Apple supplier Luxshare Precision’s blockbuster Hong Kong listing got off to a rough start on Thursday, despite raising HK$24.27 billion, or about $3.09 billion, in the city’s biggest IPO of 2026.
The company priced its H-shares at HK$63.28 each, at the top of its marketed range, but the stock slipped toward HK$60 in early trading, down more than 5%.
The weak debut showed that even large AI-linked supply-chain names are no longer guaranteed a smooth first day.
Luxshare Precision IPO: A warning sign investors missed
The shaky opening was not entirely unexpected as Luxshare’s H-shares had already shown pressure in unofficial gray-market trading before the bell, signalling that some investors were ready to flip the deal rather than hold it.
That was notable because the offer had already been priced to look attractive.
The HK$63.28 Hong Kong offer price represented a discount to Luxshare’s Shenzhen-listed shares, which had closed at 62.47 yuan on Wednesday.
That gap was meant to give buyers a margin of safety, but didn’t seem enough to stop early selling.
The contrast is what makes the debut important.
Luxshare had arrived with almost everything IPO bulls usually want: Apple exposure, AI supply-chain optionality, cornerstone demand and the biggest Hong Kong listing of the year.
Doo Financial Futures analyst said ahead of the listing that Luxshare’s IPO was benefiting from the global equity market’s AI-driven frenzy.
He also said the deal reflected Hong Kong’s renewed appeal as a fundraising hub for Chinese companies.
That bullish backdrop makes the first-day slide harder to ignore.
Also read: Apple price hikes unlikely to hurt demand, JPMorgan says as it raises PT
Why was the discount not enough
The first concern is customer concentration.
Luxshare is one of Apple’s most important Chinese suppliers, assembling products across Apple’s hardware ecosystem.
That relationship has helped drive scale, but it also cuts both ways.
The Wall Street Journal reported that Apple’s share of Luxshare’s revenue fell to 57% in 2025 from 75% in 2023, showing progress on diversification, but also underlining how central Apple still is to the business.
The second issue is supply, as Luxshare did not list it in isolation.
Hong Kong is witnessing an IPO-rush with five Chinese technology and advanced manufacturing companies launching offerings last week, seeking up to HK$44.1 billion, or about $5.6 billion, combined.
That rush included electronics, chip, circuit-board equipment and robotics names.
When several large deals hit the market at once, even strong companies can face allocation fatigue.
Investors have to choose where to deploy capital, and first-day trading can become more about fund flows and deal mechanics than long-term fundamentals.
There is also a broader warning for the Hong Kong IPO market.
The new listings in the city raised about $22.45 billion in the first half of 2026, up nearly 57% from a year earlier and the busiest start to a year in five years.
Analysts noted that while appetite for quality AI-related stories remained strong, investors should still watch valuation discipline, post-listing performance and geopolitical risk.
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