On June 24, Seer Robotics officially listed in Hong Kong. Its shares opened flat at HKD 101.6 (USD 13), then climbed steadily to an intraday high of HKD 140.5 (USD 17.9), up 38.3%, before pulling back to close closer to the offering price.
Based on that valuation and the company’s RMB 442 million (USD 64.8 million) in revenue last year, its trailing price-to-sales ratio rose to about 25 times, making it one of the most highly valued new robotics stocks in Hong Kong. Geek+, a major autonomous mobile robot company, trades at about nine times sales, while Estun, one of China’s leading industrial robot companies, trades at about four to five times sales. Seer Robotics’ offering price had already reflected expectations that its high growth and high gross margins can continue.
Seer Robotics went through a sharp swing in just 24 hours. In gray market trading on the afternoon of June 23, the stock opened slightly higher at HKD 105 (USD 13.4) and rose as high as HKD 130, (USD 16.6) up 27.9% from its offering price. It then slid sharply, falling as low as HKD 80, (USD 10.2) down 21.3%. Its trading range for the day reached 49.21%. It ultimately closed near the lower end at HKD 94.2 (USD 12), down 7.28% from the offering price. For most of the session, it traded below the offering price, with an average transaction price of HKD 92.84 (USD 11.8) and a gray market capitalization of about HKD 10.4 billion (USD 1.3 billion).













