China Chipmaker
CXMT Targets Nearly $10 Billion IPO to Boost AI Ambitions
CXMT, a linchpin in China’s drive to develop homegrown artificial intelligence
technology, is aiming to raise nearly $10 billion in a blockbuster public offering
in Shanghai.
·
Major IPO
Planned: China's
leading memory chip manufacturer, ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT),
plans to raise up to US$9.8
billion through an IPO on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
·
Largest
IPO in Asia: The offering
is expected to be the largest
IPO in Asia in 2026 and among the biggest ever in mainland China.
·
Strong
Investor Demand: CXMT nearly
doubled its IPO price
from earlier guidance due to strong investor interest.
·
Supports
AI Strategy: The funds
will help China advance its goal of technological
self-reliance and strengthen its position in the global artificial intelligence (AI) race.
·
Memory
Chip Boom: Rising
demand for memory chips
used in AI data centres is driving the company's rapid growth.
·
Rapid Financial
Growth: In Q1 2026, CXMT's revenue surged
over 700% year-on-year
to nearly US$7.5 billion.
The company earned over US$1
billion profit in 2025, compared with a US$3 billion loss in 2023.
·
Growing
Global Presence: CXMT's
global memory chip market share increased from 3% to 8% between Q1 2025 and Q1 2026.
·
Competition: The company competes with global leaders Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and Micron
Technology.
·
Export
Restrictions: U.S.-led
export controls restrict CXMT's access to advanced chip-making equipment, limiting
its technological progress.
·
Government
Support: The company
has received billions of dollars
in Chinese government support, making it a key pillar of China's
semiconductor strategy.
·
Technology
Gap: CXMT still
lags in High-Bandwidth Memory
(HBM) technology, which is essential for advanced AI applications.
·
Domestic
Innovation: The company
is working with Chinese equipment
suppliers to develop indigenous alternatives to restricted foreign
technology.
·
Geopolitical
Challenges: CXMT has
been placed on a U.S. Pentagon
list of companies allegedly linked to China's military, increasing
geopolitical and supply chain risks.
·
Risk Disclosure: In its IPO filing, CXMT warned that tighter
international restrictions could create future
supply chain instability.
CXMT's record IPO highlights
China's determination to build a self-reliant semiconductor industry and strengthen
its AI capabilities, despite export restrictions and intense global competition
in advanced chip technologies.
[ABS News Service/15.07.2026]
China’s largest maker of memory chips is raising billions of dollars
in a blockbuster public offering to pursue the nation’s agenda of technological
self-sufficiency and leadership in the global race to develop artificial intelligence.
ChangXin Memory Technologies, known as
CXMT, said in a filing on Wednesday that it had roughly doubled the price of its
offering on the Shanghai exchange from earlier guidance, based on strong investor
demand. It is seeking to raise the equivalent of up to $9.8 billion.
That would be the largest initial public offering in Asia this year,
and one of the biggest ever on an exchange in mainland China.
The Chinese chip maker is tapping sky-high investor enthusiasm. Last
week, SK Hynix, a South Korean memory chip giant, raised $26.5 billion by selling shares in the United States, in the largest such offering
on Wall Street by a non-U.S. company.
CXMT is riding the A.I.-led boom in demand for memory chips, which
instantaneously shuttle data to and from the processing engines of computers. All
computers rely on memory chips, but the demands of A.I. data centers being built in the United States and China seem all
but limitless.
The 10-year-old firm cannot operate as freely as many of its rivals.
It is prevented from acquiring some of the most advanced chip-making tools by export
restrictions imposed on Chinese firms by the United States and other countries,
bowing to American pressure.
These curbs have made the fast-growing company a linchpin in China’s
drive to nurture homegrown suppliers to reduce its dependence on foreign technology.
Chip manufacturing has been a bright spot for China’s economy, propping up activity
that has otherwise been sluggish. Government data released on Wednesday showed that
economic growth last quarter slowed to its weakest rate
in years.
CXMT saw its revenue jump to nearly $7.5 billion in the first quarter,
up more than 700 percent from a year earlier, according to its I.P.O. prospectus.
It made a profit of more than $1 billion last year, a sharp turnaround from a loss
of nearly $3 billion as recently as 2023.
CXMT is starting to make inroads in the global memory market, which
is dominated by the South Korean duo of Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, plus Micron
Technology of the United States. CXMT held 8 percent of the global market share
in the first quarter of 2026, up from 3 percent a year earlier, according to Counterpoint
Research.
“CXMT encapsulates many of China’s technology ambitions in a single
company,” said Kyle Chan, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, who is a China
tech policy expert. “The company is hitting its stride at a pivotal moment for China’s
A.I. push.”
The company is also a testament to returning Chinese talent and government
largess.
CXMT’s founder and chairman, Zhu Yiming, is a product of the elite
Tsinghua University, often considered akin to the M.I.T. of China. He departed for
America for graduate studies at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
Mr. Zhu stayed in the United States, the hub of cutting-edge chip
design. In Silicon Valley, he founded GigaDevice, a semiconductor
design start-up, in 2005. He returned to China and in 2016 worked with the regional
government to begin the project that became CXMT, headquartered in Hefei, in eastern
China.
Years of losses and billions of dollars in government subsidies followed.
“The company has benefited from very generous government support, which is the sole
reason it could enter the hugely capital intensive memory
industry,” said Chris Miller, a professor at Tufts University and author of “Chip
War,” which chronicles the global semiconductor race.
The shares CXMT plans to sell will represent about 10 percent of
its stock, and could begin trading in the coming weeks. The sale also includes an
option to sell extra shares after trading begins, depending on demand, worth about
$1 billion.
Despite its recent success, CXMT is behind market leaders in the
most advanced technology, known as high-bandwidth memory. The ultrafast data-transfer
technology is especially in demand for developing larger, more capable A.I. models.
Trade restrictions that prevent CXMT from buying the most advanced
chip-making tools are making it harder for the firm to catch up. The company is
working with domestic Chinese suppliers to create alternatives, but the trade curbs,
analysts say, are a major obstacle.
“It’s going to be a steep hill to climb for CXMT in the high-bandwidth
memory market,” said Neil Shah, vice president of research for Counterpoint Research.
For an ascendant Chinese company like CXMT, geopolitics is part of
doing business. The Pentagon has placed the state-backed company on a list of companies
with alleged ties to China’s military, making it a potential national security concern.
In its prospectus for investors, CXMT addressed this political risk
factor. The language was oblique, but the message was clear: It said that if “relevant
countries” tighten restrictions further, the company “may face supply chain instability.”