Cornerstone investors return to Hong Kong IPO market

After four subdued years, cornerstone investors anchoring Hong Kong's IPO market are returning in force, reshaping the deal landscape. Firms like Fidelity International have backed listings in mining, crypto, and food sectors. Experts expect this momentum to continue into 2026.

Hong Kong's IPO market has seen a strong return of cornerstone investors after four subdued years. Fidelity International's most significant commitments dated back to 2021, when Chinese short-video platform Kuaishou Technology raised US$5.4 billion and healthcare firm Medlive Technology completed a US$543.4 million listing. The asset manager then went quiet for the next four years.

Late last year, Fidelity returned to Chinese assets in force. It backed gold miner Zijin Gold International’s US$3.2 billion listing in September 2025, followed by crypto platform HashKey Group, snack retailer Busy Ming, and pork giant Muyuan Foods.

Fidelity’s comeback is not an isolated case. Heavyweight global investors such as BlackRock, Temasek, and Qatar Investment Authority are reappearing in cornerstone books, signalling a shift in sentiment.

“We have seen a robust comeback of international long-only investors – especially European and Middle Eastern sovereign funds – in Hong Kong’s IPO market, and we expect that momentum to carry into 2026,” said John Lee, vice-chairman and head of Greater China for global banking at UBS.

The return is not limited to Europe and the Middle East, with US and Singapore-based funds also re-emerging as cornerstone backers in major listings, particularly across consumption, industrial, and hi-tech sectors.

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New share listings by Chinese technology firms in Hong Kong have delivered above-average returns on their debuts so far in 2026, as investors bet on Beijing’s push for technology self-reliance amid a challenging macro environment. The outperformance underlines that the tech self-reliance trade is extending its momentum into 2026, the first year of China’s latest five-year development plan, which emphasises artificial intelligence and other cutting-edge technologies.

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Cathy Zhang, head of Asia-Pacific equity capital markets at Morgan Stanley, predicts that 2026 could exceed last year's record IPO figures in Hong Kong, driven by January's momentum, with more than 450 companies already in the pipeline.

The Tokyo Stock Exchange is positioning itself as a cross-border listing hub for Asian startups' initial public offerings, providing assistance in fundraising and preparations through partners like banks, auditors, and venture capital funds across the region. So far, 20 startups have been selected for the program, with half based in Singapore and Taiwan.

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Despite a hot domestic market, South Korean investors have increased purchases on Hong Kong and mainland exchanges this year. Data shows they bought US$507 million in Hong Kong-listed shares and US$154 million in mainland-listed shares, focusing heavily on AI and semiconductor names.

 

 

 

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