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Chinese EV Charging Giant Takes Fourth Shot at Hong Kong IPO Despite Shrinking Margins

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Wanbang Digital Energy, the world's largest smart charging equipment supplier, is attempting another Hong Kong listing after three failed attempts. While revenue has grown steadily, the company faces declining profit margins and wild cash flow swings as it pivots from equipment sales to integrated energy solutions.

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Sometimes persistence pays off in business. Sometimes it's a warning sign. Wanbang Digital Energy is about to find out which one applies to them.

The Chinese electric vehicle charging equipment provider is taking its fourth swing at going public, filing once again for a Hong Kong listing after two rejected applications in mainland China and an earlier lapsed Hong Kong filing. That's a lot of trips to the regulatory plate without a hit.

Here's the thing though: Wanbang isn't some struggling startup desperately hunting for capital. The company actually built something real. Founded in 2014 when China's EV industry was still heavily subsidized and charging standards were all over the map, Wanbang focused on developing commercial-grade charging systems that could meet international supplier standards. This was back when equipment quality varied wildly and automakers were extremely picky about safety and reliability.

From Equipment Seller to Energy Solutions Provider

The strategy worked. According to the company's listing application, Wanbang became one of the first Chinese firms in the sector to obtain global certifications as an original equipment manufacturer, landing partnerships with multiple international automakers. By 2024, it had become the world's biggest supplier of smart charging equipment by output and revenue, moving more than 470,000 units annually across roughly 70 countries.

That sounds impressive until you realize the fundamental problem with the business model. Intelligent charging equipment is still fundamentally a manufacturing play. Sure, the technology is more sophisticated than residential chargers, which helps Wanbang supply major automakers. But at the end of the day, you're selling boxes. One-off sales, intense price competition, and gross margins that get squeezed whenever a competitor decides to play hardball on pricing.

So Wanbang did what any smart equipment company does when it realizes it's stuck in a low-margin manufacturing trap: it tried to pivot upmarket into solutions and services. The company has been actively shifting toward microgrid systems and large-scale energy storage, positioning itself as an integrated smart energy provider rather than just someone who makes chargers.

The Numbers Tell a Mixed Story

You can see the transformation in the revenue mix. In 2023, intelligent charging equipment and related services made up 92.4% of total revenue. By the first nine months of 2025, that share had dropped to 71.1%. Meanwhile, microgrids – those localized systems that generate, store and distribute power – jumped from 7.6% to 19.8% of revenue. Large-scale energy storage started contributing close to 10% beginning in 2024.

Revenue growth has been solid. For the nine months ended September 2025, revenue climbed 23% to 3.07 billion yuan (about $430 million), actually accelerating from the 20.4% growth rate in 2024. That's the good news.

The bad news is what's happening to profitability. Gross margin fell from 29.2% in 2024 to 24.6% in the first nine months of 2025. Net profit crashed 32.4% in 2024 to 320 million yuan, with net margin contracting to 8% from 14.2% in 2023. Although net profit bounced back to 304 million yuan in the first nine months of 2025, the 9.8% net margin still sits well below the 2023 benchmark.

Translation: the charging equipment business is getting commoditized fast, and the new microgrid and energy storage projects haven't yet reached the scale needed to offset those margin pressures.

Cash Flow Rollercoaster

If the profit margin squeeze wasn't concerning enough, the cash flow volatility should raise some eyebrows. Net cash from operating activities hit 1.15 billion yuan in 2023, then plunged to just 272 million yuan in 2024. In the first nine months of 2025, operating cash flow rebounded sharply to 1.04 billion yuan from a mere 68 million yuan in the same period of 2024.

These wild swings stem largely from uneven delivery and settlement cycles for large-scale projects. When you're building microgrids and energy storage facilities instead of just shipping charging units, your cash conversion cycle gets longer and lumpier. That's just the nature of project-based businesses.

