Six months ago, CaoCao Inc. (2643.HK) made its debut on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange with high hopes. Today, those hopes are colliding hard with market reality.
The Chinese ride-hailing platform just watched more than $1 billion in market value vanish into thin air. Over six consecutive trading days this month, shares dropped from HK$52.30 to HK$32.80, a brutal 37% decline that left retail investors stunned and scrambling for answers.
From Grand Vision to Market Collapse
The timing couldn't be more ironic. Earlier this month, CEO Gong Xin stood at a robotaxi event unveiling what he called the "100 billion yuan from 100 cities in one decade" roadmap. The vision was ambitious: five global operation centers, service in 100 cities worldwide, and cumulative gross transaction value hitting 100 billion yuan ($14.2 billion) over the next decade.
Investors, apparently, weren't buying it. Days after this grand announcement, the stock went into freefall.
As the selloff intensified, CaoCao's management went into damage control mode. On December 15, the company issued a statement insisting everything was fine. Business operations? Normal. Fundamentals? Sound. The core ride-hailing segment was growing robustly in line with expectations, they said, while the medium- to long-term robotaxi strategy was progressing as planned. International expansion was moving forward steadily.
The market's response? Keep selling.
So the next day, CaoCao tried again with another announcement. This time, 19 members of the management team pledged not to sell shares that vested under incentive plans before June 24, 2025. Only then did the bleeding slow, with shares edging up 0.7% to HK$33.04 the following day.
The Lockup Clock Is Ticking
What spooked investors so badly? The answer lies in a date circled on every early investor's calendar: December 24.
That's when the six-month lockup period expires for CaoCao's cornerstone and pre-IPO investors. Lockup periods are standard practice for newly public companies, designed to prevent a flood of selling right out of the gate. But as expiration dates approach, investors often get nervous about exactly that scenario playing out.
Here's what's at stake. Seven pre-IPO institutional investors collectively hold 80.65 million shares, representing 14.82% of the company. That group includes Xiangcheng Xiangxing, Oceanpine Marvel, ABC Investment, Longqi Xinglu, Dongwu Innovation, Tongxiang Wuzhen Fund and Paradise Silicon-valley Tiansheng.
Six cornerstone investors control another 22.64 million shares, or 4.16% of the total. That lineup includes Mirae Asset Securities, Gotion High-Tech, RoboSense, Mercedes-Benz, Infini Global Master Fund and Eve Asia.
And then there's Li Shufu, founder of Chinese auto giant Geely and CaoCao's major shareholder. He controls 77% of the company's shares, which face lockup expirations on both December 24 and June 24, 2025.
Do the math, and you've got more than 100 million shares—nearly 19% of the company's total—about to become eligible for sale this week, right before Christmas. The fear of a post-holiday selling wave could be driving investors to dump shares preemptively. Some market watchers also suspect that institutional or cornerstone investors may have found ways to pre-place shares before the official lockup expiry, which could explain the sharp mid-December declines.
This Has Happened Before
If this feels like déjà vu, that's because it is. CaoCao only went public in June, but the stock has already experienced similar volatility.
On September 8, the company announced an "Integrated Sky-Ground Mobility" blueprint and a partnership with low-altitude mobility specialist Aerofugia. The stock initially surged 12% to HK$88.70. But the celebration was premature. Shares reversed course dramatically, ultimately closing down 12% on the day. Making the decline even more painful, it happened on the very day CaoCao was added to Hong Kong's "Stock Connect" program, which opens Hong Kong-listed stocks to mainland Chinese investors in Shanghai and Shenzhen.
The next day was worse. Shares plunged another 23%, bringing total losses from the peak to nearly 40% and wiping out HK$14 billion in market value.
Two episodes of such extreme volatility in less than six months have understandably made investors wary of touching the stock.
The Fundamentals Don't Help
Investor skepticism isn't just about lockup fears. CaoCao's underlying business offers little reassurance.
The company is deeply unprofitable, racking up combined losses of 5.2 billion yuan ($739 million) from 2022 through 2024. While the net loss narrowed in the first half of this year, the company still burned through 495 million yuan.
The balance sheet isn't pretty either. Total liabilities hit 11.28 billion yuan by the end of 2024, with the debt ratio standing at a heavy 177%. Using proceeds from the IPO, CaoCao managed to reduce total liabilities to 10.12 billion yuan by mid-2025. But the debt ratio still sits at an elevated 125%.
There are some bright spots. Revenue jumped 54% year-over-year to 9.46 billion yuan in the first half of this year. But gross margins remain stubbornly stuck in the single digits, inching up just 1 percentage point to 8.4% in the first half of 2025. That translates to gross profit of only 796 million yuan.
Sales and marketing expenses, meanwhile, ballooned 62% year-over-year to 840 million yuan during the same period, ensuring continued operating losses. Without a 39% increase in government subsidies—which totaled 113 million yuan—the losses would have been even steeper.
As for those robotaxi dreams that CEO Gong Xin pitched so enthusiastically? They've generated relatively little revenue so far. Investments in autonomous vehicles will likely be substantial over the next several years, with any potential payback only visible in the distant future.
What Comes Next
For investors considering whether to "buy the dip" after the recent selloff, the picture remains murky. Even after the first lockup expires this week, there's still another wave of expirations coming next June. That creates an overhang of uncertainty that could keep potential long-term investors on the sidelines.
CaoCao operates China's second-largest ride-hailing platform, a position that should theoretically provide competitive advantages. But with ongoing losses, thin margins, heavy debt, and the prospect of massive capital requirements for its robotaxi ambitions, the investment case remains challenging.
The company insists its operations remain on track and its growth trajectory is intact. Management's pledge not to sell shares until mid-2025 shows some commitment. But actions speak louder than words, and the stock price is sending a clear message: investors need more than ambitious roadmaps and reassuring statements. They need a path to profitability that doesn't depend on government subsidies and doesn't require burning through cash for years while waiting for autonomous vehicles to maybe, someday, generate returns.
For now, CaoCao's stock looks like it's stuck in the slow lane, regardless of how fast its ride-hailing platform can get you across town.




