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Hong Kong To Grab Global Top Spot For IPOs This Year – KPMG

These important liquidity events, which can be a barometer of a financial centre's vigour, are watched by wealth managers. On that basis, private bankers and others in Hong Kong will be uncorking the champagne.
Hong Kong is poised to be in the top spot in global IPO market
rankings by the end of 2025, fuelled by an “unprecedented wave”
of IPO applications, KPMG
has predicted.
IPOs are liquidity events and, as such, are closely watched by
wealth managers and bankers as sources of new clients. By
contrast to Hong Kong, the IPO market in the once-vibrant UK has
been sluggish and dropped from the top 20 global exchanges for
capital raised from IPOs through the third quarter
(Bloomberg, 6 October).
KPMG said that at the end of the third quarter, the Hong Kong
market was “setting new benchmarks,” with an historic number
of almost 300 active IPO applications in the pipeline as of 30
September. The figures came in KPMG’s latest Chinese Mainland and
Hong Kong IPO review.
For the first three quarters of 2025, global markets raised
$111.6 billion across 930 deals, representing a 32 per cent and 3
per cent increase in total funds raised and number of deals,
respectively, compared with the same period in
2024.
The US stock exchanges ranked second and third after Hong Kong,
with a 19 per cent increase in combined fundraising year-on-year,
while the National Stock Exchange of India and Shanghai Stock
Exchange took fourth and fifth places, respectively.
“The uncertainties surrounding US trade policy are gradually
diminishing, and companies are once again eyeing public markets
to finance their next phase of development,” Paul Lau, partner,
head of capital markets and professional practice, KPMG China,
said. “IPOs in emerging industries like AI and crypto continue to
capture headlines, reflecting investors’ growing interest in
forward-looking investments.”
The vigour of Hong Kong’s share flotations chime with what
WealthBriefingAsia heard when your correspondent met
with bankers, consultants and wealth managers in the city in
mid-September. KPMG’s predictions about Hong Kong also fit with
claims that the Asian city will at one point surpass Switzerland
as the world’s largest cross-border financial centre by
assets.
One of the ingredients in Hong Kong’s status is the Wealth
Connect system connecting investment and capital markets of the
city, mainland China and Macao. The Connect system was first
introduced in September 2021, and is seen as a way to tighten
links across the Greater Bay Area.
A-share momentum
In other details, KPMG said the A-share [mainland China) market
showed “positive momentum” in IPO activities during the third
quarter. In aggregate, it raised RMB113.2 billion ($18.5
billion) across 95 deals for the first nine months of 2025,
which is a 12 per cent rise in deal volume and a 30 per cent
increase in funds raised compared with the same period
last year.
Recently, the Shanghai STAR Market has undergone deep reform and
implemented the “1+6” policies in July. These reforms include
establishing a science and technology innovation growth tier to
serve pre-profitable tech firms with technological breakthroughs;
piloting a senior professional institutional investor system to
introduce more long-term capital to support tech firms; and
implementing a trial IPO pre-review stage to improve overall
review efficiency. These measures aim to enable pre-profitable
tech firms to access capital to foster their long-term growth,
KPMG said.
“The increased participation of institutional investor in IPOs,
as well as the rise in foreign institutional investors’ interest
in Chinese Mainland’s technological innovations, are expected to
facilitate a broader and more diverse range of high-quality
foreign capital into Chinese Mainland’s capital markets,” Irene
Chu, partner, head of new economy and life sciences, Hong Kong
SAR, KPMG China, said.
Hong Kong
The Hong Kong IPO market maintained its momentum in Q3, with
funds raised reaching HK$182.9 billion ($29.52 billion) across 67
listings in the first nine months of the year, surging by a 229
per cent rise in funds raised and 49 per cent higher in deal
volume compared with the same period last year.
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange recently concluded its consultation on IPO price discovery and open market requirements and immediately launched a further consultation on ongoing public float requirements.