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China’s SenseTime Shares Plunge 51% as Lock-up Expires

SenseTime’s Hong Kong-listed shares recovered to be 43% down at noon HK time, after investors engaged in profit-taking.


Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) company SenseTime saw its shares plunge on Thursday after a key lock-up period expired.
SenseTime revived a Hong Kong listing plan after the US placed the company on a national security blacklist. File photo: Reuters.

 

Leading Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) company SenseTime saw its shares plunge as much as 51% on Thursday after a key lock-up period expired.

Its Hong Kong-listed shares recovered to be 43% down at noon Hong Kong time, after investors engaged in profit-taking.

SenseTime revived a Hong Kong listing plan after the US placed the company on a national security blacklist.

The lock-up expiry on Wednesday affected some stock owned by the company’s cornerstone investors.

The company said in a statement that management had undertaken not to sell shares before the next lock-up period expires in December.

Last December, the company’s shares jumped as much as 23% from their IPO price as they debuted on the Hong Kong stock exchange.

The start-up raised $740 million in its IPO and priced its shares at HK$3.85 ($0.49) each, at the bottom of the range flagged, valuing SenseTime at $16.4 billion.

The gains on debut were in contrast to most analysts’ expectations that the shares would slip or trade flat due to the relative weak demand during the IPO process.

 

  • George Russell

 

 

READ MORE:

China Uses AI Software to Lift Surveillance Capabilities

Artificial Intelligence an ‘Existential’ Threat to China-US Ties – FP

SenseTime Delays Rollout of AI Casino – FT

 

 

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George Russell

George Russell is a freelance writer and editor based in Hong Kong who has lived in Asia since 1996. His work has been published in the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, New York Post, Variety, Forbes and the South China Morning Post.