Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Retail Traders Seek Nearly $60 Billion for Toymaker’s HK IPO

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(Bloomberg) — Retail investors have applied to borrow nearly $60 billion to participate in Chinese toymaker Bloks Group Ltd.’s Hong Kong initial public offering, continuing to show demand for new listings.

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Individual investors have sought to borrow money through margin financing, with the amount reflecting more than 3,100 times the number of shares reserved for them at the upper end of the IPO’s price range, according to TradeGo data displayed on the Futubull trading application. They applied to borrow HK$462 billion ($59 billion) through brokerages to bid for the Shanghai-based company’s shares as of 3:30pm Hong Kong time.

Bloks, which makes assembly-character toys, has been taking investor orders since Tuesday and is set to list shares on Jan. 10. It is offering 24.1 million shares to raise as much as HK$1.5 billion, with local retail investors being allocated 10% of the shares. The debut also comes against the backdrop of a rally in fellow toymaker Pop Mart International Group Ltd.

Dealmakers are broadly expecting a better year for Hong Kong IPOs. Some listings attracted significant interest from individual investors last year, with high subscription multiples being concentrated among smaller deals.

Chinese courier SF Holding Co.’s $749 million listing saw about 79 times subscription for its retail tranche, while the same allotment for health-supplement company Herbs Generation Group Holdings Ltd.’s $16 million IPO drew more than 6,000 times subscription. Both companies triggered the so-called clawback mechanism, which increased the allocation to retail investors.

The jump in retail activity comes as an increasing number of brokerage firms have been offering margin loans at a low or even zero interest rate, said Andy Wong, IPO leader at Shinewing (HK) CPA Ltd., an accounting and advisory firm.

“This shall create a continued boiling atmosphere for the Hong Kong IPO market,” Wong said. But that also means lower chances of securing shares in the IPO, and the issuer’s shares might face pressure after their listing, he added.

Hong Kong’s stock exchange is seeking to change some requirements for IPOs through a market consultation, which touches on the clawback mechanism. Mom-and-pop investors can currently be allocated as much as 50% of a deal when the subscription ratio is above a certain level, and the exchange is proposing to lower that to 20% if issuers initially reserve 5% of the shares for the public.

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