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Nvidia supplier Victory Giant sees shares soar 60% in Hong Kong debut

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Why This Matters

Victory Giant's successful HK$20.1 billion IPO highlights strong investor confidence in China's tech supply chain and the broader Hong Kong IPO market, especially in technology sectors. This surge underscores the growing importance of Chinese tech suppliers in the global semiconductor ecosystem and the resilience of Hong Kong's capital markets amid geopolitical tensions.

Key Takeaways

The logo for Victory Giant Technology is seen at the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEX) In Hong Kong on April 21, 2026.

Victory Giant had raised about HK$20.1 billion ($2.57 billion) in the city's biggest listing in about seven months. This makes Victory Giant Hong Kong's biggest IPO since Zijin Gold International's $3.2 billion IPO in September.

The Chinese company, which supplies printed circuit boards to Nvidia, priced its shares at 209.88 Hong Kong dollars in the IPO. Shares were last trading 46% higher at HK$306.8.

Shares in Victory Giant Technology surged as much as 60% on Tuesday, after the Chinese company's blockbuster initial public offering — the biggest in Hong Kong this year.

Investor interest in large listings in Hong Kong has been growing, especially in tech-related sectors, which have remained resilient amid market volatility driven by the current Middle East conflict.

In the first quarter of 2026, Hong Kong's IPO market raised HK$109.9 billion across 40 new listings, according to a KPMG report. This was nearly six times the amount raised and three times the number of new listings in the same period last year, KPMG said.

"Nearly 80% of funds raised came from A+H and specialist technology listings; both segments are expected to continue supporting strong IPO performance this year," it added.

Some major IPOs on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange so far this year include Chinese chip designer Montage Technology, whose shares surged more than 60% on its trading debut in February.

Shares of China-based AI startup MiniMax Group also doubled on its first day of trading in Hong Kong, becoming the second major Chinese developer of large language models to go public.

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