Hong Kong's equity capital markets bounce back in first half, as Shein IPO looms
HONG Kong's equity capital markets activity roared back to life in the first half of 2025, driven by global investors sharpening focus on China as the city awaits the possible Shein initial public offering in the second half.
Big ticket capital raisings and a rush of 'A to H' share deals, where companies already listed on mainland Chinese markets list in Hong Kong, helped revive flatlining markets and led to the strongest first half since 2021.
Fast fashion giant Shein is working to list in Hong Kong before the end of the year, Reuters reported in May, citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
A Shein listing would help Hong Kong re-establish its credibility as a global fundraising centre as a time of major volatility created by US trade policy changes.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index is up 21.2 per cent year-to-date, making it one of the best performing major markets in the world, despite the tariff negotiations between China and the United States.
'The new era has come which is a more divided world - I think that's reality we are facing,' said James Wang, head of Asia ex-Japan equity capital markets at Goldman Sachs.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
'Arguably, there are more investment opportunities. It's a structural change and there is going to be capital outflowing from the US and inflows into the Asian region.'
Across Asia, including Japan, there was a 15.3 per cent increase in total equity issuance in the first half to US$116.2 billion, up from US$100.7 billion in the same period last year, according to LSEG data.
There were US$12.8 billion of combined proceeds from IPOs and second listings in Hong Kong in the first half, up more than eight-fold on the same time last year, the data showed.
But the US$2.9 billion raised from IPOs in Hong Kong during the half, while up from last year's US$1.7 billion, remained well below the US$8.5 billion raised on the Nasdaq in New York, according to LSEG data.
Despite the Hang Seng's rally, investors remain nervous buying into IPOs as volatility continues to rack global markets.
'An A to H listing is like a follow on, there is a price benchmark, but for standalone IPOs where you don't have that price benchmark,' Wang said.
'The last round's valuation is not a benchmark. For people to feel comfortable to write a large ticket they need to get comfortable the market is there to support them, not just that they feel the valuation is OK.'
Global investors buying back into China and participating in major deals like battery maker CATL's US$5.3 billion listing and electric vehicle makers Xiaomi and BYD raising a combined US$11 billion helped drive equity transactions, dealmakers said.
'Many global investors have reduced underweight positions and are taking advantage of capital market liquidity events to increase exposure,' said Sunil Dhupelia, JPMorgan's co-head of equity capital markets for Asia-Pacific.
'Engagement from global investors on our Hong Kong and mainland China pipeline is the highest it has been for some time,' he said.
China in May cut benchmark lending rates for the first time since October as authorities worked to ease monetary policy to shield the economy from any Sino-US trade war impact.
China's Premier Li Qiang said on Thursday the world's second-largest economy remains the biggest driving force for the global economy and that policymakers would take 'forceful steps' to boost domestic consumption.
'I think investors are also taking some comfort that China still has chips in their bag that they can play to support the market, such as supportive policy measures,' said Aaron Oh, UBS's head of equity capital markets for Asia Pacific.
'And China has shown resiliency thus far despite the global trade uncertainties.'
Goldman Sachs topped Asia's equity capital market league tables in the first half, ahead of Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan, the LSEG data showed. REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
What traders have gotten wrong in 2025
[LONDON] Six months since Wall Street laid out its predictions for 2025, world conflicts and US President Donald Trump's turbulent policy making have shattered assumptions about the strength and pre-eminence of US assets and the economy, leaving market favourites in tatters and conjuring unexpected winners. As foreseen: swings in sovereign bond markets have been sharp, the Japanese yen rallied, and a comeback for emerging markets is finally materialising. At the same time, few envisaged the US dollar – the emblem of US exceptionalism – would suffer losses this deep, or predicted the S&P 500's giddying plunge followed by breakneck rebound. Europe's stock market, meanwhile, has morphed from backwater into investor must-have. A 'very significant evolution' has occurred in markets in the past six months, said Simon Dangoor, head of fixed income macro strategies at Goldman Sachs Asset Management. 'Any themes that you were playing for at the start of the year that were about medium-term trends have been tested.' Here's a look into a group of assets and how they performed so far this year: US dollar Trump's low-tax, high-tariff policies were expected to stoke inflation and reduce the chances of interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve – factors seen propelling the US dollar's supremacy well into 2025. Instead, a Bloomberg gauge of the currency posted its worst start to a year since at least 2005, and its hegemony is being debated ever more fiercely. