Key Takeaways:
- SFC expands IPO enforcement to bookbuilding and placement activities
- Connected parties funded orders to create false oversubscription impressions
- HKEX's August 2025 rule changes allow issuers to cap public offerings at 10%
Key Takeaways:

Hong Kong's market regulator is expanding IPO enforcement to placement practices after uncovering connected-party funding schemes that fabricated oversubscription.
The Securities and Futures Commission is broadening its IPO enforcement to bookbuilding and placement activities after identifying cases where connected parties funded subscription orders to create the false impression of massive oversubscription, according to people familiar with the matter.
"The SFC maintains regular communication with licensed entities as part of its routine supervisory work," a spokesperson for the regulator said, declining to comment on individual cases.
Regulators have identified unfair placement practices including connected persons linked to issuers and major shareholders themselves funding subscription orders. The SFC has individually notified the investment banks involved and requested detailed remediation and rectification plans.
The crackdown comes as Hong Kong's IPO market experiences extreme heat, with the HKEX's August 2025 listing rule amendments giving issuers the option to cap public offering allocations at as little as 10 percent — down from as much as 50 percent previously — significantly reducing retail investors' ability to participate in hot IPOs.
Mechanism B Gains Traction Among Issuers
Under the amended rules, new listing applicants may choose Mechanism A or Mechanism B for allocation to the public subscription tranche. An increasing number of issuers are opting for Mechanism B, which directly caps the public offering portion at the minimum threshold of 10 percent. Before the rule changes, retail investor participation could account for as much as 50 percent of the total offering size, meaning the new allocation structure has weakened retail investors' ability to participate in hot IPOs.
The shift toward Mechanism B has implications beyond retail access. A smaller public float reduces the free-float adjusted market capitalization, which can affect index inclusion eligibility and passive fund flows. The Hang Seng Indexes require a minimum free float of 15 percent for inclusion in benchmark indices, and companies with public floats below this threshold may face delays in index admission.
Enforcement Ramifications for Investment Banks
The SFC's expanded scrutiny targets the investment banks that manage IPO bookbuilding and placement processes. The regulator has requested detailed remediation plans from the banks involved, indicating that compliance failures in placement activities will carry consequences. The last time the SFC intensified IPO-related enforcement was in 2022, when it fined several banks for deficiencies in IPO sponsor work, leading to tighter due diligence standards across the industry.
For investment banks, the widening regulatory net means additional compliance costs and potential liability for placement practices that previously received less regulatory attention. The SFC's focus on connected-party funding — where issuers or their major shareholders effectively underwrite their own offerings — strikes at a practice that undermines price discovery in the primary market. The regulator has said it will explain its regulatory views and expectations to the market when appropriate, leaving the door open for further guidance on acceptable placement practices.
The widening of the regulatory net suggests the SFC views placement integrity as the next frontier in market quality enforcement. For retail investors, the combination of tighter placement oversight and reduced public allocation under Mechanism B creates a more complex calculus for participating in Hong Kong's IPO market. The SFC's next steps will be closely watched by investment banks, issuers, and investors alike as Hong Kong competes with other global financial centers for IPO listings.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.