- Valuation about $6.5 billion at high end
- Six Chinese firms to list in Hong Kong this week
- MiniMax scheduled to start trading on January 9
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At the higher end, the IPO would value MiniMax at about $6.5 billion.
Its books have been oversubscribed multiple times, said the sources, who declined to be named as the information was confidential.
MiniMax is scheduled to price the offering on January 6, but one of the sources said it looks to close bookbuilding for the institutional tranche by 5 p.m. Hong Kong time on Monday. The shares will start trading on January 9.
The company did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment.
Bloomberg first reported on Monday the planned IPO price.
Six Chinese companies are scheduled to debut in Hong Kong this week. Zhipu AI, chipmaker Iluvatar CoreX and surgical robotics maker Shenzhen Edge Medical will start trading on January 8, while MiniMax and two others will debut on January 9.
MiniMax’s rival Zhipu AI fixed its offer price at HK$116.20 per share to raise HK$4.3 billion, according to its December 30 prospectus.
STRONG DEBUTS
“The Hong Kong IPO market will remain vibrant, with IPO funds raised anticipated to reach HK$350 billion in 2026, supported by listings of high-end manufacturing and tech companies,” said Eddie Wong, PwC Hong Kong Capital Markets Leader, in a Monday briefing.
“Despite uncertainties in the global geopolitical landscape, the demand for international financing by Chinese enterprises, and investors’ interest in high-quality Chinese companies remain strong,” he said.
Seventeen companies submitted listing applications in 2026 so far, HKEX filings showed.
($1 = 7.7878 Hong Kong dollars)
Reporting by Kane Wu in Hong Kong and Yantoultra Ngui in Singapore; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Muralikumar Anantharaman
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Kane Wu covers M&A, private equity, venture capital and investment banks in Asia. She tracks the region’s most high-profile deals, fundraisings as well as investment trends amidst geopolitical, macroeconomic and regulatory changes. She was nominated for a SOPA Excellence in Business Reporting award for coverage of China regulatory crackdown in 2021. Prior to Reuters, she worked at the Wall Street Journal and also wrote about Asia’s loan market for Thomson Reuters Basis Point. She is based in Hong Kong.
Yantoultra Ngui is the Southeast Asia Deals Correspondent of Reuters in Singapore, covering M&A and capital market activities in a region that is fast emerging as one of the world’s biggest economies. He previously was a reporter at Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ). Notably, he was part of WSJ’s team that covered the financial scandal at Malaysian state fund 1MDB, and that won SOPA Excellence in Breaking News award for the coverage of the assassination of Kim Jong Nam, the half-brother of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un, in Malaysia in 2018. Yantoultra graduated with an MBA in Finance from Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) in 2010.











