Hong Kong might be grabbing headlines as the world's hottest IPO market this year, but something interesting is happening up north in Beijing. The Beijing Stock Exchange, once dismissed as a capital markets afterthought, is quietly having a moment. And by "moment," we mean hosting more new listings than its flashier rivals while building a pipeline of companies that would make any exchange jealous.
Launched just four years ago by President Xi Jinping to fund innovative small companies, the Beijing bourse has hosted 38 IPOs in 2025—up more than 50% from last year. That puts it on track to beat out both the STAR Market in Shanghai and ChiNext in Shenzhen in terms of new listings, despite those exchanges having far more history and cachet.
The really telling number? Beijing is currently vetting 172 IPO candidates. That's more than quadruple the 44 candidates at the STAR Market and 34 at ChiNext combined, according to KPMG. Something is clearly drawing companies to Beijing, and it's not just the dumplings.
Why Everyone's Suddenly Into Beijing
The answer is pretty straightforward: lower barriers and faster approvals. China's securities regulators drastically tightened IPO requirements in Shanghai and Shenzhen in early 2024, especially on the STAR Market, which focuses on "hard technology" like biotech and semiconductors. For companies that don't quite meet those prohibitively high standards, Beijing has become the obvious alternative.
The Beijing Stock Exchange has the most relaxed requirements for IPO applications of any Chinese board. And facing increasingly impatient companies, dozens have withdrawn their applications from China's two biggest exchanges and headed to Beijing instead.
Take Shandong Haiaos Biotechnology, which announced this month it hired bankers to prepare for a Beijing IPO. The collagen casing producer had previously planned to list in Shenzhen. Other companies making the switch include Beijing Wisdom Mechanical Technology, Zuxing New Materials, Beijing Beier Bioengineering, and fintech firm Agree Technology.
Beijing has welcomed these companies by streamlining its vetting process, publishing listing criteria that cast a wider net, and taking measures to improve market liquidity. It's a classic virtuous cycle: easier listings attract more companies, which attracts more investors, which makes the market more attractive for listings.
The Numbers Tell the Story
In 2025, Chinese startups raised 7.2 billion yuan (about $1 billion) via IPOs on the Beijing Stock Exchange. That's up 40% from a year ago. Sure, it's modest compared with the roughly $36.8 billion raised in Hong Kong IPOs this year, but context matters. Beijing's IPOs are far smaller because they come from earlier-stage and more specialized companies.
The 38 companies that sold shares in Beijing include precision equipment maker Zhuhai Nante Metal Technology (920124.BJE), medical diagnostics maker Dynamiker Biotechnology (920009.BJE), and energy equipment manufacturer Santacc Energy (920158.BJE). That compares with about a dozen IPOs on the STAR Market this year and 30 on ChiNext, though the average fundraising size on those rival boards is much bigger.
The trading action has been equally impressive. The Beijing Stock Exchange 50 Index has jumped more than 40% so far this year, outperforming an 18% gain for the blue-chip CSI300 index and a 30% gain for Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index. Average daily turnover has more than doubled from last year to roughly 30 billion yuan, as individual and institutional investors pile into the market. According to Huayuan Securities, the number of trading accounts reached almost 10 million, up from 7.6 million at the end of 2024.
Better Performance, Lower Barriers
The Beijing Stock Exchange has managed to perform better than the older National Equities Exchange and Quotations (NEEQ)—once called the "New Third Board"—partly due to lower requirements for investors. Traders must have accounts worth at least 500,000 yuan, the same as the STAR Market, and half the 1 million yuan required for NEEQ trading. That higher barrier has left the NEEQ struggling with thin trading and low liquidity.
Here's where things get really interesting: newly listed stocks on average popped up 354% on their Beijing exchange debuts, compared with 222% in Shanghai and 206% in Shenzhen, according to Huayuan Securities. Yes, these big jumps are partly caused by exchange rules that force companies to price their shares artificially low. But the better performance in Beijing compared with Shanghai and Shenzhen still shows more excitement around companies listing on the newer exchange.
Room to Grow
Analysts say the Beijing board has huge growth potential. Even after this year's boom, the exchange's total market cap is still less than 1 trillion yuan—a tiny fraction of 65 trillion yuan for Shanghai and 43 trillion yuan for Shenzhen. That means Beijing still has a long runway before it meets the government's big expectations.
Founder Securities expects the Beijing bourse to continue reforming its rules in 2026 to attract more IPO candidates and lure more investors. For example, mutual fund companies are expected to launch exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on the board that would channel fresh capital into the market, while pension funds and foreign institutions may also boost their activity as more tech startups get listed.
When the exchange was established in September 2021, President Xi said it should be a "hub for serving innovative small and medium-sized enterprises." That mission is becoming more imperative as rivalry between China and the U.S. intensifies and the world's second-biggest economy loses growth momentum. With China currently crafting a new Five Year Plan for its economic priorities from 2025 to 2029, the Beijing bourse could play an important role in executing the fundraising needed for that plan.
As China Galaxy Securities noted in its 2026 strategy report, the Beijing Stock Exchange is helping companies "transform from being 'small and beautiful' to 'strong and lasting.'" It's also helping China develop a multi-tier capital market system that can finance companies at various stages of their life cycles—exactly what you'd want if you're trying to cultivate the "little giants" key to national strategies around supply chain independence, tech self-reliance, and economic upgrading.
Not bad for an exchange that was supposedly a backwater just a couple years ago.




