logo
Thailand's Coconut Water Giant IFBH Soars In Hong Kong IPO Debut

Thailand's Coconut Water Giant IFBH Soars In Hong Kong IPO Debut

Forbes30-06-2025
IFBH, the Thai company behind the IF-branded bottled coconut water, started trading in Hong Kong on June 30, 2025. Shanshan Kao/Forbes Asia
IFBH, the Thai company behind China's largest coconut water brand IF, saw its shares jump 42% in its Hong Kong stock market debut Monday, boasting a market cap of $1.3 billion.
IFBH ended its first day trading at HK$39.5, up from its HK$27.8 per share set for the initial public offering. The company, a subsidiary of Bangkok-based General Beverage, raised HK$1.16 billion ($145 million) from the sale of 41.7 million shares at the top end of a marketed range of HK$25.3 to HK$27.8.
The stock surge gave Pongsakorn Pongsak, IFBH's founder, CEO and largest shareholder, a net worth of $807 million, propelling the 45-year-old into the ranks of Thailand's wealthiest people. Forbes estimates Pongsakorn's wealth based on his 60% stake in IFBH, which he holds directly and through General Beverage. Pongsakorn holds a 91% stake in General Beverage, which in turn owns 60% in IFBH.
IFBH's IPO has attracted a roster of big-name cornerstone investors, including Black Dragon, an investment fund backed by Soopakij Chearavanont, the chairman of Thai agriculture-to-telecoms conglomerate Charoen Pokphand (CP) Group and the eldest son of billionaire Dhanin Chearavanont; HongShan's HCEP Management; Jain Global, the U.S. hedge fund founded by former Millennium co-chief investment officer Bobby Jain; U.S. trading giant Jane Street; and UBS Asset Management. The company's pre-IPO investors include Singaporean sovereign wealth fund Temasek.
IFBH said it will use the IPO proceeds to bolster fulfillment capabilities, strengthen its presence in mainland China and expand operations in Australia, the Americas and Southeast Asia. 'Over the years, we have grown into one of the leading ready-to-drink natural coconut water brands in Asia,' Pongsakorn said at the listing ceremony in Hong Kong on Monday. 'Looking ahead, we are excited to continue investing in innovation, strengthening our sourcing capabilities and growing our brand sustainability.'
Pongsakorn Pongsak (right), founder and CEO of IFBH, attends the company's listing ceremony at Hong Kong's stock exchange on June 30, 2025. Shanshan Kao/Forbes Asia
IFBH is best known for its IF-branded bottled coconut water—a clear and slightly sweet beverage derived from coconuts that some people believe is good for health. The company posted $362 million in retail sales value in China last year, making it the country's largest coconut water producer, according to its prospectus, which cited China Insights Industry Consultancy. With a global retail sales value of $374 million in 2024, IFBH said it's also the world's second-largest coconut water company after New York-based Vita Coco.
The company generated more than 92% of its revenue from mainland China in 2024, with 4.6% from Hong Kong and the rest from places including Australia, Cambodia, Canada, Kuwait, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and the U.S. Its sales surged 80% year-on-year to $157.6 million in 2024, while net profit nearly doubled to $33.3 million during the same period. IFBH attributed the growth to the increased sales volume in mainland China.
Despite its business scale, IFBH has a lean team of 46 staff, thanks to its 'asset-light' business model. IFBH outsources its manufacturing and distribution to parent General Beverage and other third parties, freeing the company to focus on marketing and R&D.
Pongsakorn founded General Beverage in 2011 and launched the IF-branded coconut water two years later. He started selling the beverage in Hong Kong in 2015, followed by mainland China in 2017. Pongsakorn has continued to innovate over the years, launching plant-based snacks such as coconut crispy rolls, as well as products that cater to local preferences, like coconut black tea in China. In late 2022, he formed IFBH to run General Beverage's operations outside of Thailand.
IFBH's listing comes amid Hong Kong's IPO market revival. The city is on track to reclaim its crown as the world's top listing venue in 2025 following a five-year dry spell, driven by renewed investor interest for Chinese tech stocks following the rise of AI startup DeepSeek and U.S.-China tensions that are prompting more Chinese companies to pivot toward Hong Kong listings.
Since the beginning of 2025 through June 26, there were 41 listings in Hong Kong raising a total of more than HK$104 billion, according to data from the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing. Among the companies going public in the city includes gold jeweler Zhou Liu Fu Jewellery, whose shares soared nearly 70% over the first two trading days on Friday, catapulting its chairman into billionaire status. MORE FROM FORBES Forbes Chairman Of Chinese Gold Jeweler Zhou Liu Fu Becomes A Billionaire After Stock Surge By Zinnia Lee Forbes Billionaire Brothers' Chinese Bubble Tea Giant Mixue Surges In Hong Kong Debut By Zinnia Lee Forbes Ex-Baidu AI Scientist Becomes A Billionaire After Shares Of His Self-Driving Tech Startup Jump 16% By Zinnia Lee
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Evergrande's $7 Billion Secret: The High-Stakes Hunt for Hui Ka Yan's Hidden Fortune
Evergrande's $7 Billion Secret: The High-Stakes Hunt for Hui Ka Yan's Hidden Fortune

