Hon Hais Smart Factory Unit Targets Raising Up To $4.3b In Shanghai IPO

Hon Hai

Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. employees walk past the company's headquarters in the Tucheng district of New Taipei, Taiwan, on Wednesday, June 26, 2013. Photographer: Ashley Pon/

Foxconn Industrial Internet Co. plans to raise 27.1 billion yuan ($4.3 billion) selling stock in an initial public offering, kicking off the largest mainland Chinese debut since the 2015 stock market crash.

Shares will be offered at 13.77 yuan apiece, valuing the company at about $43 billion. The smart factory unit of Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Apple Inc.’s most important assembly partner, will float 1.97 billion shares in Shanghai, it said in a filing with the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Hon Hai, which makes smartphones, cloud computing equipment and robots, wants to spend more than 27 billion yuan funding FII’s projects in areas from smart manufacturing to fifth-generation wireless technologies. The move will position billionaire Terry Gou even more centrally in the global tech supply chain as he tries to move beyond assembling PCs and phones and lessen a dependence on Apple for more than half its revenue.

Known as FII, the business’s valuation puts it on par with Sony Corp. With sales of 355 billion yuan in 2017, its revenue is about level with Walt Disney Co. or HP Inc. Its fundraising is one of the highest-profile tech listings in Shenzhen or Shanghai in years, as the government courts a long under-represented sector.

The debut will come amid a push to attract capital from Taiwan, a self-governed island over which China claims sovereignty.

Beijing has introduced plans to welcome Taiwanese investment in some of the nation’s most restricted sectors, though pro-independence Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen has warned that such moves could suck away much-needed capital.

FII’s debut also dovetails with an effort to drive tech listings on the mainland. Chinese enterprises have long pursued the prestige and capital associated with marquee overseas debuts. But technology businesses from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to Tencent Holdings Ltd. have in recent years outstripped their old-economy peers to become the nation’s largest, and virtually none are traded domestically.

Bloomberg

RECENT NEWS

Indian Food Delivery Unicorn Zomato Likely To File For IPO Next Month

Food delivery unicorn Zomato is planning to file for an Initial Public Offering (IPO) by April which could raise $65... Read more

Vietnams Bamboo Airways Aims Third-quarter Listing With Market Cap Of $2.73b

Vietnam’s startup Bamboo Airways said on Friday it aimed to list its shares on a local stock exchange in the thi... Read more

Didi Chuxing Advances IPO Plans To Next Quarter, Targets $62b Valuation

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing Technology Co. is accelerating plans for an initial public offering to as early... Read more

Warburg-backed Kalyan Jewellers IPO Loses Shine, Sees Tepid Demand

Kalyan Jewellers India Ltd’s initial public offering was oversubscribed by just 1.28 times on Thursday, a sign of tep... Read more

Chinese E-commerce Platform DMall Hires Banks For Over $500m US IPO

Chinese e-commerce platform Dmall (Beijing) E-commerce Co has hired Bank of America, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan for a... Read more

Tencent-backed Chinese Software Firm Tuya Eyes $915m In US IPO

Tuya Inc., a software company backed by New Enterprise Associates and Tencent Holdings Ltd., is on track to raise $915 ... Read more