Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

MetaX shares soar 687.79 pct on trading debut

HotTV

HotTV

HotTV

MetaX shares soar 687.79 pct on trading debut

2025-12-17 17:11 Last Updated At:12-21 13:00

Shares of Chinese graphics processing unit (GPU) producer MetaX Integrated Circuits soared nearly 700 percent on its trading debut in Shanghai on Wednesday.

Priced at 104.66 yuan (about 14.86 U.S. dollars) in the initial public offering on the Science and Technology Innovation Board of Shanghai Stock Exchange, MetaX shares skyrocketed 687.79 percent to close at 824.5 yuan in the morning, bringing the Shanghai-based company's market capitalization to 329.882 billion yuan.

So far, the combined market cap of China's three major GPU chipmakers and computing service providers, namely Cambricon Technologies, Moore Threads, and MetaX, have exceeded the 1-trillion-yuan mark.

According to the prospectus, MetaX will focus its IPO proceeds on research and development of new high-performance general-purpose GPUs and related industrial products. Currently, the company's products are deployed in more than 10 intelligent computing clusters, and its computing network covers the national artificial intelligence (AI) public computing platform, the intelligent computing platforms of major telecom operators, and commercial intelligent computing platforms.

"We are entering the capital market as a core domestic supplier of base-level computing power. We will spend every penny wisely on developing our base-level core technologies, products, and ecosystems," said Sun Guoliang, senior vice president of MetaX.

MetaX's IPO is expected to boost the development of relevant upstream and downstream sectors, including manufacturing of chips, operating systems, general and industry-specific AI models, and intelligent agents.

"It's not a single company, but an entire industrial chain. I'm glad to see that models of various industries have been gradually applied in various production scenarios this year, with some small closed loops taking shape," Sun said.

Experts note the accelerated upgrading and application of general-purpose large language models and vertical models in various industries have created higher demands for computing power in China. The size of China's AI chip market is estimated to reach 178 billion yuan in 2025.

"Specifically, amid a shift from simple reasoning to the training of large language models, and a shift from single-modal text processing to numerous multimodal large language models, the demands for large models include graphics rendering, so the demands for computing power will be enormous in the future," said Zhang Bo, a professor at University of Shanghai for Science and Technology.

MetaX shares soar 687.79 pct on trading debut

MetaX shares soar 687.79 pct on trading debut

Impact of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran is pushing Gulf countries to revisit costly plans for pipelines to bypass the Strait of Hormuz, so that they can continue to export oil and gas, the Financial Times newspaper reported on Thursday.

"Officials and industry executives say new pipelines may be the only way to reduce Gulf countries' enduring vulnerability to disruption in the strait, even though such projects would be expensive, politically complex and take years to complete," said the report.

"Previous plans for pipelines across the region have repeatedly stalled, undone by high costs and complexity," it said.

The Strait of Hormuz is a vital global energy corridor bordered by Iran to the north.

Around a fifth of global liquefied natural gas supply passed through the Strait of Hormuz, which also carries about one quarter of global seaborne oil trade.

Israel and the United States launched joint attacks on Tehran and several other Iranian cities on Feb. 28, killing Iran's then Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, along with senior military commanders and civilians. Iran responded with waves of missile and drone strikes against Israel and U.S. assets in the Middle East, while tightening control over the Strait of Hormuz by restricting passage to vessels belonging to or affiliated with Israel and the United States.

Gulf countries consider new pipelines to avoid Strait of Hormuz: Financial Times

Gulf countries consider new pipelines to avoid Strait of Hormuz: Financial Times

Recommended Articles