Montage Technology, a server and data center connectivity specialist, this week made its initial public offering (IPO) on the Hong Kong stock exchange. Following the listing, the company's shares climbed 64% on the first day of trading after a $902 million offering, reports Bloomberg. Montage is not alone in its successful IPO, which underscores continued investor enthusiasm for Chinese semiconductor companies tied to artificial intelligence and data center growth.
A 64% jump in one day
The company priced its shares at HK$106.89 ($13.67)— the upper end of the proposed range — and sold 65.9 million shares in the offering. The stock finished its debut session at HK$175, and the company raised well over $902 million initially planned, which represents one of the strongest first-day performances among Hong Kong listings in the last five years, according to Bloomberg. The pricing in Hong Kong was a discount relative to Montage's Shanghai-listed shares, which had closed at 170.90 yuan ($15.61) on the day before the offering.
Montage's Shanghai-listed shares have more than doubled over the past year, offering the company an approximate valuation of $29 billion. The firm recently reported projected net income of 2.15 billion yuan ($311.105 million) to 2.35 billion yuan ($340.045 million) for 2025, according to Bloomberg. Analysts surveyed by the news agency expect earnings to reach about 3.3 billion yuan ($477.51 million) in 2026, as demand associated with AI and data center expansion continues to grow.
Montage produces a variety of products for server and data center connectivity, including DDR5 memory PMICs and SPDs, PCIe retimers, CXL controllers, clock chips, and many others. The crown jewel in Montage's lineup is its Jintide platform, which sits next to an Intel Xeon CPU and adds Chinese encryption and hardware root of trust (HRoT) support, as well as a proprietary I/O hub to the leading x86 processor. Because Montage is particularly strong in China, Frost & Sullivan believes that the Shanghai-based company held more than one-third of global revenue share in the memory interconnect chip segment in 2024. Keeping in mind China's attempt to become self-sufficient in terms of semiconductor supply, investing in China-based Montage is a safe bet.
A broader picture
(Image credit: Micron)
Montage is not the only high-tech company from China that seeks capital, gets more than it had planned, and sees its stock rising significantly in just a few days or months, as demand for Chinese AI, data center, and microelectronics-related stocks is high among investors in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
Since roughly late-2024 through early-2026, there has been a noticeable wave of IPO activity among Chinese AI, semiconductor, and AI-adjacent tech companies in Hong Kong. The most notable companies include Biren Technology (+76% gain on debut), GigaDevice Semiconductor (rose 93% since January), Iluvatar CoreX (with modest performance), Minimax Group (rose 196% since January), OmniVision Integrated Circuits Group (which raised $600 million on the day of listing), and Zhipu AI (+13.3% on first day, market capitalization of around $7 billion).
Biren and Iluvatar CoreX produce AI accelerators, and their business is expected to prosper now that the Chinese government does not want to allow AI GPUs from AMD and Nvidia into the country. Still, both companies face strong competition from local vendors like Cambricon (first listed in 2020) and Huawei, which are bigger financially and have stronger software stacks.
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