According to Reuters, China-based Apple supplier Luxshare Precision Industry Co Ltd has priced its Hong Kong initial public offering at the upper end of its target range, aiming to raise approximately $3 billion.
HK Listing Advances Amid Broader Tech IPO Surge
The Shenzhen-listed electronics manufacturer (002475.SZ) confirmed on June 12 that it received filing confirmation from China’s securities regulator (CSRC) for a planned Hong Kong listing of up to 441 million shares. According to the first source with direct knowledge of the matter, Luxshare is preparing investor education materials ahead of the offering. Chinese technology IPOs and secondary listings in Hong Kong have raised $11.24 billion so far this year — a dramatic increase from just $235.6 million in the same period last year, according to data from LSEG.
Regulatory Penalty and Geopolitical Pressures
The company recently faced regulatory scrutiny: China’s State Administration for Market Regulation fined Luxshare 900,000 yuan ($133,000) for unlawful implementation of its acquisition of certain business assets from Wingtech Technology. This penalty underscores tightening antitrust enforcement amid broader geopolitical recalibrations. As noted in the report, Wingtech — the Chinese firm owning European chipmaker Nexperia — announced plans this week to sell roughly half its business and refocus on chipmaking “due to changes in the geopolitical environment.” Meanwhile, German automotive wiring systems supplier Leoni expects to report a loss in 2024 and plans to cut 4,500 jobs in administration and management worldwide by 2026, as part of its sale of a majority stake to Luxshare.
Strategic Diversification Beyond China
Luxshare’s Hong Kong listing forms part of a wider strategic pivot. The company is actively weighing U.S.-based manufacturing expansion — a move driven by mounting pressure to reduce overreliance on its China-centric supply chain. This follows years in which Apple’s success was deeply intertwined with Chinese contract manufacturers; Apple’s market capitalization now stands near $3 trillion, much of it built on that China-based production network. Now, trade tensions and export controls are forcing suppliers like Luxshare to reassess geographic concentration. Adding urgency, OpenAI has signed a deal with Luxshare to co-develop a consumer device, according to The Information, citing people familiar with the matter.
Competitive Landscape and Market Timing
Luxshare is not alone in targeting Hong Kong’s capital markets. Chinese optical parts maker Zhongji Innolight (300308.SZ) plans to launch its own Hong Kong listing as early as mid-July, with proceeds potentially reaching $7 billion, according to two sources with direct knowledge. This wave reflects both capital-market opportunity and risk-mitigation logic: Hong Kong offers access to international investors while remaining within China’s regulatory perimeter. Reuters correspondents Yantoultra Ngui, Southeast Asia Deals Correspondent based in Singapore, and Kane Wu, Hong Kong-based reporter, jointly covered the story. Ngui previously reported for the Wall Street Journal and Thomson Reuters Basis Point, and was nominated for a SOPA Excellence in Business Reporting award for coverage of China’s 2021 regulatory crackdown.
Source: Reuters
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










