What makes Yuanjie – a Chinese optical chip star and Hong Kong IPO candidate – stand out?
Yuanjie’s rise underscores how China’s optical chip firms are riding the AI infrastructure boom, with data centre demand driving growth

Yuanjie Semiconductor Technology, a Chinese maker of laser chips for optical communications, has emerged as one of the mainland exchanges’ biggest beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence infrastructure boom – with its shares rising nearly ninefold over the past year as it pursues a Hong Kong listing.
The Shaanxi-based integrated device manufacturer, whose shares closed at 1,100 yuan on Friday, now ranks second by share price among mainland-listed companies, trailing only Kweichow Moutai at 1,416 yuan. Yuanjie’s market capitalisation stands at about 94.6 billion yuan (US$13.7 billion).
It is only the second company on Shanghai’s tech-focused STAR market to breach the 1,000 yuan threshold, after AI chipmaker Cambricon.
Founded in 2013 by Zhang Xingang, a Tsinghua University graduate who later earned his master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Southern California, Yuanjie listed on the STAR Market in 2022. Zhang, a veteran of the optical communications industry, previously worked at Luminent and Source Photonics before establishing the company.
Yuanjie’s core products are laser chips – the optical heart of high-speed data transmission – spanning continuous wave lasers, electro-absorption modulated lasers (EML) and distributed feedback lasers. These serve AI data centres, 5G infrastructure and fibre access networks, powering transceiver modules that convert electrical signals into pulses of light across fibre cables.

By external sales revenue in 2025, Yuanjie ranked as the sixth-largest laser chip provider globally and the second-largest supplier of laser chips for silicon photonics-based high-speed optical interconnect products worldwide, according to data from China Insights Consultancy cited in the company’s Hong Kong stock exchange filing on Wednesday.