香港股市

Hong Kong’s ‘Nasdaq’ GEM market fails to sparkle

Twenty years ago this month, with the dotcom boom in full swing, Hong Kong launched what it hoped would be the Asian financial hub’s answer to New York’s Nasdaq. But a long decline in trading activity and returns offers few reasons to celebrate the milestone.

The city’s Growth Enterprise Market made its debut in November 1999, allowing pre-profit companies to raise cash from investors with fewer restrictions than the main board of the Hong Kong stock exchange — one of the world’s premier listing venues. The 2000 float of Tom.com, an internet company backed by Li Ka-shing, provided some early runs.

“Everyone was talking about it being the Nasdaq of Hong Kong,” said Michael Pepper, a partner at law firm Reed Smith in the city, who advised on GEM’s launch and gave his daughter the middle name Gemma in a nod to the fledgling market. “I thought it was a really good idea, but at the moment it looks a bit like an unloved child.”

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