Chinese coffee startup Luckin Coffee Inc on Thursday priced its U.S. initial public offering at the top end of its targeted price range and sold more shares than planned in the biggest U.S. float by a Chinese firm this year, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Beijing-based coffee chain raised 561 million U.S. dollars by selling 33 million American depository shares (ADS), more than the 30 million it originally said it would sell, at 17 U.S. dollars each, at the top end of an indicative range of 15 U.S. dollars to 17 U.S. dollars.
Each ADS represents eight Class A shares, the company said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week.
The pricing values loss-making Luckin, already backed by Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte Ltd and U.S. money manager BlackRock Inc, at about 4.2 billion U.S. dollars.
A spokesman for Luckin declined to comment. The people declined to be identified as the information was not yet public.
Luckin is due to begin trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange on Friday under the symbol "LK".
The IPO comes as Chinese-U.S. trade tensions involving tit-for-tat tariffs rattle global financial markets. In total, Chinese firms have raised 619 million U.S. dollars in U.S. IPOs so far this year, down sharply from 3.7 billion U.S. dollars in the same period in 2017, Refinitiv data showed.
Luckin is the latest Chinese start-up tapping international capital markets to bolster coffers amid ever-intensifying competition with bigger rivals, notably Starbucks, at the home market.
Luckin currently operates 2,370 stores across China and plans to open 2,500 more this year with the goal of displacing Starbucks as China's largest coffee chain.
The coffee chain, co-founded in June 2017 by Chief Executive Qian Zhiya, plans to primarily use the IPO proceeds for store network expansion, customer acquisition, marketing, research and development.
The brand is banking on increased coffee consumption in China, expected to rise to 15.5 billion cups by 2023 from 8.7 billion last year, according to a report cited by Luckin in its prospectus.
The company has warned it may continue to incur losses in the foreseeable future. Last year, it recorded a net loss to shareholders of 475.4 million U.S. dollars and total revenue of 125.27 million U.S. dollars, according to the filing. For the first three months of 2019, it posted a net loss of 85.3 million U.S. dollars.
Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, CICC, Haitong International and KeyBanc Capital Markets are among the banks underwriting the IPO.
Source(s): Reuters