By Doug Young
If you've been watching the global IPO markets, you've witnessed something of a tectonic shift. Chinese companies that once flocked to New York for offshore listings have turned sharply back toward Asia, and the numbers tell a dramatic story. Hong Kong just reclaimed its throne as the world's leading IPO market by fundraising, while New York's momentum with Chinese listings has essentially collapsed.
The driving force? Policy changes, plain and simple. Both government regulations and stock exchange rules have fundamentally reshaped where Chinese companies choose to go public, and industry observers are betting this shift isn't just a blip. It's the new normal.
The Numbers Behind Hong Kong's Comeback
Companies raised about HK$280 billion, or roughly $36 billion, through Hong Kong IPOs last year. That's almost a quarter of the approximately $160 billion raised worldwide through initial public offerings, according to reports from the world's top accounting firms. The achievement pushed Hong Kong past the Nasdaq, which came in second with about $26 billion raised, according to Deloitte.
The vast majority of these new listings were Chinese companies, and the turnaround is frankly stunning. Hong Kong had raised just HK$239 billion in the previous three years combined. That dismal stretch owed much to China's slowing economy and the increasingly frosty relationship between China and the West, particularly the United States.
The reversal began taking shape toward the end of 2024 when China started rolling out stimulus measures to jumpstart its flagging economy. The benchmark Hang Seng Index responded enthusiastically, rising nearly 30% over the course of last year. Meanwhile, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange kept sweetening the deal for Chinese companies with a steady stream of policy adjustments that made listing in the city far more attractive.
How Hong Kong Made Itself Irresistible
These policy changes actually stretch back to 2018, when Hong Kong began allowing dual-class share structures. This was a big deal for private Chinese companies like Alibaba (BABA), which wanted founders to maintain control even while holding relatively small stakes. Previously, this structure was forbidden, which had sent many high-growth Chinese tech companies straight to New York.
From there, Hong Kong kept removing barriers. The exchange introduced new policies making it easier for high-growth but money-losing companies to list, something that was previously a non-starter. More recently, the city streamlined rules for companies already listed on China's domestic A-share markets in Shanghai and Shenzhen to make second listings in Hong Kong. Last year also saw the formal launch of a "specialist technology listing" channel designed specifically for early-stage but high-potential tech and biotech companies.
The result has been nothing short of a flood. The exchange processed roughly 110 new listings last year, and the pipeline shows no signs of slowing. More than 200 companies currently have Hong Kong IPO applications pending with the China Securities Regulatory Commission, which must formally approve all such listings. The Hong Kong Stock Exchange's own website shows about 400 active IPO applications from the last six months, virtually guaranteeing the IPO stream continues at least through the first half of 2026.
To give you a sense of the frenzy, six companies made their trading debuts on the exchange in just one week this January, with 11 set to complete listings in the first half of the month. That's remarkable considering January is typically slow due to Christmas and Lunar New Year holidays. The listing activity reached a crescendo late last month when six companies debuted on a single day, December 30, marking a high not seen since seven companies debuted on one day back in July 2020.
Dual Listings Drive the Boom
The relaxed pathway for domestically listed companies to make second IPOs in Hong Kong proved particularly powerful. The exchange hosted 19 such dual listings last year, including eight that raised HK$10 billion or more. Four of those ranked among the world's 10 biggest IPOs for the year.
Leading the pack was CATL, the world's largest electric vehicle battery maker, which raised $5.2 billion in its May listing. CATL exemplified the new economy stocks that dominated last year's hottest IPOs, spanning sectors from new energy and biotech to robotics and artificial intelligence. By contrast, stocks from traditional industries like restaurants and consumer products that historically appealed to Hong Kong investors received much more tepid receptions.
New York's Chinese IPO Market Collapses
While Hong Kong boomed, the opposite story played out for Chinese companies listing in the United States. New listings by Chinese companies in the U.S. raised just $1.12 billion last year, down sharply from $1.91 billion in 2024, according to Deloitte. Even more telling, the average Chinese IPO in the U.S. raised just $18 million last year compared to $32 million the year before, demonstrating that major offshore-bound Chinese listings were increasingly choosing Hong Kong over New York.
The shifting tide became literal when EV maker Zeekr delisted from the New York Stock Exchange in December, just a year and a half after raising $440 million in its 2024 IPO. The company was privatized by Hong Kong-listed parent Geely Auto.
The U.S. has grown increasingly hostile toward Chinese listings, a dramatic change from the first two decades of the 21st century when they flourished on Wall Street. Many of China's fastest-growing private tech firms had found comfortable homes in the U.S. after their dual-class structures and unprofitable operations made listing in Shanghai, Shenzhen, or Hong Kong difficult or impossible.
But a growing chorus of U.S. politicians calling for Chinese stock delistings has scared off potential listing candidates. Adding fuel to the anti-China sentiment, the Nasdaq announced new rules last year requiring Chinese listings to raise at least $25 million from their IPOs and expediting forced delistings of companies that fail to maintain public floats of at least $5 million. Those rules are still under review by U.S. securities regulators and likely to take effect later this year.
SPACs Still Struggling in Hong Kong
While Hong Kong's steady stream of policy relaxations has boosted new listings, one area has notably underperformed: its regime launched in 2022 to host more backdoor listings using special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs. The stock exchange welcomed just its third SPAC listing in December, when autonomous driving technology firm Seyond completed its merger with the TechStar Acquisition Corp. SPAC to become officially listed.
The takeaway? Hong Kong has successfully positioned itself as the preferred destination for Chinese companies seeking offshore capital, and with nearly 400 listings in the pipeline and continued political headwinds in the U.S., that position looks secure for the foreseeable future. The tide has turned, and it's not turning back anytime soon.




