(Reuters) - Shares of China's BingEx surged 17% on Friday as the courier delivery firm shrugged off a sluggish start to its Nasdaq debut.
The company, which brands its services as FlashEx, priced its IPO at $16.50 each. Shares opened flat for trading, fetching a valuation of $1.17 billion.
Chinese companies are slowly returning to float on U.S. markets following a long hiatus after ride-hailing giant Didi Global delisted in 2021 due to pressure from regulators.
EV maker Zeekr's debut earlier this year was the first big listing by a Chinese company in the US since then.
BingEx sold 4 million American depositary shares (ADS) to raise $66 million.
It also bodes well for the broader IPO market that is on the road to recovery, driven by a recent searing rally in equities and the start of the U.S. Federal Reserve's monetary policy easing cycle.
"This year has been dominated by uncertainties about when the Federal Reserve would start cutting interest rates and who will occupy the White House from January 2025. Now we've got clarity on the former and will soon know the answer to the latter," said Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell.
Analysts expect investors will be warmer toward riskier investments next year as uncertainty and market jitters abate, further boosting the IPO market.
"Any company waiting in the wings to float should be in a better position by the end of 2024 to decide whether to press the button or not," Coatsworth added.
BingEx was the largest independent on-demand dedicated courier service provider in China by revenue in 2023, it said, citing data from iResearch. It operates in over 295 cities in the country.
Deutsche Bank Securities, CICC and CLSA are the underwriters to the offering.