Latest news with #DualityBiotherapeutics
Business Times
5 days ago
- Business
- Business Times
Chinese flu shot maker soars in Hong Kong trading debut
[HONG KONG] Ab&B Bio-Tech soared as much as 169 per cent in its trading debut in Hong Kong, after retail investors flocked to the Chinese vaccine maker's initial public offering (IPO). The stock climbed to as high as HK$34.64 per share on Monday (Aug 11) morning, more than double its HK$12.90 IPO price, which was set at the low end of the marketed range. The share sale's success builds on the rally of health-care stocks, which have been the best performers on the Hang Seng Composite Index this year. Ab&B, which sells an influenza vaccine, was so sought after among retail investors that they applied for more than US$20 billion worth of margin loans to bid for the stock. That's thousands of times the number of shares available to them. Ab&B is also the last company to go public in Hong Kong under listing rules that allowed retail investors to grab as much as half of all allocated shares in an oversubscribed new listing. Starting this August, mom-and-pop investors will only be able to get up to 35 per cent of such deals. Aside from flu shots, Ab&B is also developing vaccines for rabies, herpes and other respiratory diseases, with plans to commercialise them in China and beyond. Though much smaller in scale, Ab&B follows other health-care companies in starting out with a bang in Hong Kong this year. Cancer drugmakers Duality Biotherapeutics and Nanjing Leads Biolabs saw their stocks more than double on their trading debuts. BLOOMBERG


Reuters
07-04-2025
- Business
- Reuters
China's Duality Biotherapeutics tests market appetite with $200 million Hong Kong IPO
SYDNEY, April 7 (Reuters) - China biotech firm Duality Biotherapeutics is testing investor appetite on Monday amid a global stock market rout by launching a HK$1.56 billion ($200.70 million) Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO). The company is selling 15.07 million shares in a price range of HK$94.60 to HK$103.2 each, according to its prospectus. Keep up with the latest medical breakthroughs and healthcare trends with the Reuters Health Rounds newsletter. Sign up here. ($1 = 7.7729 Hong Kong dollars)