
Jingdong Industrials Inc, the supply-chain unit of Chinese mainland e-commerce giant JD.com Inc, is set to debut in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on Thursday after its HK$2.98 billion ($383 million) offering.
Jingdong Industrials shares fell in gray-market trading on Wednesday.
The company is among the final wave of firms closing out what has been a standout year for deals in Hong Kong. Listings in the city have raised more than $34 billion this year, on track to end 2025 at a four-year high, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Jingdong Industrials sold 211.2 million shares at HK$14.1 apiece, the middle of a marketed range, with the IPO attracting international long-only investors, hedge funds and specialist investors in the technology, media and telecommunications sector. The retail portion was 60.5 times subscribed.
Proceeds from the IPO will be used to enhance its industrial supply-chain capabilities, including improving artificial intelligence technologies, and to support expansion, investments and acquisitions.
ALSO READ: Banks stung by shrinking fees in cutthroat Hong Kong IPO boom
Jingdong Industrials, which started its supply chain service in 2017, has become a leading player in China's maintenance, repair and operations procurement market. The company made revenues of 20.4 billion yuan ($2.89 billion) in 2024, compared with 14.1 billion yuan in 2022, according to its prospectus.
Still, the group’s reliance on JD.com is emerging as a risk amid intensifying competition among food delivery platforms. Revenue generated from JD Group’s platforms accounted for 36 percent in the first half of the year.
JD.com shares have fallen about 15 percent this year in Hong Kong, while those of JD Logistics Inc. have dropped 6 percent.
