
JD Industrials, Unisound AI revive Hong Kong IPOs as Chinese listings accelerate
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JD Industrials and another Chinese firm, Unisound AI Technology, resubmitted their
initial public offering (IPO) applications to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Sunday. They did not disclose their fundraising expectations, according to separate filings. It was Unisound's third application.
The firms' previous Hong Kong listing plans, in 2023 and 2024, respectively, lapsed due to unfavourable market conditions and valuation mismatches. They are now betting on the city's revitalised IPO market this year, driven by
regulatory support for Chinese firms to list in Hong Kong and optimism in the technology sector following breakthroughs by Chinese
artificial intelligence (AI) start-up
DeepSeek
The reopening of the pathway for Chinese listings was 'important in driving sentiment', Hong Kong Monetary Authority chief executive Eddie Yue Wai-man said during a
conference last week . 'We've got another 100 applications in the pipeline,' he added.
JD Industrials, established in 2017, is China's largest industrial supply chain technology and service provider by gross merchandise value (GMV). It is nearly three times the size of its closest competitor, according to China Insights Consultancy.
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Its GMV rose to 28.8 billion yuan (US$4 billion) in 2024 from 22.3 billion yuan in 2022, representing a compound annual growth rate of 13.5 per cent. It also turned around the business by logging a net profit of 761.6 million yuan last year from a net loss of 1.3 billion yuan in 2022.
In March 2023, JD.com said it would spin off its property and industrial units and list them in Hong Kong. Around that time, a group of investors including Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala, Abu Dhabi fund 42XFund, asset manager M&G, private equity firm BPEA EQT and Chinese venture capital firm HongShan put a total of US$300 million into JD Industrials via series B preferred share financing.

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