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          Biz / Tech

          Xiaomi shares end up underwater in debut

          Zhu Shenshen
          Xiaomi Corp's?US$4.7 billion initial public offering stumbled at the starting line on Monday, dropping as much as 6 percent when the shares debuted in Hong Kong trading.
          Zhu Shenshen
          Xiaomi shares end up underwater in debut
          Imaginechina

          Xiaomi Corp’s US$4.7 billion initial public offering suffered a 6 percent drop in share prices when they started trading in Hong Kong yesterday.

          The shares in the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker recovered somewhat, closing at HK$16.8, a 1.2 percent discount to its offer price of HK$17.

          The issue, once ballyhooed as the biggest in the world this year, was scaled back to its lowest price range. Among the setbacks confronting the offer were concerns about mounting China-US trade tensions that have roiled the technology sector, and the company’s backdown from earlier plans to issue Chinese depositary receipts. 

          Lei Jun, Xiaomi’s chairman and chief executive officer, tried to put a brave face on the poor showing.

          “It’s a new start for Xiaomi after an IPO for more innovation and global expansion,” he said at the Hong Kong Exchange and Clearings, adding that “it’s a tough timing for an IPO.”

          Investors in the IPO included Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing, Tencent Chairman Pony Ma and Alibaba Chairman Jack Ma. 

          One factor in Xiaomi’s disappointing debut may hinge on how investors view the company’s business.

          Some investors think Xiaomi is not an Internet company but “a purely consumer firm with the genes of technology,” according to Sinolink Securities in a research note.

          The Chinese market is a “cashcow” of Xiaomi but the whole market is “shrinking.” That is the reason why xiaomi has to get listed now for capital on research and overseas expansion despite the bad timing, said Jia Mo, an analyst of Canalys.

          Meanwhile, Xiaomi internet services like reading and game are not competitve compared with tier-one players like Tencent in China, industry insiders said.

          Xiaomi is sometimes called the “Apple of China.” Its products include smartphones, TVs, routers and other smart devices. The company reported a two-thirds surge in revenue last year to 114.6 billion yuan (US$17.25 billion). A third of that income comes from global sales, Lei wrote earlier in a public letter.

          The company is the first in Hong Kong to sell shares with a dual-class structure since the city changed listing rules to allow company founders to keep outsized voting rights.

          Hong Kong is now a popular destination for technology IPOs, especially for mainland firms.

          In the past two years, online health care platform Ping An Good Doctor, game gadget vendor Razer, online car-financing provider Yixin Group and online finance payment service provider ChinaPnR all held IPOs in Hong Kong.

          Businesses in the “new economy” will continue to boost IPO activities on both the mainland and in Hong Kong in the second half, EY predicted in a report in June.

          Online-to-offline giant Meituan-Dianping, Tencent’s online music subsidiary QQ Music and online education platform Hujiang are among Chinese tech firms considering Hong Kong listings. How Xiaomi’s performance may affect those plans remains to be seen. 

          Xiaomi shares end up underwater in debut
          Imaginechina

          Xiaomi Corp founder, Chairman and CEO Lei Jun (right) hits the gong during the company’s trading debut on the Hong Kong Exchange and Clearings. 

          Relegated to No.2

          When Xiaomi priced its IPO at the bottom end of a range between HK$17 and HK$22, it effectively reduced its valuation to about US$54 billion — roughly half of the initial goal set by the company. The deflated issue now ranks as the second biggest in the world this year.

          Some institutional investors saw bids as low as HK$15.20 in gray-market trading ahead of the formal start of trading, 11 percent below the IPO price, according to a Bloomberg report.

          Shanghai’s stock index is down almost 20 percent so far this year, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has dropped about 5 percent.

          Analysts cite the mounting trade dispute between China and the US, which has been especially heated in the technology sector.

          Xiaomi earlier applied to issue shares via China depositary receipts in the mainland market, along with the Hong Kong listing. It later put the depositary receipts plan on hold. 

          Xiaomi was among the first companies to submit an application to issue the depositary receipts when China issued rules for a pilot program in the new market in June as part of plans to encourage the domestic listing of innovative companies.

          Xiaomi’s sprawling businesses, which include artificial intelligence speakers, air purifiers and wristband, still depend on smartphones for 80 percent of revenue.

          Founded in 2010, Xiaomi launched its own mobile system and introduced aggressive pricing. It grabbed market share rapidly with online-only phone models and competitive prices.

          Then Xiaomi gradually expanded into other smart devices and opened off-line stores nationwide. 

          It also moved aggressively into India where its phones have become popular sellers. 

          Lei insisted that Xiaomi had evolved beyond just smartphones into a maker of intelligent and Internet of Things devices. He said the company had limited the margin of hardware products to 5 percent

          In 2017, Xiaomi generated revenue of 114.6 billion yuan, the first time the company surpassed the 100-billion-yuan line. Excluding one-time charges, profit was 5.36 billion yuan.

          Business scope of Xiaomi

          Xiaomi shares end up underwater in debut
          SHINE

          Xiaomi’s road toward IPO in HK

          2010 Founding of Xiaomi Corp

          2011 Debut of its first smartphone which is sold only online

          2012 Annual sales exceeding US$1 billion after selling 1 million smartphones by March

          2013 Debut of Xiaomi’s entry-product line RedMi with price below 1,000 yuan

          2014 Annual revenue exceeding US$10 billion

          2015 Release of the second-generation TV products starting from 1,999 yuan 

          2016 Release of Xiaomi 5

          2017 Release of its Mi 5C that uses a self-developed processor; Xiaomi becomes the top smartphone player in India

          2018 Release of Xiaomi 8; Xiaomi lists in Hong Kong

          Source: Xiaomi and Shanghai Daily

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