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China memory chipmaker CXMT aims to raise $8.6 billion in Asia’s biggest IPO of 2026 so far

By Thomson Reuters Jul 14, 2026 | 10:49 AM

HONG KONG, July 14 (Reuters) – China’s ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) expects to raise about 57.9 billion yuan ($8.55 billion) before any over-allotment option in its IPO on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market, the chipmaker said in ​a filing on Tuesday.

The initial public offering will be Asia’s ‌largest so far this year and the biggest Chinese A-share semiconductor offering ever, surpassing chipmaker SMIC’s share sale in 2020.

If an over-allotment option is fully exercised, gross proceeds would rise to about 66.6 billion yuan, Tuesday’s filing showed. CXMT said the IPO price was ‌set ​at 8.66 yuan per share.

The company is scheduled ⁠to list on July 27 ⁠on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, two people familiar with the matter said.

The price setting has seen the company double its original fundraising target of 29.5 billion yuan ($4.35 billion).

CXMT and the Shanghai Stock Exchange did not immediately ​respond to requests for comment.

CXMT, the world’s fourth-largest DRAM (dynamic random-access memory) chipmaker with approximately a 7.7% market share in 2025, has ridden the upcycle ⁠to explosive growth.

DRAM is a critical component ⁠for servers that power cloud computing, databases and AI workloads.

CXMT’s ​mega IPO comes amid rising volatility in global memory-chip shares. It could also ​weigh on liquidity in China’s stock market, where a surge in ‌tech shares appears to be losing steam.

Some analysts said the offering would not drain market liquidity.

“Memory supply is still not enough,” said Donnie Teng, a Greater China semiconductor analyst at Nomura, citing unprecedented demand from the AI industry.

As ⁠long as AI demand is structurally positive and hyperscalers continue to spend their capex, the whole market can eventually absorb the liquidity drain from this IPO, ⁠he said.

CXMT has long ‌been seen as a technological laggard compared with global ⁠leaders Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

SK Hynix’s U.S.-listed shares jumped ​14% ‌in their Nasdaq debut last Friday following its $26.5 billion ​share sale, ⁠although the shares have lost some of those gains this week.

Hefei-based CXMT said in its prospectus that it will use the listing proceeds to upgrade production lines and technologies.

($1 = 6.7817 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Summer Zhen and Beijing newsroom; Additional reporting by Kane Wu and Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Sonali Paul, Muralikumar ​Anantharaman and Susan Fenton)