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The 'Liberation Day' tariffs at the start of April were so sweeping and punitive that they fuelled fears of a US recession and fanned speculation that Trump was seeking to buoy domestic manufacturing by engineering a weaker US dollar. That's a dangerous game: the US depends on foreign investors to buy its mountainous debt pile, and a weaker greenback erodes returns on those bonds. Societe Generale, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase had not expected a turn in the US dollar's fortunes in the first half and only predicted gradual slippage later in the year. Now, a JPMorgan team led by Meera Chandan says the greenback's faltering link to rates and equities could be a sign of structural weaknesses. They predict a gauge of the US currency's strength will drop another 2 per cent by year-end. US stocks Investors entered the year with a record high allocation to US stocks, emboldened by a robust economy and bets around artificial intelligence (AI). That optimism was all but abandoned within months, first as Chinese startup DeepSeek challenged the US's dominance in the AI race, and later on fears that Trump's tariffs would tip the economy into a recession. Nearly US$7 trillion of market capitalisation was wiped from the technology-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index between a February peak and an April low. A Bank of America fund manager survey showed the biggest-ever drop in exposure to US stocks in March. By early April, US equity bulls were in short supply. But Trump's decision later that month to pause some of the highest tariffs in a century proved pivotal. The S&P 500 hit a record high as data show the economy chugging along and with technology heavyweights in vogue again. After months of ructions and tempered forecasts, Wall Street strategists are taking an optimistic tone on US stocks for the second half. 'I am as bullish on US stocks as ever,' said Marija Veitmane, a senior multi-asset strategist at State Street Global Markets. 'They still offer the best earnings story with the fastest growth and most predictability. Institutional investors restarted buying in mid-April and have not looked back since.' Asian currencies With the Bank of Japan prepared to raise interest rates at a time when peers were cutting, traders started 2025 confident they'd see a rally in the yen. JPMorgan Asset Management and Brandywine Global Investment Management were among those proved right by the currency's almost 9 per cent surge against the US dollar to around 145 this year. The yen got a further boost in April from surging demand for haven assets amid the confusion around Trump's tariffs. Jupiter Asset Management's Mark Nash, who positioned for the rally in January, forecasts the currency will climb to 120 per US dollar by year-end, an advance of around 17 per cent from current levels. In China, meanwhile, US trade tariffs were expected to hurt the yuan, but so far the US dollar's own sharp sell-off has upended the prediction. In December, Nomura called for the yuan to weaken to 7.6 per US dollar in offshore trading by May, and JPMorgan saw a rate of 7.5 in the second quarter. Instead, the yuan has surged 1.8 per cent this year, hitting 7.1565 per US dollar on Thursday (Jun 26) – the highest level in seven months – as the People's Bank of China strengthened the daily reference rate. Still, strategists say the yuan will eventually have to fall, given strains in the Chinese economy that may require monetary and fiscal easing in the second half of the year to lift growth. 'China will want to utilise the yuan as a release valve, as well as to maintain competitiveness given the ongoing pressure on the economy and the fact that exports remain the main engine of growth,' Barclays Bank strategists Mitul Kotecha and Lemon Zhang wrote in a Jun 24 note. They see the yuan weakening to 7.20 per US dollar by the end of the year, and to 7.25 by March 2026. Global bonds Amid the turbulence, many investors were grateful for one trade that 'saved their bacon', according to Jared Noering, global head of fixed income trading at NatWest Markets. Short-dated government bonds were expected to perform well, boosted by central bank interest-rate cuts as inflation eased further. In contrast, long-dated bonds were predicted to come under pressure as governments took on increasing levels of debt to plug deepening fiscal deficits and ramped up public spending. Wagers structured around this divergence have largely played out around the globe, including in the US, where markets remain on edge over the administration's tax and spending plans. Measures of the so-called term premium in longer-dated US Treasuries have soared in an indication buyers are demanding higher compensation for rampant borrowing. Pimco and Allspring Global Investments correctly predicted the divergence in short- and longer-term yields in global bond markets. BlackRock Investment Institute was also correct to underweight long-term Treasuries. European stocks It was hard to find fans of European equities at the start of the year, let alone investors betting they would outshine their US peers. Six months on, fears about a sluggish economy and the threat of tariffs have been offset by Germany's plans to unleash hundreds of billions of euros in defence spending after Trump demanded Europe foots its own military bill instead of relying on the martial heft of the US. As at Jun 27, the benchmark Stoxx 600 index had trounced the S&P 500 by 16 percentage points in US dollar terms, the best relative performance since 2006. The euro has surged to US$1.17, bucking widespread forecasts for parity with the US dollar in early 2025. Beata Manthey, Citigroup's head of European and global equity strategy, was among the rare voices to back European stocks late last year. Targets at JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs proved too cautious. Goldman's chief global equity strategist, Peter Oppenheimer, said much has changed: 'Very aggressive tariffs are not likely to be fully implemented.' Emerging-market comeback Every year since 2017, emerging-market equities have lagged US stocks. In 2025, a procession of money managers, with Morgan Stanley among the most vocal, were convinced it was going to be different. And so far, the jinx appears to have been broken. A boom in AI companies from Taiwan, South Korea and China has helped the equity index. But the overall investment case for emerging markets is underpinned by broad currency strength against the greenback and the perception that the period of US exceptionalism is waning. Emerging markets have added US$1.8 trillion to shareholder wealth in 2025, reaching a record market capitalisation of US$29 trillion. Bernd Berg, a strategist at InTouch Capital Markets, expects those inflows to continue thanks to benign inflation and decent growth rates. 'The geopolitical tensions have not derailed this rally,' Berg said. In individual developing markets, Turkey's lira took a hit in March, tumbling to a record low in the space of half an hour, after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan detained his main political rival. That spooked investors who'd borrowed funds in countries where interest rates were low and ploughed the cash into high-yielding lira-denominated assets. They feared the political shock could eventually herald changes in the country's market-friendly economic policy and high central-bank interest rates. While the broader fears have not materialised, investors are wary, with Pimco among those trimming exposure to Turkish bonds. Meanwhile, the failure of Trump's push for peace between Russia and Ukraine has seen the price of Ukrainian bonds slump. Once a favourite investor bet on a ceasefire, Ukrainian warrants, which have interest payments linked to economic growth, have tumbled since the government defaulted on a payment. BLOOMBERG


