Shares of Lightelligence, previously operating under the name Shanghai Xizhi Technology, opened to frothy trading in Hong Kong on Tuesday as the optical computing firm recorded a dramatic gain on its first day of public trading.
Hong Kong stock exchange data showed the stock climbed as much as 408% to HK$930, compared with the companys offer price of HK$183.2. The initial public offering raised in the range of roughly $300 million to $400 million, marking Lightelligence as one of the earliest AI photonics companies to float on the Hong Kong market.
Lightelligence develops optical computing systems that use light rather than electrical signals to carry out data processing. That technology is attracting attention as market participants seek faster and more energy-efficient infrastructure to support growing artificial intelligence workloads.
The strong reception for Lightelligences shares underscores persistent investor interest in firms tied to next-generation semiconductors and the AI supply chain. That appetite for specialized hardware and photonics applications remains visible even while broader market forces exert downward pressure on equities.
Indeed, the broader Hong Kong market retreated on the same day: the Hang Seng index fell 0.7%, and the Hang Seng TECH sub-index declined 1.2%.
Founded in 2017, Lightelligence counts major technology investors among its backers, including Tencent (HK:0700) and Baidu (HK:9888). The companys flotation has positioned it as a notable public benchmark for AI photonics in the region.
Observers and market participants will be watching whether the companys trading momentum holds beyond the initial session and how interest in AI-adjacent hardware names fares amid geopolitical concerns and a higher-rate environment that the stock market continues to navigate.
Summary
Lightelligence saw a substantial surge in its Hong Kong debut, jumping to a session high of HK$930, up 408% from its HK$183.2 offer price. The IPO raised roughly $300 million to $400 million. The firm, founded in 2017 and backed by Tencent and Baidu, is focused on optical computing solutions intended for faster, more power-efficient AI processing. Its debut came as Hong Kongs benchmark indices fell.