Key Highlights
- HashKey conjured $206M from thin air in Hong Kong, pricing shares like a magician’s top hat trick.
- The IPO became a lottery where the top 20 investors won 80% of the prize, while the rest clapped politely.
- In December’s first act, HashKey bowed before HKEX, becoming Hong Kong’s “largest licensed” crypto bazaar.
O esteemed reader! HashKey Holdings Ltd., purveyor of Hong Kong’s grandest “licensed” cryptocurrency carnival, has now summoned HK$1.6 billion ($206 million) from its IPO, a feat rivaling even the most audacious of financial conjurers. The shares? Priced near the peak of their marketed range, as if the market itself were a pawn in their game.
Bloomberg, that venerable scribe of capital, reports the company peddled 240.6 million shares at HK$6.68 apiece, nearly reaching the HK$6.95 ceiling. A market valuation of HK$19 billion? Why, it’s as if the city’s collective wealth materialized from a rabbit’s hat! 🎩🐇
The IPO’s popularity? A frenzy so fierce, it would make a Gogolian bureaucracy blush. The top 20 investors, like wolves in pinstripes, devoured 80% of the institutional shares. Ordinary mortals? Left with crumbs and dreams. HashKey, ever the miser, refused to expand the offering. Trading commences December 17-mark your calendars, lest you miss the spectacle! 📅
This follows HashKey’s grand announcement on December 9, when it declared its IPO ambitions to raise up to HK$1.67 billion ($215 million). A public offering, they called it. We call it a modern-day Cossack dance with money. 💃🕺
Company background
At December’s dawn, HashKey performed a triumphant bow before the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, securing its listing with the grace of a ballerina on a unicycle. Now, it claims the title of “largest licensed virtual asset exchange”-a crown of dubious glory, perhaps, but one that shimmers in the right light. 🌟
This triumph, dear reader, is no mere business venture. It is a statement: Hong Kong’s push to regulate digital assets, including stablecoins, is now a full-blown opera. JPMorgan Chase, Guotai Haitong Securities, and Guotai Junan International-these titans of finance-acted as joint sponsors, their names etched into the script like characters in a farcical play.
For the public offering, investors must apply for 400 shares at a time, fees included. A bureaucratic ballet! Applications opened December 9, closed December 12, and results were announced December 16. Refunds? By December 17. A clockwork of chaos! ⏰
Among HashKey’s backers: Gaorong Ventures, a firm with a résumé that includes Meituan and PDD Holdings. Earlier this year, they tossed $30 million at HashKey, valuing it above $1 billion. A test of Hong Kong’s ambition to become a regional crypto hub? Perhaps. Or simply a wager on the next financial Ponzi scheme dressed in blockchain finery. 🎲
While Hong Kong has licensed multiple crypto exchanges, global giants like Binance and Coinbase remain absent, like guests who forgot the address. Local demand for crypto products? Modest, to say the least. Yet HashKey’s IPO marches on, a beacon of institutional interest in digital assets and a testament to Hong Kong’s quest for a regulated, transparent crypto ecosystem-or perhaps just a well-rehearsed illusion. 🎭
Its performance will be watched closely, like a magician’s sleight of hand. Will it inspire others to follow? Or collapse into a heap of digital confetti? Only time will tell. But one thing is certain: in Hong Kong’s crypto circus, the show must go on. 🎪
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2025-12-15 11:35