers raised 30 billion dollars in proceeds from 73 IPOs, statistics showed.

A total of 25 international IPOs were executed during the year, raising 10 billion dollars in proceeds, including Tencent Music Entertainment Group from China, PagSeguro Digital Ltd. from Brazil, and Hudson Ltd. and Farfetch Ltd. from Britain.

A total of 18 Chinese companies raised more than 4 billion dollars in proceeds last year, the exchange said in its response to Xinhua’s inquiry. The companies are from a variety of industries, including education, hospitality, technology, and automotive.

Alex Ibrahim, head of international capital markets at NYSE, told Xinhua that it was a “huge highlight” to have companies like Tencent Music Entertainment listing on the exchange and raising over 1 billion dollars.

The IPO of Nio, a leading Chinese electric vehicle maker, also raised more than 1 billion dollars and was a very successful transaction, he noted. “It was super exciting to see those cars in front of the exchange and in Times Square,” Ibrahim said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

Asked why so many Chinese companies chose to list in NYSE over other stock exchanges, Ibrahim said one major reason is that U.S. market is the deepest in the world and companies want to have access to liquidity.

He added that the companies also want to be next to their competitors that have already been listed in NYSE so as to make sure the evaluation is aligned and make themselves available to the vast number of investors.

“This trend will continue because I think there are fantastic companies in China,” he said.

He said that the human element the NYSE has is also an important reason companies are willing to be listed there.

On the other hand, the demand from U.S. investors’ side for Chinese companies and products is high.

Ibrahim said there are a lot of great entrepreneurs creating and selling new technologies and tapping the growth of Chinese economy.

“Investors want to be part of this growth,” he said, adding that the way to access the growth is through IPOs.

NYSE-listed companies traded with 45 percent lower volatility compared to companies listed and traded on other U.S. exchanges, according to the stock exchange.

Source: Xinhua

12/12/2018

China’s Tencent Music raises nearly $1.1 billion in U.S. IPO

NEW YORK/HONG KONG (Reuters) – China-based music streaming company Tencent Music Entertainment Group (TME.N) said it raised close to $1.1 billion in its U.S. initial public offering (IPO) after pricing its shares at the bottom of its targeted range.

The music arm of gaming and social network giant Tencent Holdings Ltd (0700.HK) priced its American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) at $13 per share, at the low end of its indicated $13 to $15 per share range, it said in a filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange.

The IPO values Tencent Music at $21.3 billion and shows how companies are defying a bout of market volatility with flotations.

Tencent Music sold 41 million ADRs, while existing shareholders sold a further 40.9 million, the filing said.

Tencent Music’s IPO tops off a bumper year for U.S. listings by Chinese companies, with $7.9 billion raised before Tencent Music’s debut, Refinitiv data showed.

That is the highest amount since 2014, the year of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s (BABA.N) record $25 billion IPO.

Tencent Music’s U.S. IPO is the fourth largest among Chinese firms this year by deal value. Video streaming company iQiyi Inc (IQ.O) leads with its $2.4 billion listing, followed by online group discounter Pinduoduo Inc (PDD.O) at $1.6 billion and electric vehicle maker NIO Inc (NIO.N) at $1.15 billion.

Returns for investors have been mixed, with the 31 Chinese IPOs in 2018 down an average of around 11 percent as of Dec. 10, according to data provider Dealogic.

With streaming apps QQ Music, KuGou, Kuwo as well as karaoke app We Sing, Tencent Music is China’s largest online music platform boasting more than 800 million active users monthly.The firm is often compared with Spotify Technology SA (SPOT.N) but offers more socially interactive services that make it profitable while its Swedish counterpart is not.

Tencent Music initially planned to launch the deal in October but postponed because of a sell-off in global markets roiled by a U.S.-China trade war and fears of slowing global growth.

Tencent Music reported a 244 percent profit jump for January-September to $394 million. By comparison, Spotify lost a net $520 million.

Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are the lead sponsors of Tencent Music’s deal.

Tencent Music is due to begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday under the symbol “TME” (TME.N).

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