China online insurer ZhongAn prices HK IPO at top end, raises $1.5 billion: IFR

Reuters  |  HONG KONG 

(Reuters) - Online Property & Casualty Co priced its at the top of an indicated range, raising $1.5 billion in Hong Kong's biggest ever financial technology stock offering, IFR reported on Friday.

China's first internet-only insurer priced 199.3 million new shares at HK$59.70 ($7.65) each, the top of a HK$53.70-HK$59.70 range said IFR, a Thomson publication. It cited people close to the deal.

ZhongAn, founded by Alibaba Group Holding Executive Chairman Jack Ma, Tencent Holdings Chairman Pony Ma and Ping An Group Co of Chairman Ma Mingzhe, will debut on the stock exchange on Sept 28.

The insurer declined to comment on the pricing of the initial public offering (IPO).

Japan's SoftBank Group Corp agreed to buy a total stake of just under 5 percent for about $550 million in as part of the IPO, the deal's prospectus showed.

The adds to the $7.1 billion of new listings so far in 2017 in Hong Kong, which has been looking to attract more technology and so-called new economy companies to sell shares. It was the biggest in the city since the $1.9 billion listing of Resources Pharmaceutical Group last October.

plans to add life and other healthcare products to the range of policies it offers to accelerate its growth after the IPO, Chief Financial Officer Francis Tang said on Sunday.

It is among several Chinese fintech companies tapping investors to fund expansion as consumers move more of their banking, payments, investing and online. The bulk of such fund-raising has been through private placements.

Last year, Ant Financial, the world's most-valuable fintech company, raised $4.5 billion, in one of the biggest funding rounds for a private internet company, while peer-to-peer lending and wealth management platform Lufax raised $1.2 billion, and JD Finance, the finance subsidiary of online direct sales firm JD.com, raised $1 billion.

Both Ant Financial and Lufax are considering IPOs in Hong Kong, sources previously told Reuters, though the timing for the deals is uncertain.

($1 = 7.8082 dollars)

(Reporting by Fiona Lau of IFR; Writing by Elzio Barreto; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, September 22 2017. 09:57 IST