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Momenta Global gauges investor interest for Hong Kong IPO this week

Momenta Global, one of China’s most heavily funded autonomous-driving startups, is beginning to test investor appetite for a Hong Kong initial public offering this week. The company is targeting roughly $1 billion in proceeds at a valuation of approximately $9 billion, a figure that would make it one of the larger tech IPOs in Hong Kong this year.

Momenta had previously pursued a listing in the States, but those plans lapsed amid geopolitical friction between Washington and Beijing.

From Detroit backing to Hong Kong bells

Momenta develops intelligent driving solutions, ranging from advanced driver-assistance systems, known as ADAS, to fully autonomous vehicles, including Robotaxis, Robovans, and Robotrucks.

The investor roster reads like a who’s who of global automaking. General Motors invested $300 million in Momenta back in 2021. Toyota and SAIC Motor have also backed the company.

Momenta has raised hundreds of millions in total funding over multiple rounds, including approximately $500 million in a pre-IPO round.

China’s securities regulator, the CSRC, approved the Hong Kong listing on June 10. The approval permits Momenta to issue up to 43.75 million overseas-listed ordinary shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, with a 12-month window to get the deal done.

What this means for investors

Momenta’s backers from the traditional auto world provide a degree of commercial validation that pure-play tech investors cannot. A $300 million check from GM is a strategic investment from a company that needs this technology to work and has the engineering depth to evaluate whether it actually will.

Chinese rivals like Pony.ai and WeRide have also been pursuing public listings, and global players from Waymo to Mobileye continue to pour resources into the space.

If Momenta successfully raises $1 billion, the proceeds are expected to fund continued technology development and commercialization.

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