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China’s U.S. IPO Queue to Shrink Amid Regulatory Crackdown

China’s U.S. IPO Queue to Shrink Amid Regulatory Crackdown

China’s crackdown on U.S. initial public offerings by its companies has put its burgeoning pipeline of potential listings at risk.

A medical data company, a fitness app and an e-commerce platform have, in the past week, postponed plans to go public in the U.S., as Beijing cracks down on tech and data-heavy firms listing stateside. There are about 70 other private firms based in Hong Kong and China set to go public in New York, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The broadened scrutiny by Beijing on U.S. offerings by its firms is going to close off a deep and liquid market for many of China’s smaller growth companies who would otherwise be unlikely to be able to meet the bar for listing back home or in Hong Kong.

Big companies, too, have been affected: TikTok owner ByteDance Ltd. is working to ensure it complies with data security requirements before going public after meetings with Chinese government officials over the issue earlier this year, people familiar with the matter said.

The company has not “shelved” its IPO plans and had not decided on specific timing, two of the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private information. The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that ByteDance had put its intentions to go public on hold indefinitely.

“Recent developments regarding overseas listings or related data security risks have put a downside risk to the Chinese tech sector,” said Mathieu Racheter, the head of equity strategy at Julius Baer Group Ltd. in Zurich.

China’s U.S. IPO Queue to Shrink Amid Regulatory Crackdown
More Chinese companies that are looking at U.S. IPOs:
  • Convenience store chain startup Bianlifeng, raising around $500 million
  • Online brokerage Webull, raising between $300 million and $400 million
  • Maid and home-maintenance service provider Swan Daojia. Valuation at $3 billion
  • China Evergrande Group’s online home and car sales platform FCB Group. Valuation at $20 billion
  • Esports tournament organization and content creation firm VSPN
  • Biotechnology company Adagene Inc., raising about $200 million
  • Plans put on hold in May: Hello Inc. (raising between $500 million and $1 billion), Ximalaya Inc. (raising $500 million and $1 billion) to and Qiniu Ltd. (placeholder fundraising amount of $100 million)

So far this year, 37 Chinese companies have listed in the U.S., raising about $13 billion in all, according to Bloomberg data. That’s the highest for such a year-to-date period on record and almost exceeds the full-year tally for 2020.

Last week, medical data firm LinkDoc Technology Ltd. pulled a New York float that could have raised as much as $211 million, with people familiar with the deal citing market volatility. That happened just after Beijing said Tuesday that rules for overseas listings would be revised and publicly traded firms held accountable for keeping their data secure.

These restrictions came as authorities ordered virtual stores remove apps from recently listed ride-hailing giant Didi Global Inc. days after its U.S. listing and restrained the ability of tech firms to raise capital through variable interest entity structures, which have allowed Chinese companies in sensitive industries like Didi and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. bypass foreign owernship restrictions.

LinkDoc isn’t the only deal put on hold, according to media reports. SoftBank Group Corp-backed Chinese fitness app Keep opted not to go ahead with its U.S. filing, according to the Financial Times, and e-commerce startup Meicai also put its float on hold, the South China Morning Post reported on July 9.

Apart from ByteDance, another closely watched U.S. listing hopeful is Lalamove, known as Huolala on the mainland. The Hong Kong-based delivery company backed by Tiger Global had filed confidentially for a U.S. IPO, Bloomberg reported on June 24.

China’s U.S. IPO Queue to Shrink Amid Regulatory Crackdown

Beijing’s spotlight on the tech sector is already taking a toll even on Hong Kong-traded firms. TikTok rival Kuaishou Technology, which pulled off the world’s biggest share sale of 2021, slumped 17% last week, while New York-traded Baidu Inc. is down 30% since its secondary listing in the offshore Chinese city in March.

Any “listings in the pipeline that were planning to head to the U.S. will have to rethink strategy and instead focus on a primary listing in Hong Kong,” Ramiz Chelat, a portolio manager at Vontobel Asset Management, wrote in a note. “This is all part of the ‘coming home’ strategy.”

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.