Alibaba Wins Exchange’s Approval for Mega Hong Kong Listing


Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. plans to offer about 500 million shares in its Hong Kong listing, a person with knowledge of the matter said, setting the tech giant up to potentially raise more than $11 billion.
The base offering could raise $11.7 billion based on Alibaba’s last close in New York, though it wasn’t clear if the company would market the deal at a discount to its U.S. stock price. Alibaba’s American depositary shares, which represent 8 ordinary shares of the internet company, rose 0.1% to $186.97 in U.S. trading Tuesday.Alibaba declined to comment in an emailed statement.
The Hong Kong stock exchange approved the internet company’s listing application, a person with knowledge of the matter said earlier Wednesday. Asia’s largest corporation is proceeding with what could be this year’s largest stock offering despite violent pro-democracy protests gripping the city. The Chinese e-commerce titan is aiming to raise as much as $15 billion in the financial hub’s largest issuance of stock since 2010, Bloomberg News reported last week.
The deal underwriters would also have a so-called greenshoe option to sell an additional 75 million shares, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Terms of the share sale haven’t been finalized and could still change before the offering launches, the person said.
Alibaba’s share sale marks a triumph for Hong Kong stock exchange that lost many of China’s brightest technology stars to U.S. rivals. The city’s bourse has introduced new rules that allow dual-class shares after resisting such a change for a decade. Efforts to lure Alibaba went all the way to the top of Hong Kong’s government, with Chief Executive Carrie Lam exhorting billionaire Jack Ma to consider a listing in the city.
The New York-listed Chinese giant had aimed to list over the summer before pro-democracy protests rocked the financial hub, while trade tensions between Washington and Beijing clouded the market’s outlook. It’s unclear if the violence will affect the listing process, given growing resentment toward mainland Chinese influence as well as the country’s most visible corporate symbols.
Listing closer to home has been a long-time dream of Ma’s-- a move that curries favor with Beijing and hedges against trade war risks. A successful Hong Kong share sale could also help finance a costly war of subsidies with Meituan Dianping in food delivery and travel, and divert investor cash from rivals like Meituan and WeChat-operator Tencent Holdings Ltd.
Day Three Of World Economic Forum 2019
Daniel Zhang
Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
A successful Hong Kong debut will be another feather in the cap for Daniel Zhang, who took over as chairman from Ma in September. The former accountant is now spearheading the company’s expansion beyond Asia but also into adjacent markets from cloud computing to entertainment, logistics and physical retail.

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