The balance sheet reflects this transition pain. At the end of 2024, the company's gearing ratio hit 119.4% before improving to 96% by the first nine months of 2025. Still elevated, in other words. Non-current liabilities ballooned from 395 million yuan in 2023 to 1.96 billion yuan in the first nine months of last year, showing increased reliance on medium to long-term financing as the company funds its transformation.

Strategic Backing and Global Ambitions

Wanbang hasn't been going it alone. Prior to this IPO attempt, the company brought in some heavyweight partners, including China International Capital Corporation and French energy multinational Schneider Electric. Wanbang even entered the European market through a joint venture with Schneider, suggesting the company's expansion plans have won endorsement from both industrial and financial players.

According to the listing documents, IPO proceeds would go toward scaling up operations and service centers in Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia and the Americas, along with funding technology R&D.

But here's where things get interesting. Mature markets like Europe offer higher barriers to entry that can protect major players from competition, but they also come with higher compliance costs, sales expenses and longer payback periods. In practice, Wanbang's overseas revenue share has actually declined in recent years, dropping from 25.2% in 2023 to 18.6% in the first nine months of last year, partly due to exchange rate headwinds.

The IPO Question

So what's the investor pitch here? Wanbang has industry status, a legitimate market leadership position, and backing from credible partners. The long-term opportunity in new energy infrastructure is real. Electric vehicles need charging, grids need storage, and distributed energy systems are the future.

But the company also faces intensifying competition in its core business, shrinking margins, volatile cash flows and rising leverage. The strategic pivot toward higher-margin solutions makes sense in theory, but it's still early days and the execution risk is real.

After three failed listing attempts, Wanbang is essentially asking investors to bet that it can convert scale and credentials into stable profits and cash flow before the capital costs overwhelm the business. That's the real question this fourth IPO attempt needs to answer. Sometimes the fourth time is the charm. Sometimes it's just the fourth warning.

Chinese EV Charging Giant Takes Fourth Shot at Hong Kong IPO Despite Shrinking Margins

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Wanbang Digital Energy, the world's largest smart charging equipment supplier, is attempting another Hong Kong listing after three failed attempts. While revenue has grown steadily, the company faces declining profit margins and wild cash flow swings as it pivots from equipment sales to integrated energy solutions.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Sometimes persistence pays off in business. Sometimes it's a warning sign. Wanbang Digital Energy is about to find out which one applies to them.

The Chinese electric vehicle charging equipment provider is taking its fourth swing at going public, filing once again for a Hong Kong listing after two rejected applications in mainland China and an earlier lapsed Hong Kong filing. That's a lot of trips to the regulatory plate without a hit.

Here's the thing though: Wanbang isn't some struggling startup desperately hunting for capital. The company actually built something real. Founded in 2014 when China's EV industry was still heavily subsidized and charging standards were all over the map, Wanbang focused on developing commercial-grade charging systems that could meet international supplier standards. This was back when equipment quality varied wildly and automakers were extremely picky about safety and reliability.

From Equipment Seller to Energy Solutions Provider

The strategy worked. According to the company's listing application, Wanbang became one of the first Chinese firms in the sector to obtain global certifications as an original equipment manufacturer, landing partnerships with multiple international automakers. By 2024, it had become the world's biggest supplier of smart charging equipment by output and revenue, moving more than 470,000 units annually across roughly 70 countries.

That sounds impressive until you realize the fundamental problem with the business model. Intelligent charging equipment is still fundamentally a manufacturing play. Sure, the technology is more sophisticated than residential chargers, which helps Wanbang supply major automakers. But at the end of the day, you're selling boxes. One-off sales, intense price competition, and gross margins that get squeezed whenever a competitor decides to play hardball on pricing.

So Wanbang did what any smart equipment company does when it realizes it's stuck in a low-margin manufacturing trap: it tried to pivot upmarket into solutions and services. The company has been actively shifting toward microgrid systems and large-scale energy storage, positioning itself as an integrated smart energy provider rather than just someone who makes chargers.