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Japan factory output rises, but slower than expected as US tariffs threat looms
TOKYO: Japanese factory output rose at a slower-than-expected pace in May, government data showed on Monday (Jun 30), as sweeping US tariffs were threatening to derail the country's already fragile economic recovery. Industrial output rose 0.5 per cent in May from the previous month, data from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) showed, less than a median market forecast for a 3.5 per cent rise. Manufacturers surveyed by METI expect seasonally adjusted output to rise 0.3 per cent in June and fall 0.7 per cent in July. "It's necessary to pay close attention to the worsening trend in sentiment (among manufacturers on) production planning," a METI official said. Tokyo is scrambling to find ways to get Washington to exempt its automakers from automobile industry-specific tariffs of 25 per cent, which are severely impacting the country's manufacturing sector. Japan also faces a 24 per cent "reciprocal" tariff rate starting on Jul 9 unless it can negotiate a deal with Washington. Motor vehicle production went up by 2.5 per cent and shipments jumped 10.5 per cent in May from a month prior, the data showed. Some manufacturers had moved up their shipments because of the tariffs, the METI official said. The number of firms mentioning that the tariffs had an impact on their production or shipment increased slightly from April, the official said. "Exports are likely to remain sluggish and production indices are expected to continue show weakness in response to the global economic slowdown," said Yutaro Suzuki, an economist at Daiwa Securities. The hit from US tariffs could derail a lacklustre recovery in Japan's economy, the world's fourth largest. The economy shrank in January to March, the first contraction in a year, due to subdued private consumption. The US tariffs also complicate the Bank of Japan's efforts to raise still-low interest rates and reduce a balance sheet that has ballooned to roughly the size of Japan's economy. "The poor run of data will keep the central bank on hold for the time being," said Stefan Angrick, head of Japan and Frontier markets Economics at Moody's Analytics. "Until there's progress on US-Japan trade, Japan's manufacturers will remain in the doldrums, with few clear sources of support."


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Japan's food inflation to intensify in July, survey shows
TOKYO: Japanese households will get no respite from rising living costs with a five-fold increase expected in the number of food items set to experience price rises in July, a private think tank survey showed on Monday (Jun 30). The finding highlights mounting inflationary pressure in Japan's once deflation-prone economy, which some policymakers view as an early sign of widespread, sustained price rises that may require raising interest rates further. A survey conducted on 195 major food makers showed they expect to hike prices for 2,105 items in July - up fivefold from year-before levels - by an average 15 per cent, Teikoku Databank said. Aside from rising raw material prices and utility bills, companies cited increasing transportation and labour costs as reasons for the price hikes, the report released by Teikoku Databank showed. "The momentum for food and beverage price hikes is stronger in 2025 than that of the previous year," the report said. Prices were set to rise for a range of items including those made of rice, as well as chocolate, chewing gum, potato chips and pasta sauce. Among companies that announced plans to hike prices from Jul 1, Ajinomoto AGF plans to raise prices for its coffee items by about 25 to 55 per cent, and Meiji will increase prices for cheese and milk by up to 11 per cent. A renewed rise in crude oil prices due to the escalating conflict in the Middle East could spark a revival of the price hike rush Japan experienced in 2022, when prices increased for a total of 25,768 food and beverage items, Teikoku Databank said. After raising its short-term policy rate to 0.5 per cent in January, the BOJ has kept borrowing costs steady despite core consumer inflation hitting a more than two-year high of 3.7 per cent in May, exceeding its 2 per cent target for well over three years. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has stressed the need to move cautiously in raising rates until inflation is driven more by solid consumption and higher wages, rather than rising raw material costs. But the central bank's argument that rising food and fuel costs are likely temporary, and not a justification for raising rates, is being tested by persistent rises in the cost of living that may affect public perceptions of future price moves, analysts say. The BOJ's quarterly "tankan" survey on companies, due on Tuesday, will highlight the challenge it faces in balancing mounting inflationary pressure, and risks to Japan's fragile economy from steep US tariffs. Analysts polled by Reuters expect an index measuring big manufacturers' business sentiment to worsen to +10 in the June survey from +12 in March. The focus would be on whether companies will retain their solid capital expenditure plans despite uncertainty over US trade policy. Big firms surveyed in the tankan are expected to increase capital expenditure by 10 per cent in fiscal 2025 from year before levels, the Reuters poll showed.