Didi shares slide 3.3% premarket on report Chinese government mulling serious penalties for U.S. IPO

Referenced Symbols

Shares of Chinese ride-sharing company Didi Global Inc. DIDI, -8.94% fell 3.3% in premarket trade Thursday, after Bloomberg reported that Chinese regulators are considering serious penalties for the company after its U.S. initial public offering in June, citing people familiar with the matter. Didi raised $4.4 billion in the deal, which came despite pushback from China's cyberspace administration. The decision to push ahead with the deal is being viewed as a challenge to Beijing's authority, the people told Bloomberg. Officials from that agency, the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of State Security, the Ministry of Natural Resources, along with tax, transport and antitrust regulators, have launched an investigation at the company's offices. The penalties under consideration include a fine, suspension of some operations or the introduction of a state-owned investor. But the company may also be forced to delist its U.S. shares, although it is unclear how that might happen. The Chinese government started a crackdown on its big tech giants last year, forcing Alibaba BABA, +1.52% Founder Jack Ma's Ant Group Co. to pull what would have been the world's biggest-ever IPO.

Read Next

Read Next

Barron's: Virgin Galactic Stock Got Clobbered After Blue Origin’s Success. Here’s Why.

Galactic shares went from $15 to $50 over the course of about 2½ months starting in early May. That Icarus-like rise is as much a reason the stock fell Tuesday as the Blue Origin flight.

More On MarketWatch

About the Author