logo
Hong Kong IPO: EV battery king CATL files plan to pursue global expansion

Hong Kong IPO: EV battery king CATL files plan to pursue global expansion

Published: 9:10pm, 11 Feb 2025 Contemporary Amperex Technology , the world's largest producer of batteries for electric vehicles (EVs), is proceeding with a plan to list its shares in Hong Kong in what could be the city's biggest initial public offering (IPO) in more than four years. CATL, as the Chinese company is known, submitted its application draft with the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday, following the board's approval in December. The IPO size and timeline were not disclosed. A US$5 billion deal, as reported by Reuters, would rank as the largest since Kuaishou Technology raised US$6.2 billion in January 2021.
BofA Securities, China International Capital Corp, China Securities International and JPMorgan Chase were listed as joint sponsors, while Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and UBS will also have an unspecified role in the deal, according to the draft.
CATL's yuan-denominated shares fell 2.6 per cent to 251.80 yuan in Shenzhen before the announcement, giving it a market value of 1.1 trillion yuan (US$150.5 billion). They have declined about 5 per cent this year, after a 68 per cent surge in 2024.
12:53
'Overtaking on a bend': how China's EV industry charged ahead to dominate the global market 'Overtaking on a bend': how China's EV industry charged ahead to dominate the global market
'CATL has ambitions of expanding its worldwide footprint since it can chase higher profitability outside mainland China,' said Davis Zhang, a senior executive at Suzhou Hazardtex, a supplier of specialised batteries. 'With production and technological advantages over their global rivals, Chinese EV players are often welcome in overseas markets to localise their research and manufacturing expertise.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Evergrande to delist from Hong Kong stock market
Evergrande to delist from Hong Kong stock market

RTHK

time3 hours ago

  • RTHK

Evergrande to delist from Hong Kong stock market

Evergrande to delist from Hong Kong stock market Evergrande says the city's stock exchange has decided to delist its shares per listing rules. File photo: AFP China Evergrande Group has announced its shares will be delisted from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, as court-appointed liquidators warned of the real estate firm's debt load was far bigger than earlier estimated. In a filing on Tuesday, the company said the stock exchange has decided to cancel its listing from August 25 – as trading had not resumed by July 28 – and it would not apply for a review of the decision. "The last day of the listing of the shares will be on August 22, 2025 and the listing of the Shares will be cancelled with effect from 9am on August 25, 2025," the filing read. "All shareholders, investors and potential investors of the company should note that after the last listing date, whilst the share certificates of the shares will remain valid, the shares will not be listed on, and will not be tradeable on the stock exchange." Hong Kong's High Court issued a winding-up order for Evergrande in January 2024, ruling that the debt-laden company had failed to come up with a viable restructuring plan. Trading of its shares has since been suspended. In an attached progress report, liquidators Edward Middleton and Tiffany Wong said a "holistic" restructuring is out of reach. They also said Evergrande's debt load exceeded the US$27.5 billion of liabilities disclosed in its financial statement in December 2022. "As at July 31, 2025, this claims' discovery exercise had resulted in 187 proofs of debt being submitted, by which claims of approximately HK$350 billion (US$45 billion) in aggregate have been made," the document read. But the latest figure was not to be taken as final, the liquidators added.

Trump extends US-China tariff truce, Xi and Lula talk: SCMP daily highlights
Trump extends US-China tariff truce, Xi and Lula talk: SCMP daily highlights

South China Morning Post

time4 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Trump extends US-China tariff truce, Xi and Lula talk: SCMP daily highlights

Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order extending by 90 days the US's tariff truce with China, removing the risk of an immediate escalation hours before the ceasefire was set to expire, but leaving trade relations fragile. Trump said on Monday that he had personally negotiated a deal with Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang, letting the tech giant sell a lower-end chip in China in exchange for part of those sales revenues being paid to the US government. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Chinese leader Xi Jinping spoke by phone for about an hour. Photo: Reuters Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has spoken by phone with Chinese leader Xi Jinping for about an hour, in a high-level contact aimed at reinforcing ties with Brazil's largest trading partner while confronting a sudden rupture in trade relations with the United States.

Despite US-China tariff truce, the turning tide keeps reshaping shipping routes
Despite US-China tariff truce, the turning tide keeps reshaping shipping routes

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Despite US-China tariff truce, the turning tide keeps reshaping shipping routes

Even after securing another 90-day tariff truce with the US, China's trade-diversification efforts are expected to continue reshaping shipping routes for the rest of the year, as transpacific routes remain under pressure following an initial front-loading phase. 'Despite ongoing negotiations between the two countries, we believe it is unlikely that tariffs will be completely eliminated, which will continue to weigh on US import volumes,' said Jarl Milford, a maritime analyst at Veson Nautical. 'We expect a full-year decline in volumes on this trade lane, which will apply further pressure on freight rates,' he told the Post. The Shanghai Containerised Freight Index, which is updated every Friday and tracks spot freight rates for containerised cargo, specifically from Shanghai to major global destinations, has declined for nine consecutive weeks. The latest rates from Shanghai to the US west coast and east coast have fallen by more than half from their peak in early June, when exporters rushed to front-load their products after the initial three-month tariff pause began. Danish shipping giant Maersk also mentioned the significant impact on its container-liner services in its second-quarter earnings report, noting that its China-US box volumes during the April-June period declined by around 35 per cent, year on year. However, it pointed out that the contraction in North American imports was more than offset by the strong import growth into Europe, Latin America, Africa, western Asia and Central Asia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store