Tungsten miner Jiaxin’s dual listing a boost for Hong Kong and yuan’s global profile


Tungsten miner Jiaxin International Resources debuted on the Hong Kong and Kazakh stock exchanges on Thursday in the world’s first such dual listing, highlighting deepening ties between China and Central Asian nations.

Shares of the Chinese company, whose only project is in Kazakhstan, surged 178 per cent to HK$30.34 on Thursday from its initial public offering (IPO) price on the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Jiaxin’s listing on the Astana International Exchange (AIX) was a “pioneering example” of IPO financing in Central Asia denominated in yuan, said Christopher Hui, the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau (FSTB), in a social media post on Thursday. He said the deal reflected the diverse international participation in Hong Kong’s market and the city’s collaboration with Central Asia in driving forward the Belt and Road Initiative.

The listing also marked a “new chapter” in the internationalisation of the yuan, said Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po in a blog post on Sunday.

HKEX chairman Carlson Tong (centre), CEO Bonnie Chan (sixth left), Hong Kong’s Belt and Road Initiative Commissioner Nicolas Ho (seventh right) and executives of Jiaxin International Resources Investment at the company’s trading debut in Hong Kong on Thursday. Photo: Handout
HKEX chairman Carlson Tong (centre), CEO Bonnie Chan (sixth left), Hong Kong’s Belt and Road Initiative Commissioner Nicolas Ho (seventh right) and executives of Jiaxin International Resources Investment at the company’s trading debut in Hong Kong on Thursday. Photo: Handout

Jiaxin raised HK$1.2 billion (US$154 million) from the share sale, pricing them at HK$10.92 in Hong Kong and 9.93 yuan in Astana, according to its filing. Of the 109.8 million shares on offer, about 1.2 per cent were offered on the AIX.

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