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Hong Kong IPOs: PwC cuts 2024 fundraising prediction by 20% to US$10.2 billion

  • About 80 companies could list in Hong Kong this year, raising a total of HK$80 billion (US$10.2 billion), much lower than the HK$100 billion previously anticipated, PwC says

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Accounting firm PwC is cautiously optimistic about fundraising activity on the Hong Kong stock exchange in the second half of the year. Photo: Jelly Tse
Mia Castagnonein Shanghai

PwC has downgraded its outlook for Hong Kong’s initial public offering (IPO) market, noting the high interest rate environment has weighed on companies’ fundraising plans.

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The accounting firm said in its half-yearly report on Tuesday that it anticipates 80 companies to list on the city’s stock exchange this year, with fundraising to reach up to HK$80 billion (US$10.2 billion), significantly lower than its forecast of more than HK$100 billion in January.

The city’s new listing environment continues to be burdened by high interest rates and cautious investor sentiment, according to its report.

Funds raised from new share sales in Hong Kong dropped to a two-decade low in the first half, pushing the city down several rungs to 13th place in a global ranking of IPO markets.

A total of 26 companies raised US$1.5 billion on the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange in the first six months of the year, according to LSEG data.

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“At the beginning of the year the market was quite upbeat about the Hong Kong market,” said Louis Wong, executive director of Phillip Capital Management (Hong Kong).

“Since then, lacklustre market sentiment in Hong Kong coupled with macroeconomic slowdown and growth uncertainties in China have led most [companies] to lower their expectations.”

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