Hong Kong/Singapore — Asian equity markets are pulling in growing attention from global investors, with a pickup in initial public offerings, stronger cross-border inflows and a rebound in deal-making reinforcing the region’s rising weight in global capital markets.
Senior executives at JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs pointed to a breadth of activity across listings, secondary offerings and mergers and acquisitions, describing a market that is no longer narrowly defined by a single country or theme. JPMorgan’s Asia Pacific CEO, Sjoerd Leenart, told CNBC the level of activity has been “unbelievable,” adding that a significant share of last year’s IPO volume came from the region.
Data compiled by EY shows IPO proceeds in Asia-Pacific more than doubled year-on-year, a rebound that coincided with several of the world’s largest deals being executed in regional markets.
The renewed momentum is also visible in benchmarks and capital flows. Hong Kong’s equity capital markets staged a strong first-half comeback in 2025, buoyed by “A-to-H” listings and improving sentiment toward China, according to Reuters, with mega-deals helping lift proceeds from IPOs and secondary listings.
Beyond fundraising, regulators are tightening rules as trading heats up. China has moved to rein in speculative behavior tied to high-frequency and leveraged activity—most recently restricting certain high-speed access to exchange data and adjusting margin-related conditions—steps framed as protecting retail investors and market stability amid elevated turnover.
Bankers say part of the shift reflects how investors and corporates are adapting to persistent geopolitical volatility rather than waiting for “certainty” to return. In remarks also carried by CNBC, Goldman Sachs’ Kevin Sneader said markets have become more comfortable operating through disruption, with technology supply chains—particularly semiconductors—remaining a core magnet for capital.
Still, risks are close behind the rally. Trade policy remains a live variable, with fresh tariff threats and shifting timelines around bilateral agreements feeding uncertainty for exporters and auto-heavy markets such as South Korea.
For now, however, deal pipelines and trading activity suggest global investors are rebalancing toward Asia as a primary—not peripheral—engine of equity issuance and growth.




