The Numbers Tell a Mixed Story

You can see the transformation in the revenue mix. In 2023, intelligent charging equipment and related services made up 92.4% of total revenue. By the first nine months of 2025, that share had dropped to 71.1%. Meanwhile, microgrids – those localized systems that generate, store and distribute power – jumped from 7.6% to 19.8% of revenue. Large-scale energy storage started contributing close to 10% beginning in 2024.

Revenue growth has been solid. For the nine months ended September 2025, revenue climbed 23% to 3.07 billion yuan (about $430 million), actually accelerating from the 20.4% growth rate in 2024. That's the good news.

The bad news is what's happening to profitability. Gross margin fell from 29.2% in 2024 to 24.6% in the first nine months of 2025. Net profit crashed 32.4% in 2024 to 320 million yuan, with net margin contracting to 8% from 14.2% in 2023. Although net profit bounced back to 304 million yuan in the first nine months of 2025, the 9.8% net margin still sits well below the 2023 benchmark.

Translation: the charging equipment business is getting commoditized fast, and the new microgrid and energy storage projects haven't yet reached the scale needed to offset those margin pressures.

Cash Flow Rollercoaster

If the profit margin squeeze wasn't concerning enough, the cash flow volatility should raise some eyebrows. Net cash from operating activities hit 1.15 billion yuan in 2023, then plunged to just 272 million yuan in 2024. In the first nine months of 2025, operating cash flow rebounded sharply to 1.04 billion yuan from a mere 68 million yuan in the same period of 2024.

These wild swings stem largely from uneven delivery and settlement cycles for large-scale projects. When you're building microgrids and energy storage facilities instead of just shipping charging units, your cash conversion cycle gets longer and lumpier. That's just the nature of project-based businesses.

The balance sheet reflects this transition pain. At the end of 2024, the company's gearing ratio hit 119.4% before improving to 96% by the first nine months of 2025. Still elevated, in other words. Non-current liabilities ballooned from 395 million yuan in 2023 to 1.96 billion yuan in the first nine months of last year, showing increased reliance on medium to long-term financing as the company funds its transformation.

Strategic Backing and Global Ambitions

Wanbang hasn't been going it alone. Prior to this IPO attempt, the company brought in some heavyweight partners, including China International Capital Corporation and French energy multinational Schneider Electric. Wanbang even entered the European market through a joint venture with Schneider, suggesting the company's expansion plans have won endorsement from both industrial and financial players.

According to the listing documents, IPO proceeds would go toward scaling up operations and service centers in Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia and the Americas, along with funding technology R&D.

But here's where things get interesting. Mature markets like Europe offer higher barriers to entry that can protect major players from competition, but they also come with higher compliance costs, sales expenses and longer payback periods. In practice, Wanbang's overseas revenue share has actually declined in recent years, dropping from 25.2% in 2023 to 18.6% in the first nine months of last year, partly due to exchange rate headwinds.

The IPO Question

So what's the investor pitch here? Wanbang has industry status, a legitimate market leadership position, and backing from credible partners. The long-term opportunity in new energy infrastructure is real. Electric vehicles need charging, grids need storage, and distributed energy systems are the future.

But the company also faces intensifying competition in its core business, shrinking margins, volatile cash flows and rising leverage. The strategic pivot toward higher-margin solutions makes sense in theory, but it's still early days and the execution risk is real.

After three failed listing attempts, Wanbang is essentially asking investors to bet that it can convert scale and credentials into stable profits and cash flow before the capital costs overwhelm the business. That's the real question this fourth IPO attempt needs to answer. Sometimes the fourth time is the charm. Sometimes it's just the fourth warning.

    Chinese EV Charging Giant Takes Fourth Shot at Hong Kong IPO Despite Shrinking Margins - MarketDash News