Zhipu considers multibillion-dollar share sale in Hong Kong after 2,000% gain

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A Beijing-based artificial intelligence company went public six months ago at HK$116.20 per share. Those shares recently traded as high as HK$2,980. That’s roughly a 2,000% gain, the kind of return that makes early investors feel like they found a winning lottery ticket wedged between couch cushions.

Zhipu, formally known as Knowledge Atlas Technology, is now considering a multibillion-dollar share sale in Hong Kong to capitalize on the rally that has pushed its market capitalization past HK$1 trillion at its peak. That translates to an implied valuation of around $83B, which is remarkable for a company that raised approximately $560 million in its initial public offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange just months ago on January 8, 2026.

From IPO to AI juggernaut in record time

Zhipu holds the distinction of being the first major Chinese developer of large language models to go public. The company sits among a group of firms sometimes called China’s “AI tigers,” a cohort of domestic players trying to compete globally with established names like OpenAI.

The IPO itself was sizable but not jaw-dropping, raising roughly HK$4.35B. What happened next was the jaw-dropping part. Year-to-date gains of nearly 2,000% by mid-June 2026 turned a respectable debut into one of the most talked-about stock stories in Asian markets this year.

Chairman Liu Debing’s net worth ballooned to about $22.4B amid the rally by early June 2026.

A dual-listing strategy takes shape

Zhipu isn’t content with one stock exchange. On June 2, 2026, the company announced plans to apply for a share issuance on Shanghai’s STAR Market, China’s answer to Nasdaq. This would give Zhipu access to a massive pool of domestic Chinese investors who may not participate in Hong Kong-listed equities.

The potential Hong Kong share sale, which Bloomberg reported could raise several billion US dollars, would represent a different kind of capital raise. Rather than listing on a new exchange, this would involve selling additional shares on the exchange where Zhipu already trades.

What this means for investors

The most obvious risk with a share sale of this magnitude is dilution. When a company issues new shares, existing shareholders own a smaller percentage of the pie. If the capital is deployed effectively, the pie grows larger and everyone benefits. If it isn’t, shareholders end up with less of a pie that isn’t growing fast enough to compensate.

Zhipu’s 2,000% gain creates an unusual dynamic. Selling shares at or near all-time highs means Zhipu gets more dollars per share issued, minimizing the dilution relative to what it would face at lower prices.

One metric worth watching closely is how Zhipu’s valuation compares to its actual revenue and customer adoption. An $83B implied valuation demands extraordinary growth to justify. The STAR Market listing timeline will also be critical, since regulatory approvals in China can be unpredictable, and any delays could weigh on sentiment.

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