China’s biggest pork producer Muyuan flat in Hong Kong share debut



Shares of China’s biggest pig breeder Muyuan Foods opened flat in their Hong Kong debut on Friday, reflecting a cooling in the city’s red-hot initial public offering (IPO) market as retail investors turn more cautious.

The world’s largest hog firm’s shares first changed hands at the offer price of HK$39.

Muyuan raised HK$10.7 billion (US$1.4 billion) after pricing the shares at the top of the marketed range, which marked a discount of more than 25 per cent versus its Shenzhen-traded shares based on Thursday’s close. Hong Kong shares, or H shares, typically trade at a discount compared with their counterparts in mainland China (A shares) to attract investors.

“Given the AH price gap, it’s very unlikely to trade near A-share levels,” said Dickie Wong, executive director of research at uSmart Securities.

The discount “gives decent downside protection and attracts some AH arbitrage and institutional interest”, while retail investors showed light commitment, he added.

The retail portion of the offering was oversubscribed by around five times, while the institutional tranche was oversubscribed about nine times, according to the company’s late filing on Thursday. That contrasted with retail oversubscription levels in the thousands seen in other blockbuster deals.

Muyan’s performance followed the modest debut of another billion-dollar deal, Eastroc Beverage, earlier this week, highlighting a cooling in Hong Kong’s IPO sentiment as the market undergoes a period of correction.

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