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Zhipu AI Launches $4B Hong Kong Share Sale as Stock Surges

  • Zhipu seeks fresh funds after January Hong Kong listing
  • Deal comes as Beijing weighs AI model export curbs
  • Shares jumped 13.4% before placement launch

July 8 (Reuters) - Knowledge Atlas Technology JSC, known as Zhipu AI, is seeking to raise around $4 billion via a share ‌sale in Hong Kong, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters on Wednesday.

The deal came after Zhipu's shares surged 13.4% on Wednesday, extending strong gains in one of Hong Kong's hottest artificial intelligence stocks.

Zhipu is offering 19.78 million new shares at HK$1,588 to HK$1,698 ​each, representing a 7% to 13% discount to Wednesday's close of HK$1,825. The accelerated bookbuild, a rapid share ​sale typically aimed at institutional investors, would increase the company's share capital by about 4.2%, ⁠according to the term sheet.

Chinese technology companies are turning to Hong Kong's capital markets to fund research, hiring ​and expansion as China seeks to narrow the gap with the U.S. in artificial intelligence.

This week alone, several technology firms ​moved ahead with Hong Kong listings, including Nexchip Semiconductor, which priced an IPO to raise about HK$6.98 billion ($890 million).

Investor demand for Chinese AI companies remains strong, although concerns about valuations have made buyers more selective, said Glenn Yin, research director at brokerage ACCM.

"Raising $4 billion gives Zhipu ​significant firepower to compete, but it also increases pressure on the company to demonstrate that heavy AI investment can ​translate into sustainable commercial returns," he added.

Zhipu plans to use the proceeds for research and development, including hiring, computing capacity and technical ‌services, ⁠as well as business expansion, strategic investments, mergers and acquisitions, working capital and general corporate purposes.

CHALLENGER TO THE U.S.

Zhipu is one of China's best-known AI model developers and is viewed by investors as a fast-rising Chinese challenger to U.S. firms such as OpenAI, helped by strong demand for large language models.

The fundraising also comes as Beijing considers tighter control ​over its most advanced AI ​technology.

Reuters reported on Tuesday ⁠that Chinese authorities had held meetings with top technology firms, including Zhipu, about possibly limiting overseas access to China's leading AI models, according to people familiar with the matter.

Any ​such curbs could affect how Chinese AI companies sell or offer their models abroad, although ​Reuters could not ⁠determine how the restrictions would work.

Zhipu raised HK$4.35 billion in its Hong Kong initial public offering at the start of the year. It said last month it aimed to raise 15 billion yuan from a planned STAR Market listing in Shanghai.

Meanwhile AI startup ⁠MiniMax is ​working on a large language model with 2.7 trillion parameters, Reuters reported earlier ​on Wednesday. On Tuesday, the news of DeepSeek developing its own AI chip hurt sentiment towards U.S. chip stocks.

($1 = 6.7995 Chinese yuan renminbi)

($1 = 7.8395 Hong Kong dollars)

Reporting ​by Nichiket Sunil and Rajasik Mukherjee in Bengaluru and Yantoultra Ngui in Singapore; Editing by Joyjeet Das and Louise Heavens

Source: Reuters


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