Hong Kong's equity capital markets attracted close to $44 billion in fundraising during the first half of 2026, marking the largest six-month total seen in five years, according to compiled data. Initial public offerings, share placements and block trades together drove a 29% increase in proceeds compared with the same period a year earlier.
The city accounted for the largest share of $122 billion raised across the Asia-Pacific region, with investor interest concentrated in firms linked to artificial intelligence supply chains. Prominent Chinese companies that led the activity included battery manufacturer Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. (CATL) and printed circuit board producer Victory Giant Technology - both completed multibillion-dollar offerings.
Fundraising momentum in Hong Kong came even as broader equity prices weakened. The Hang Seng Index has fallen nearly 12% this year, and authorities in Beijing have introduced new regulatory measures that market participants say could slow listings. Broader geopolitical uncertainty has also weighed on market sentiment.
Several AI-related firms are poised to seek capital in Hong Kong in the coming months. Electronics assembler Luxshare Precision Industry is planning a listing of about $3 billion, while optical transceiver maker Zhongji Innolight and Baidu's AI chip unit Kunlunxin have also been cited as preparing market entries.
Companies that recently completed listings are returning for additional capital. CATL completed a $5 billion share placement after its Hong Kong listing last year, and AI developer Zhipu is reportedly preparing another multibillion-dollar fundraising round after its January initial public offering.
The broader AI investment trend is bolstering fundraising across other Asian markets as well. South Korean memory chipmaker SK Hynix has filed for a U.S. listing that could raise about $29 billion, and Taiwanese technology companies have issued record convertible bond offerings to expand AI-related production capacity.
India stands out as an exception to the regional pickup in share sales. Share sales there fell 32% from a year earlier to just over $14 billion, a decline attributed to weaker equity markets and geopolitical tensions depressing investor demand. Nonetheless, several large IPOs are still anticipated later this year, including listings for Jio Platforms and the National Stock Exchange of India.
While the AI-led demand has supported a substantial amount of capital raising in Hong Kong and the wider region, market participants are navigating a landscape marked by falling equity indices, regulatory initiatives that could affect listing pipelines, and geopolitical factors that have dampened issuance in some markets.