3 New U.S. Listed China IPOs Have Been Outstanding; Too Late To Profit?

 | Jun 11, 2018 02:30AM ET

In the past year there have been says Dan McClory of Boustead Securities, which underwrote three of the Chinese IPOs this year.

“So now the resurgence is related to Chinese companies coming to market in the U.S. with Chinese investors. So these companies aren’t just coming to the U.S. and thinking they’re going to have capital thrown at them. They’re coming with their checkbook already full from investors from China who are closer to the company, who know and understand it better, and who are in a lot of cases better long-term fits.”

Drew Bernstein concurs. He is co-managing partner at Marcum Bernstein & Pinchuk, which audited five of the Chinese listings this year.

“A lot of the more recent IPOs, they’ve [also] had this little nuance to them in the sense that they’ve had some of these really stellar companies or brand-name companies participating as shareholders. So you’ve had Tencent (OTC:TCEHY), Alibaba (NYSE:BABA), Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU) all participating as shareholders in some of these recent IPOs, which I think adds some credibility to them from the investors side.”

Indeed, two Chinese tech companies, YY Inc (NASDAQ:YY) and Baidu, both recently spun off their streaming video units as IPOs. YY spun off its gameplay video streaming unit HUYA Inc (NYSE:HUYA) in mid-May, while Baidu spun off iQIYI (NASDAQ:IQ), the largest online video platform in China, in late March.

These two freshly publicly traded names are each up an average 100% from their offer prices, making them two of the best performing China IPOs in recent years. Another recent IPO, Bilibili (NASDAQ:BILI)—the Chinese online entertainment and gaming website—has also scored its investors some impressive returns, 90% so far.

Do these three names have more room to run? Or has the train left the station on these stellar performers, making it too late for latecomers to benefit?

h2 1. Huya/h2

Huya is China's largest live-streaming platform for video games and e-sports. As mentioned above, it's a spin-off from the Chinese video-streaming company YY, which still owns a 45% controlling interest in the company. Another investor in this new company is Chinese messaging and gaming giant Tencent Holdings, which owns nearly 35% of Huya. In addition to Tencent's $462 million stake, venture capitalist investors in Huya include Morningside Group, China Ping An Insurance, and Engage Capital, which together invested $75 million in March 2017 to complete the YY spin-off.

The Guangzhou, China-based tech firm is often considered the “Twitch of China”—the live-streaming platform purchased by Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) for $970 million back in 2014.

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Huya, which debuted on the New York Stock Exchange on May 11, raised $180 million when it IPOd 15 million American depositary shares (ADS) at $12.00, the high end of its estimated range. It ended its first session up 33.8% per share to $16.06. Since the company's first day of trade, the stock has climbed nearly 90% to around $35 per share.