Published Mon, Feb 9, 2026 · 05:08 PM
[HONG KONG/SINGAPORE] China’s Montage Technology surged 64 per cent in its Hong Kong trading debut on Monday (Feb 9) after the world’s biggest memory interconnect chip supplier raised HK$7.04 billion (S$1.1 billion) in a share sale to mainly fund research.
Montage makes data centre memory interface chips that help artificial intelligence computer networks move data faster between processors and memory.
The shares opened at HK$168 compared to their offer price of HK$106.89. They jumped to as much as HK$176 in late trade before closing at HK$175. The stock was the tenth most actively traded by turnover early on Monday.
Shanghai-listed Montage offered 65.9 million shares in Hong Kong at a maximum offer price of HK$106.89 each.
Besides R&D, the proceeds will be used to fund commercialisation, strategic investments or acquisitions and working capital, according to its prospectus.
The retail portion of the offering was more than 700 times oversubscribed and the international tranche more than 37 times, according to the company’s allotment results announcement on Friday.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
The offering garnered 17 cornerstone investors who committed US$450 million, including JPMorgan Asset Management, UBS Asset Management and Yunfeng Capital.
Founded in 2004, Montage is the biggest memory interconnect chip supplier globally, with a 36.8 per cent market share by revenue in 2024, according to its prospectus, which cited consultancy and research firm Frost & Sullivan.
The company’s revenue increased 58 per cent to 4.1 billion yuan (S$750 million) in the nine months ended Sep 30, 2025, from 2.6 billion yuan in the same period a year ago. Net profit jumped 64 per cent to 1.6 billion yuan.
Winston Ma, an adjunct professor at NYU School of Law and former head of North America for CIC, China’s sovereign wealth fund, said US sanctions limiting China’s access to advanced chips such as Nvidia’s were accelerating capital and policy support for China’s domestic semiconductor value chain, including “middleware” chip designers such as Montage.
“The strong lineup of global cornerstone buyers suggests that Chinese AI-related IPOs are attracting institutional investors back to the HKEX market again,” he said, referring to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
“Montage’s Hong Kong debut underscores how China’s AI chip ecosystem is moving ‘up the stack’ from basic components towards specialised chips that connect processors and memory inside data centres,” he added.
Montage’s listing also comes as Hong Kong logged its strongest start to a year since 2021, with IPOs and second listings raising about US$5.5 billion in January, the most since US$7.6 billion was raised in January 2021, LSEG data showed.
Upcoming debuts include Axera Semiconductor and industrial automation equipment maker Wuxi Lead Intelligent Equipment.
CICC, Morgan Stanley and UBS were joint sponsors of Montage’s offering. REUTERS
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

