Bankers are working on more than $6 billion in initial public offerings this week in Japan and India, getting a boost from two markets that have become an increasingly important source of revenue due to the decline of a long-running deal in China.
(hotlink)The listings of Hyundai Motor(/hotlink) Co.’s Indian unit, subway operator Tokyo Metro Co. and Japanese X-ray technology firm Rigaku Holdings Corp. will boost Asia Pacific IPO volumes by China’s $28 billion passing more than, comfortably passing. $23.7 billion in sales in 2023, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The deals underscore a growing reliance on Japan and India among investment bankers who have looked to China for years. Chinese listings have raised more than $20 billion this year, down from about $136 billion in 2021, after regulators increased scrutiny of new deals and investors pulled back amid worries about the economy.
The rise in volumes outside China in Asia Pacific has been driven by over $9 billion worth of supplies from India. one of the biggest beneficiaries Investor doubts about China over the past year.
“The stars are aligned in many aspects,” Rahul Saraf, head of investment banking at Citigroup Inc. in India, said of the nation’s IPO market. Many Indian businesses are mature enough to list, and the stable political environment has provided a good backdrop for deals, he added.
Hyundai Motor Co.’s Indian unit is taking orders for a $3.3 billion share sale this week, on track to become the country’s largest-ever IPO. The deal has already seen strong demand, with BlackRock Inc., Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte and Capital Group all bidding for the company’s shares, Bloomberg News reported. notify last week
India’s busy stock market is causing some volatility worry about a bubble. Regulators have cracked down on irregularities such as financial statement fraud and price manipulation in a bid to boost the credibility of India’s capital markets.
The country’s IPO mania will eventually die down, but that doesn’t mean the market will suddenly go south, said Nitin Mathur, associate chief investment officer at Fidelity International.
“There could be a period of volatility because valuations in some areas of the market are expensive,” he said. But that wouldn’t be bad for the market’s long-term health, he added.
Lists of Japan
Bankers working on Chinese corporate listings have seen signs of life recently, and Midea Group Co. home appliances The recent $4.6 billion share sale in Hong Kong provides an optimistic backdrop for other deals.
In Japan this week, subway operator Tokyo Metro Co. is expected to have a $2.3 billion listing price, the country’s highest in six years, and X-ray technology firm Rigaku Holdings Corp. the company will raise more than 730 million dollars from it. Tokyo list
Long-time investors have covered the entire international portion of Tokyo Metro’s IPO, Bloomberg News reported last week. It said the sale of Rigaku shares covered international order books within a day of the deal’s launch.
“Large-scale IPOs like the Tokyo Metro attract a lot of attention from foreign investors,” said Chizuru Morishita, a researcher at the NLI Research Institute. “If successful, it may make it easier for other companies to enter the market.”
Japan’s stock rally and companies have pushed to increase shareholder returns and reduce cross-holdings with other companies. a pink background for the sale of shares in the country.
Hyundai Motor India will list the shares on October 22. Tokyo Metro will be released on October 23rd, and Rigaku on October 25th.