Shares in Chinese tea shop chain Sichuan Baicha Baidao Industrial fell more than 20 per cent on Tuesday in its Hong Kong trading debut following a $330 million initial public offering (IPO).
The shares were sold at US$2.23 each in the IPO, which is the largest in Hong Kong so far in 2024.
Baicha Baidao shares opened down 10.1 per cent and fell by as much as nearly 23 per cent to $1.72 each in early trade.
The shares had been offered to investors at a fixed price of $2.23 rather than in a range that would have given the underwriters the ability to set a final price after gauging demand.
Baicha Baidao’s IPO attracted tepid interest from investors.
Hong Kong retail investors did not take up the full amount of shares on offer for them, according to the company’s regulatory filings.
The retail tranche was only 0.5 times covered, which mean 7.44 million shares were reallocated to institutional investors.
The institutional tranche was 1.1 times covered, which is considered weak, especially compared to Hong Kong’s IPO boom times in 2020 and 2021 when deals were hundreds of times covered.
- Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Sydney and Donny Kwok in Hong Kong; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Jamie Freed, of Reuters.