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Shares of China's Zijin Gold surge 66% on Hong Kong debut

The shares of China's Zijin Gold International soared as high as 66% on their Hong Kong debut after the company raised $3.2 Billion in its initial public offering (IPO), which was the largest in Hong Kong for four years.

The company is a unit of China's Zijin Mining, which operates all the gold mines of the group outside China. It sold 349 millions shares at HK$71.59 per share.

Early trading saw the Hang Seng Index rise 0.8% to $HK119.

As of 0123 GMT, gold prices reached a new record of $3,842.76 an ounce.

Bullion is up 11.4% in September so far, and on course to have its best month ever since August 2011. It has also risen by 42% over the past year due to global political uncertainty and lower interest rates.

According to filings with the regulatory authorities, Zijin Gold’s retail tranche was 241-times oversubscribed and the institutional tranche was 20-4 times oversubscribed.

Dealogic data shows that the IPO raised $3.6 billion and was the biggest in Hong Kong since JD Logistics flotation in May 2021.

If the Zijin deal is subject to an overallotment, this would be the biggest since Kuaishou Technology raised $6.2 billion back in January 2021.

According to the prospectus, Cornerstone Investors, led by Singapore's wealth fund GIC, and private equity firm Hillhouse purchased shares worth $1.6 billion.

Schroders, BlackRock and other firms also took part in the transaction. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger, Neil Fullick and Scott Murdoch from Sydney and Hong Kong).

(source: Reuters)