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Didi Chuxing propels Chinese IPOs to record capital raising in the US in first half of 2021

  • As many as 36 Chinese companies have raised a total of US$12.59 billion in US markets as of June 30, the highest amount on record, according to Dealogic
  • Washington’s ‘efforts to force financial decoupling between the US and China have made little progress’, says analyst

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Didi’s successful debut shows how much Washington and Wall Street are at odds with each other when it comes to investing in China. Photo: AP
Jodi Xu Klein
Investors poured billions into Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing’s blowout IPO in New York on Wednesday, ending the first half of the year with a record amount of capital raised by Chinese companies in US markets.

As many as 36 Chinese companies raised US$12.59 billion in US markets in the first half of this year, the highest amount on record, according to Dealogic.

Despite worsening geopolitical tensions between the two countries, Didi raised US$4.4 billion on Wednesday in an upsized sale that valued the company at about US$70 billion, an astronomical number for a company that has yet to turn a profit.

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US investors were buying into the growth story of Didi, which was started as a ride-hailing app in 2012 by Alibaba alum Cheng Wei, as it branches out to develop and manufacture electric vehicles and autonomous cars in China.

Didi Chuxing’s CEO Cheng Wei speaks at a product launch event in Beijing last year. Photo: Reuters
Didi Chuxing’s CEO Cheng Wei speaks at a product launch event in Beijing last year. Photo: Reuters
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Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.

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