Chinese digital platform Qifa delays Moscow IPO as high interests rates bite
Qifa, which focuses on trade between Russia and China, had planned to raise US$18.9 million from its listing in Moscow
Sun on Tuesday said the 1.7-billion-rouble (US$18.9 million) IPO in Moscow had been planned initially in August, with the goal of selling around 20 per cent of Qifa’s shares.
“Now, it’s October or November. That’s after the key interest rate hike and as the general environment on the stock exchange became more difficult,” Sun told Reuters on the sidelines of Russia’s Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok. “So, for our future investors, we decided to postpone it.”
According to Qifa, its revenue jumped 75 per cent year on year to 5.7 billion roubles in 2023. Sales of consumer goods, such as shoes and clothes, accounted for the bulk of revenue.
Russia’s central bank hiked its key interest rate by 200 basis points to 18 per cent in July, the highest level in more than two years, and vowed to continue tightening until inflation rates in an overheated economy come down.