
Shares of China's CATL open 12.5% higher in Hong Kong trading debut
HONG KONG: Shares of China battery giant CATL opened 12.5 per cent higher than the subscription price on Tuesday (May 20) after the company raised US$4.6 billion in its Hong Kong listing, the largest of its kind in the world this year.
CATL shares started trading at HK$296 each in Hong Kong after the firm sold its shares at HK$263 apiece in the listing.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index was up 0.3 per cent in early trading.
CATL, which is also listed in Shenzhen, produces more than a third of all electric vehicle batteries sold worldwide.
Founded in 2011 in the eastern Chinese city of Ningde, CATL has been aided by strong financial support from Beijing, which has sought in recent years to shore up domestic strength in certain strategic high-tech sectors.
It has also weathered a fierce price war in China's expansive EV sector that has put smaller firms under huge pressure to compete while remaining financially viable.
HONG KONG IPO
CATL sold 135.6 million shares to raise US$4.6 billion in Hong Kong, which was the largest listing in the city since Midea Group raised the same amount last year. CATL's Shenzhen stock was down about 0.5 per cent on Tuesday.
The institutional tranche of the Hong Kong deal was oversubscribed 15.2 times, according to CATL's filings, while the retail portion was 151 times oversubscribed.
"The Hong Kong stock listing means our wider integration into the global capital market and a new starting point for us to promote the global zero-carbon economy," CATL founder and chairman Robin Zeng said at a listing ceremony in Hong Kong.
CATL had aimed to raise about US$4 billion in the listing, but increased the size of the deal following the strong demand from investors.
A further 17.7 million can be sold as part of a so-called "green shoe option" that would take the size of CATL's raising to US$5.3 billion.
At that size, it would be the largest listing in Hong Kong since Kuaishou Technology raised US$6.2 billion in 2021, according to LSEG data.
CATL's bookbuild had been open for a day when the US and China announced a brief truce in the trade war that had roiled global financial markets since early April.
The US will cut extra tariffs it imposed on Chinese imports last month from 145 per cent to 30 per cent for the next three months, the two sides said last week, while Chinese duties on US imports will fall to 10 per cent from 125 per cent.
The move created some extra momentum for CATL, whose bookbuild had already been covered with pre-commitment orders when the deal launched last Monday, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the bookbuilding process.
The tariffs pause prompted some global long-only investors who had previously not bid for CATL stock in the Hong Kong listing to place orders, they added.
CATL did not respond to a request for comment.
CATL's net profit in the first three months of 2025 rose 32.9 per cent year-on-year to 14 billion yuan (US$1.91 billion), its fastest pace in nearly two years.
Tuesday's blockbuster listing comes as Hong Kong's stock exchange is eager for the return of big-name Chinese listings in hopes of regaining its crown as the world's top IPO venue.
The Chinese finance hub saw a steady decline in new offerings since Beijing's regulatory crackdown starting in 2020 led some Chinese mega-companies to put their plans on hold.
In a list issued in January by the US Defense Department, CATL was designated as a "Chinese military company".
The United States House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party highlighted this inclusion in letters to two US banks in April, urging them to withdraw from the IPO deal with the "Chinese military-linked company".
But the two banks - JPMorgan and Bank of America - are still on the deal.

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