
Chinese AI startups such as Zhipu AI — marketed overseas as Z.ai — have advanced their IPO plans after passing listing hearings and submitting registration documents, with targets of raising hundreds of millions of dollars as they seek to capitalise on global investor appetite for AI innovation.
Z.ai’s proposed offering aims to raise approximately HK$4.35 billion (roughly US$560 million) with strong interest in its enterprise-oriented model-as-a-service platform, which serves millions of developers.
Meanwhile rivals such as MiniMax are preparing their own Hong Kong listings early in 2026, reflecting the broader rush by AI pioneers to tap the city’s deep pools of capital.
Both companies have cleared critical regulatory steps and are positioning themselves for early-year debuts as they compete to be among the first major large-model AI firms listed globally.
These developments highlight the confidence in the region’s ability to support high-growth tech IPOs amid an evolving global technology landscape.
The technology IPO pipeline is further bolstered by Chinese AI chipmakers such as Shanghai Biren Technology, which has begun bookbuilding ahead of a planned HK$4.85 billion (about US$624 million) offering that will make it the first mainland GPU developer to list in Hong Kong.
Biren’s IPO has drawn cornerstone investments from major asset managers and institutional funds, underlining strong institutional backing for semiconductor and related tech plays.
The convergence of AI software innovators and hardware specialists listing in the same window has created an exceptionally active market environment unmatched in recent years.
This upswing in IPO volume follows broader trends in Hong Kong’s capital markets, where regulatory reforms such as the Technology Enterprises Channel (TECH) and flexible listing pathways have encouraged pre-revenue and high-growth companies to pursue public listings.
The city’s strong performance as an IPO venue in 2025 — bolstered by technology, biotech and innovation-driven offerings — has set the stage for sustained activity into 2026. With more than three hundred companies reportedly in the queue to list and deep liquidity among global investors, Hong Kong is reaffirming its role as a vital hub for capital formation in Asia’s booming technology sector.






























