
The Chinese printed circuit board manufacturer raised about $2.6 billion in a heavily oversubscribed listing, with shares jumping more than fifty percent on debut as investors bet on AI infrastructure growth.
EVENT-DRIVEN: HONG KONG IPO SURGE IN AI HARDWARE
Victory Giant Technology, a Chinese manufacturer of high-end printed circuit boards used in artificial intelligence servers and advanced electronics, saw its shares surge sharply on their first trading day in Hong Kong following a multibillion-dollar public offering.
What is confirmed is that the company raised roughly $2.6 billion through its Hong Kong listing, making it the largest IPO in the city so far this year and one of its most significant technology-focused offerings in recent months.
The stock priced at HK$209.88 per share, the top end of its indicated range, before trading opened.
On debut, shares surged as much as 60 percent intraday and later settled more than 50 percent above the offer price, reflecting intense investor demand across both institutional and retail channels.
Trading volume was exceptionally high, with turnover quickly placing the stock among the most actively traded names on the exchange.
The offering was heavily oversubscribed, with retail demand reported at several hundred times the available allocation and international demand also multiple times covered.
The company expanded the deal size through an upsized share sale to meet demand, issuing nearly 96 million shares in total.
Victory Giant is already listed in mainland China and operates as a major supplier of printed circuit boards used in AI computing, data centers, automotive electronics, aerospace systems, and consumer devices.
Its products form the physical substrate that connects processors and memory inside high-performance computing systems, making it a foundational part of AI hardware infrastructure rather than a software or consumer technology company.
The timing of the listing reflects broader capital flows into AI-related industrial supply chains.
Investors are increasingly focusing on companies positioned upstream of semiconductor and server assembly, where demand growth has accelerated due to global expansion of AI training systems, cloud infrastructure, and data center construction.
Financially, the company has reported rapid growth in recent years, driven by rising demand for AI-related hardware.
Revenue and profit expanded significantly in its latest reporting period, supported by increasing adoption of high-density circuit boards used in advanced computing systems.
Most of the funds raised are allocated to expanding production capacity in mainland China, upgrading manufacturing equipment, and increasing research and development spending.
This expansion is aimed at securing long-term supply contracts in a market where AI infrastructure demand is increasingly concentrated among a small number of global technology platforms.
The IPO also highlights Hong Kong’s continuing role as a financing hub for Chinese industrial technology companies, particularly those linked to artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The strong market reception signals sustained investor appetite for hardware firms positioned at the core of the AI supply chain, even amid broader global market volatility.
Victory Giant Technology, a Chinese manufacturer of high-end printed circuit boards used in artificial intelligence servers and advanced electronics, saw its shares surge sharply on their first trading day in Hong Kong following a multibillion-dollar public offering.
What is confirmed is that the company raised roughly $2.6 billion through its Hong Kong listing, making it the largest IPO in the city so far this year and one of its most significant technology-focused offerings in recent months.
The stock priced at HK$209.88 per share, the top end of its indicated range, before trading opened.
On debut, shares surged as much as 60 percent intraday and later settled more than 50 percent above the offer price, reflecting intense investor demand across both institutional and retail channels.
Trading volume was exceptionally high, with turnover quickly placing the stock among the most actively traded names on the exchange.
The offering was heavily oversubscribed, with retail demand reported at several hundred times the available allocation and international demand also multiple times covered.
The company expanded the deal size through an upsized share sale to meet demand, issuing nearly 96 million shares in total.
Victory Giant is already listed in mainland China and operates as a major supplier of printed circuit boards used in AI computing, data centers, automotive electronics, aerospace systems, and consumer devices.
Its products form the physical substrate that connects processors and memory inside high-performance computing systems, making it a foundational part of AI hardware infrastructure rather than a software or consumer technology company.
The timing of the listing reflects broader capital flows into AI-related industrial supply chains.
Investors are increasingly focusing on companies positioned upstream of semiconductor and server assembly, where demand growth has accelerated due to global expansion of AI training systems, cloud infrastructure, and data center construction.
Financially, the company has reported rapid growth in recent years, driven by rising demand for AI-related hardware.
Revenue and profit expanded significantly in its latest reporting period, supported by increasing adoption of high-density circuit boards used in advanced computing systems.
Most of the funds raised are allocated to expanding production capacity in mainland China, upgrading manufacturing equipment, and increasing research and development spending.
This expansion is aimed at securing long-term supply contracts in a market where AI infrastructure demand is increasingly concentrated among a small number of global technology platforms.
The IPO also highlights Hong Kong’s continuing role as a financing hub for Chinese industrial technology companies, particularly those linked to artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The strong market reception signals sustained investor appetite for hardware firms positioned at the core of the AI supply chain, even amid broader global market volatility.










































