Xiaomi gains $6bn as shares rebound after lacklustre IPO

More than makes up for Monday’s 1.2 per cent decline - the worst first-day performance by a $1 billion-plus Hong Kong IPO since 2015

Lei Jun, chairman and chief executive officer of Xiaomi Corp., speaks during a news conference in Hong Kong, China,  on Saturday, June 23, 2018. Xiaomi said it hasn’t set a timeframe to revive an offering of Chinese depository shares, a delay that could hurt China’s ambitions to lure its tech giants to list in the domestic market. Photographer: Anthony Kwan/Bloomberg
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Xiaomi surged 13 per cent a day after its disappointing debut, gaining about $6 billion of market value as investors begin to pile into the world’s third-largest listed smartphone maker.

The Chinese company finished Tuesday at HK$19, well above its HK$17 initial public offering price. About HK$9.7 billion worth of shares changed hands, more than the value traded during its debut. That rebound more than made up for Monday’s 1.2 per cent decline - the worst first-day performance by a $1 billion-plus Hong Kong IPO since 2015.

In the long run, Xiaomi still needs to convince investors it’s capable of shedding a reliance on cheap phones and becoming an internet giant. The company now faces intense scrutiny while it tries to prove it should be twice as expensive as Apple. It’ll need to show in future financial results that it can squeeze more profit out of non-smartphone businesses from rice-cookers and scooters to online content.

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“It’s mostly a smartphone company, or hardware company because they do other things as well,” said Daniel Baker, an analyst with Morningstar Investment who’s got a sell rating and a target price of just HK$10 on Xiaomi. He wouldn’t speculate on Tuesday’s spike. But “if they can develop some sort of ecosystem across the IoT spaces as well as the smartphone spaces, then it might well develop some sort of switching cost and a real way to increase returns and margins”.

Xiaomi had priced its IPO at earnings multiples higher than more established tech giants, including Apple, Tencent and Facebook, arguing it was an internet services company even though most of its revenue comes from hardware. It then suffered a number of setbacks, from being forced to jettison plans to sell Chinese depositary receipts in Shanghai to the onset of global trade tensions.

On the brighter side, it was announced that Xiaomi would join the Hang Seng Composite Index on July 23 and a clutch of FTSE indices from July 16, as proposed earlier.