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Three Billionaires Created on Day One of China's New Tech Board

Three Billionaires Created on Day One of China's New Tech Board

(Bloomberg) --

China’s much-hyped new trading venue for technology stocks started with a bang on Monday, creating three new billionaires.

The 25 companies that debuted on the so-called Star market rose an average 140% in the first trading day, making billionaires of the presidents of a battery-test equipment maker and an LCD-display manufacturer, as well as the chairman of a firm that produces artificial intelligence technology for smartphone cameras.

Three Billionaires Created on Day One of China's New Tech Board

Rising personal fortunes thanks to the new Nasdaq-style venue could go some way toward helping China keep the next Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. at home rather than seeing its fastest-growing companies head to New York or Hong Kong for their initial public offerings. Key to the market’s long-term success, however, will be sustaining gains, said Shen Zhengyang, an analyst at Northeast Securities Co.

Three Billionaires Created on Day One of China's New Tech Board

Representatives of Suzhou HYC Technology Co., Zhejiang HangKe Technology Inc., Arcsoft Corp., Ningbo Ronbay New Energy Technology Co. and Beijing Tianyishangjia New Material Corp. couldn’t be reached for comment.

Anji Microelectronics Technology (Shanghai) Co. led all stocks on the Star market Monday, closing up 400%. About 48.5 billion yuan ($7.1 billion) of shares traded on the new venue, roughly 13% of the day’s turnover for the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.

The first-day surges were thanks to Star market rules that are different from other venues in China. The new board is a testing ground for regulators, who have waived restrictions on valuations and welcome unprofitable companies, as well as shares with unequal voting rights. Stocks on the Star market have no daily price limits for the first five trading days, followed by a 20% daily cap in either direction.

Tom Zhou, a fund manager at Shanghai River East Asset Management, said he expects initial volatility as investors try to figure out fair valuations, but said the focus will eventually move to assessing whether the companies’ growth potential can support their share prices.

“If not, we will see share value retreat,” Zhou said.

--With assistance from Amanda Wang, Mengchen Lu and Pei Yi Mak.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Venus Feng in Hong Kong at vfeng7@bloomberg.net;Amy Li in Shanghai at yli677@bloomberg.net;Jun Luo in Shanghai at jluo6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Mamudi at smamudi@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg