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Chinese carmaker Geely scraps US$3 billion secondary listing on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-like Star Market

  • Decision to not proceed with the listing made in a board of directors meeting on Friday, company says
  • Scraping of Shanghai listing will add pressure to Geely’s share price: analyst

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Visitors checkout Zeekr 001, a model from Geely's new premium electric vehicle brand Zeekr, at its factory in Ningbo, Zhejiang province. Photo: Reuters
Geely Automobile Holdings, China’s largest private carmaker, has decided to scrap a secondary listing on Star Market, the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s Nasdaq-like board for start-ups, it said on Friday.
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The Hangzhou-based carmaker will not proceed with its plan to raise as much as 20 billion yuan (US$3.1 billion) through the sale of yuan-denominated A shares, it said in a filing with the exchange in Hong Kong, where it is listed.

“The company decided to withdraw the application for the proposed RMB share issue on the Sci-Tech Board [Star Market],” the company said in the filing. The decision to not proceed with the listing was made in a board of directors meeting on Friday, it added.

Geely unveiled a plan to seek a secondary listing on the Star Market in September last year and said that it had obtained the required regulatory approvals. Analysts at the time believed that the carmaker would use the proceeds to step up the development of next-generation cars.
The company’s stock price has doubled since then, partly because of its now-shelved Star Market listing plan. Its share price peaked at HK$36.5 in January, surging 122 per cent from HK$16.4 at the end of August last year, before it announced its Shanghai listing plan on September 1. Its stock close 0.2 per cent lower on Friday at HK$26.05, before its latest announcement.

“The scraping of the Shanghai listing will add pressure to the future share price of Geely, as the decision to scrap the fundraising plan may mean the company has delayed investment in some projects,” said Gordon Tsui, chairman of the Hong Kong Securities Association.

Geely said the decision was made after reviewing the company’s business and after discussions with the professional parties involved in the proposed yuan share issue. “Withdrawing the application for the proposed RMB share issue on the Sci-Tech Board will not give rise to any material adverse impact on the financial position or operation of the group,” it said.

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