Xiaomi shares drop after poor Hong Kong debut

IANS  |  Hong Kong 

In a disappointing start, Chinese maker Xiaomi's shares nose dropped nearly five per cent on Monday after the company debut its IPO at the Exchange at bottom end of its target range.

Xiaomi's IPO raised $4.7 billion at a valuation of about $54 billion -- far lower than was reported earlier in 2018.

had to price its shares at 17 dollars at the bottom end of its target range after trimming its offer size, the Morning Post reported.

The valuation of the eight-year-old company was cut to $54.3 billion -- about half of the $100 billion sought.

The Chinese maker had earlier aimed to raise $10 billion in an IPO that may have had valued the company at $100 billion.

"With its fundraising trimmed, was surpassed by the $5.17 billion IPO in March by on the Frankfurt stock exchange, ranking it as the world's largest IPO," the report added.

Xiaomi's trading debut comes at a time when global stock markets have been affected by the trade war between the US and

According to CNNMoney, acknowledged the unfortunate timing.

"At this critical moment in Sino-US trade relations, the global capital markets are in constant flux. Although the macroeconomic conditions are far from ideal, we believe a great company can still rise to the challenge and distinguish itself," Lei was quoted as saying.

Several investors were put off by what they see as a high valuation based on the company's claim that it is an "company" rather than a

The company is currently at the fourth position in the market globally, behind Samsung, and

Xiaomi, which means millet in Chinese, will use 30 per cent of its IPO proceeds to develop the ecosystem of its business, especially in (AI) and of Things (IoT).

In the first quarter of 2018, Xiaomi with over 51 per cent growth was at fifth spot in China, Counterpoint Research reported. Xiaomi was the fastest growing brand in during the quarter.

The growth was driven by Xiaomi's expansion in the offline segment with aggressive promotions. It also refreshed its Redmi Note series and now has a very strong product portfolio in the mid-segment, giving more choice to budget-conscious consumers.

Lei in April announced that the company will forever limit the net profit margin after tax for the entire hardware sales -- including smartphones, of Things (IoT) and -- to a maximum of five per cent.

"If the margin crosses five per cent, then we will find a way to return the excess above five per cent to our users," he said in an email to all Xiaomi employees.

--IANS

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

First Published: Mon, July 09 2018. 09:44 IST