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China’s SenseTime Reassessing Its $767m Hong Kong IPO

Move comes after FT reported the US will put the firm on an investment blacklist on Friday, meaning US investors could not buy shares in the group


SenseTime
JCV said it keeps SenseTime and the credit card companies at arm's length - the Chinese firm is a tech partner with no access to Mastercard's and Visa's systems or data. File photo: Reuters.

 

Chinese artificial intelligence startup SenseTime Group is discussing the fate of its planned $767 million Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO) with the city’s stock exchange on Friday, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The move comes after the Financial Times reported on Thursday that Washington would put the company on an investment blacklist on Friday that would mean US-based investors could not buy shares in the company.

The sources declined to be named as the information was not yet made public. SenseTime had not been aware the blacklist was under consideration, the sources said.

The Hong Kong stock exchange declined to comment and SenseTime did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

 

SenseTime IPO

SenseTime had planned to sell 1.5 billion shares within a price range of HK$3.85 to HK$3.99 each in the IPO. It was due to set the final price and allocate shares to institutional investors on Friday, according to the firm’s filings.

The people with knowledge of the matter said SenseTime and its advisers held urgent talks late on Thursday and early on Friday on how the ban would impact its the IPO, which was in its final stages when the blacklist report was published.

US-based investors had lodged bids to buy stock during the book-building process, one person with direct knowledge of the matter said.

But a second source said some investors started to pull their bids to buy shares once the likely ban was reported.

More than half of the deal, $450 million, had been sold to cornerstone investors ahead of the transaction’s expected launch on Monday.

SenseTime is due to start trading on December 17, the filings showed.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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