
Jio’s $4 Billion IPO Filing Looms as Asia’s Equity Markets Stir
Reliance Jio is poised to launch India’s largest-ever public offering, while Hong Kong sees a flurry of tech-driven deals and Manipal Hospitals readies a billion-dollar healthcare listing.
India’s Reliance Jio Infocomm is on the verge of filing draft papers for an initial public offering that could raise as much as $4 billion, a move that would eclipse the country’s previous record set by Hyundai Motor India and mark a defining moment for Asia’s equity capital markets this year. The telecoms arm of Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries is expected to submit its documents within days, possibly ahead of the parent group’s annual general meeting on Friday, according to reports in the Indian and international financial press. The offering is structured predominantly as a fresh issue of shares, a strategic choice that underscores the company’s ambition to fund expansion rather than provide an exit for existing investors. If completed at the proposed size, the listing would be the largest in India’s history, dwarfing the $2.1 billion in total IPO proceeds raised across the country so far in 2026.
Viewed from Mumbai, the Jio filing is the centrepiece of a broader revival in Indian primary markets after a subdued start to the year. Manipal Hospitals, backed by Singapore’s Temasek, is separately targeting a $1 billion IPO in July at a valuation of around $10 billion, which would itself be the country’s first billion-dollar listing of 2026. The pipeline suggests growing confidence among issuers, yet the timing is not without risk. Indian equities have faced headwinds from geopolitical instability in the Middle East, and Reliance had previously postponed its listing ambitions amid such tensions. The sheer scale of Jio’s offering—potentially the largest in Indian corporate history—will test the depth of domestic and international demand, particularly as global investors weigh the impact of trade fragmentation and shifting capital flows.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s equity market is drawing a different class of aspirants, driven by the artificial-intelligence boom and China’s push for semiconductor self-sufficiency. Kingboard Holdings is selling a roughly 5 percent stake in its laminates subsidiary for HK$11.8 billion (US$1.5 billion) at a discount, with proceeds earmarked to expand production capacity for printed circuit boards used in AI servers. The deal reflects the scale of the AI infrastructure build-out: Morgan Stanley estimates that the five largest US hyperscalers alone will spend US$805 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026. In a separate filing, Hefei-based Circuit Fabology Microelectronics Equipment (CFMEE) is seeking up to US$410 million in a Hong Kong IPO, with trading set to begin on 26 June. The lithography and integrated-circuit equipment maker has already secured 17 cornerstone investors, signalling strong institutional appetite for Chinese semiconductor names even as Washington tightens export controls.
Taken together, these transactions illustrate a region where equity issuance is being shaped by distinct local dynamics—India’s domestic consumption story and digital infrastructure build-out, China’s drive for technological sovereignty, and the global scramble for AI hardware. Analysts in London caution that the window for large offerings could narrow if volatility returns, but for now the pipeline is filling. Jio’s filing, if confirmed, would be the most significant test of investor sentiment in emerging markets this year, while the Hong Kong deals underscore the city’s enduring role as a gateway for Chinese tech firms seeking international capital. The coming weeks will reveal whether the market’s appetite matches the ambitions of issuers across the region.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
India's telecom giant Jio is preparing a record-breaking $4 billion public offering, set to become the country's largest IPO. The move, alongside a planned $1 billion healthcare listing, underscores the strength of India's capital markets and investor appetite for digital and health sectors.
Explosive AI demand is pushing Chinese manufacturers to raise billions to expand circuit board and chip-equipment output. A $1.5 billion stake sale and a $410 million Hong Kong IPO reflect Beijing's drive for semiconductor self-sufficiency and the race to supply global AI infrastructure.
Related articles
Kane’s double and Tuchel’s half-time rally propel England past Croatia in World Cup thriller
8 languages · 33 outlets
Defense & SecurityUkraine Strikes Moscow Oil Refinery Again in Largest Drone Assault on Capital
7 languages · 21 outlets
SportLuis Díaz Stars as Colombia Beat Uzbekistan 3-1 in World Cup Opener
6 languages · 22 outlets