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The Chip Race Heats Up: Why China’s AI Firms Are Going Public Now

Anderson Liam
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Chinese chipmakers are rushing toward public markets in what is shaping up to be one of the most strategically charged IPO waves in years. For NewsTrackerToday, the surge is less about capital markets momentum and more about timing: Beijing-backed ambitions for AI self-sufficiency are colliding with a narrow window of investor appetite for domestic semiconductor champions.

The pace accelerated after two explosive Shanghai debuts. Shares of Moore Threads surged more than fourfold on their first trading day, while MetaX followed with an even sharper jump. The scale of demand signaled more than speculative enthusiasm. It reflected a growing belief among domestic investors that China must fund its own compute stack rapidly, even if profitability remains distant. From a market perspective, these openings also established a new benchmark for expectations that will be difficult for subsequent issuers to match.

Behind the rally sits a broader structural push. Chinese authorities have made it clear that access to advanced chips, particularly for AI workloads, is now a national vulnerability. IPOs are becoming a financing shortcut, allowing companies to raise large sums without relying on foreign capital or delayed private rounds. In NewsTrackerToday’s assessment, this explains why firms with very different profiles – from GPU designers to memory specialists – are moving toward listings almost simultaneously.

The most closely watched names include Biren Technology, Kunlunxin and Iluvatar CoreX, each representing a different approach to closing the compute gap. Biren is positioning itself as a domestic alternative to high-performance accelerators, despite operating under U.S. export restrictions. Kunlunxin, backed by Baidu, reflects a platform-driven strategy where internal demand anchors early scale before seeking external customers. Iluvatar CoreX sits somewhere in between, betting that capital access will buy enough time to mature its products and software stack.

Sophie Leclerc, who focuses on semiconductor product strategy, notes that funding alone does not guarantee competitiveness. She argues that hardware ambitions still depend on software ecosystems, compiler maturity and developer adoption. In NewsTrackerToday’s view, this is the critical fault line: without seamless integration into AI frameworks, even well-funded chips risk remaining marginal outside state-backed deployments.

Investor risk is already visible in valuations. Early listings are pricing in years of future success, leaving little margin for execution errors. Liam Anderson points out that such enthusiasm often creates a ceiling rather than a floor. Once the narrative shifts from national mission to quarterly delivery, companies will be judged on yield rates, customer diversification and cost discipline. That transition has historically been painful for capital-intensive tech sectors.

Memory and interface specialists add another layer to the story. Firms like ChangXin Memory Technologies and Yangtze Memory Technologies are preparing for listings that could rank among the largest in China’s tech sector. Their relevance goes beyond AI branding. Memory bandwidth and storage density are becoming bottlenecks for large models, making domestic capacity strategically as important as compute itself. In NewsTrackerToday’s analysis, this is where China may gain leverage fastest, even without matching the most advanced GPUs.

Hong Kong plays a distinct role in this wave. For several issuers, it serves as a test of international confidence rather than domestic policy support. Success there would signal that global investors are willing to separate commercial potential from geopolitical risk. Failure would reinforce reliance on mainland markets and state-aligned capital, narrowing strategic flexibility.

From this point, News Tracker Today sees two plausible paths. One leads to a genuine breakthrough by one or two firms that combine capital, software compatibility and scalable manufacturing, reshaping regional AI supply chains. The other is a shakeout, where inflated expectations collide with technical and economic realities, leaving only a handful of survivors. For investors, the recommendation is clear: look past the rhetoric of “China’s Nvidia” and focus on execution signals – real contracts, improving performance per watt and credible routes to profitability. How this IPO wave resolves will help define whether China’s semiconductor push becomes a lasting competitive shift or an expensive acceleration toward consolidation.

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