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Evergrande's $7 Billion Secret: The High-Stakes Hunt for Hui Ka Yan's Hidden Fortune

Evergrande's collapse isn't yesterday's newsit's entering a make-or-break phase. Liquidators are circling founder Hui Ka Yan, who's still refusing to disclose his personal fortune despite reportedly pocketing over $7 billion during the company's heyday. The next showdown is set for September 2 in Hong Kong's high court, where creditors hope to crack open Hui's holdingsa potential step toward recovering a slice of the group's estimated $45 billion in debt. Evergrande (EGRNF) has already notified plans to delist from the Hong Kong exchange by August 25, marking a symbolic end to its 16-year run as one of China's most ambitiousand now infamousdevelopers. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 3 Warning Signs with RKGXF. This isn't just about Hui. Liquidators are following the money across 3,000 tangled entities, stretching from Guangzhou to Vancouver to London, where Hui's ex-wife reportedly owns $350 million worth of luxury real estate. His former CEO, Xia Haijun, appears to be living comfortably in California, tied to assets worth nearly $500 million. Both have delayed disclosure for over a year, using high-priced lawyers and legal tactics, but cracks are starting to show. Meanwhile, one of Hui's sonswho ran Evergrande's wealth management unitwas reportedly taken into custody last year. The personal network is under pressure, and creditors aren't letting up. But even if they win in court, getting money out of China is another story. Most of Evergrande's value sits onshore, and the legal wall between mainland courts and Hong Kong remains steep. Last year, Chinese regulators accused Hengda Real EstateEvergrande's core property armof faking $78 billion in revenue. The resulting $4.18 billion fine didn't just damage reputationsit likely wiped out more cash that offshore creditors were counting on. Liquidators say they're tracking hundreds of actions across the mainland, but with Hui reportedly under residential surveillance and Chinese authorities staying silent, the road to recovery still looks long. September's hearing could be the turning point. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

Why JD.Com Shares Are Falling Despite Q2 Earnings Beat
Why JD.Com Shares Are Falling Despite Q2 Earnings Beat

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why JD.Com Shares Are Falling Despite Q2 Earnings Beat

Aug 14 - (NASDAQ:JD) shares slipped about 3% in U.S. morning trading after the Chinese e-commerce giant posted Q2 revenue that beat estimates but raised fresh questions about sustainability. The company reported revenue of 356.66 billion ($49.7 billion), up 22.4% year-over-year and ahead of LSEG consensus, driven mostly by electronics and appliance demand propped up by state subsidies and deep discounting. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 2 Warning Sign with JD. CEO Sandy Xu told analysts the new food-delivery arm already feeds traffic into core retail, yet rising competition and margin pressure remain real risks; she warned excessive competition can undercut pricing and merchant economics. M Science's Vinci Zhang noted the upside came largely from subsidized categories, meaning JD faces tougher year-over-year comps in the quarters ahead. The moves by JD to enter Europe through a proposed bid of Ceconomy and outside the core retail business demonstrate an attempt by management to find new growth levers. Nevertheless, net income dropped to 6.2 billion yen compared with 12.6 billion yen in the previous year, which points to the subsidies and promotions give the sales and strain the earnings. Margins, the intensity of promotion and the degree to which JD can translate new initiatives into long-run sustainable profitable growth will be monitored by investors. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

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