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HashKey’s lukewarm debut tests Hong Kong’s ambitions as digital asset hub

The firm, one of 11 licensed virtual asset trading platforms in Hong Kong, raised US$206 million in the city’s first crypto-native IPO

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HashKey executives and other exchange and government officials at the gong-striking ceremony to mark the company’s trading debut on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Wednesday. Photo: Karma Lo
Aileen Chuang

Shares of HashKey Holdings, operator of Hong Kong’s largest licensed cryptocurrency exchange, were flat on their trading debut, as investors shunned risk amid a downturn in the digital asset market.

Trading under the stock code 3887, HashKey shares first changed hands on Wednesday at HK$6.70, or 0.3 per cent above the offer price of HK$6.68 a share. The stock fluctuated between gains of up to 6.6 per cent and losses of as much as 8.4 per cent before closing 0.2 per cent lower at HK$6.67.

The firm, one of 11 licensed virtual asset trading platforms in Hong Kong, raised HK$1.6 billion (US$206 million) in the city’s first crypto-native initial public offering (IPO). OSL Group, another licensed crypto exchange operator formerly known as BC Technology, was listed in Hong Kong in 2012, long before it pivoted into digital assets.

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“Today’s successful trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange proves that taking a compliant route can also lead to success,” said HashKey chairman and CEO Xiao Feng, before striking a ceremonial gong to mark the start of trading. “I believe that, in the long run, following a compliant path actually gives a company greater longevity and more sustainable vitality.”

HashKey Holdings chairman and CEO Xiao Feng (left) and CFO Eric Zhu Minghua speak to the media after the listing ceremony on Wednesday. Photo: Karma Lo
HashKey Holdings chairman and CEO Xiao Feng (left) and CFO Eric Zhu Minghua speak to the media after the listing ceremony on Wednesday. Photo: Karma Lo
The debut comes as bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, sinks deeper into bear-market territory amid a broader risk-off shift driven by an uncertain interest-rate trajectory, profit-taking after record market highs and cascading liquidations of leveraged positions.
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