Rising U.S.-China tensions have sent Chinese companies the signal that regardless of who wins the White House, overseas investment is the way to go. Public filings of mainland China-listed companies from the last several weeks indicate a few are already putting money into the U.S. As markets await more details on Vice President Kamala Harris’ China policy, Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump has indicated the likelihood of further tariffs. In the view of BCA Research, Trump would use tariffs on China to reach a deal — including “inducing Beijing to surge (foreign direct investment) into the U.S.,” chief strategist Marko Papic and a team said in an Aug. 15 report. They cited Trump’s limited mention of tariffs during his speech accepting the Republican nomination in July. “The way they will sell their product in America is to BUILD it in America, and ONLY in America. This will create massive jobs and wealth for our country,” Trump said, according to an NBC News transcript. BCA said Trump has been making the same point during his campaigning in the last six months. “Trump has been saying it loud and clear – to anyone who wants to hear – that he intends to force China to build factories in the US and employ Americans,” the report said. The analysts pointed out that in the 1980s, U.S. trade tensions with Japan were not resolved with tariffs, but with some trade restrictions and increased direct investment in the U.S. Shenzhen-listed Vital New Material said in a filing Thursday it had finished registering its U.S. subsidiary in Austin, Texas. Vital New Material (USA) LLC has registered capital of $2 million and will be engaged in the research and development, as well as sales, of soldering materials, the filing said. Shandong Yuma Sunshade announced on Aug. 7 it was investing $1.2 million to establish the U.S. subsidiary “Yuma Texas” and build a 2,200 square-meter warehouse. Shanghai-listed Xinquan Automotive Trim said it would invest $4 million into Xinquan America Holdings via a Singapore subsidiary. The company said in a June 7 filing it has established a subsidiary in Texas for the research and development, design, manufacture and sale of auto parts. Yotrio announced on July 26 its subsidiary Lausaint Industrial had established a company in the U.S. for selling outdoor furniture. The filing said the entity, Remode Living, had been incorporated in June in Chino, California, with registered capital of $1,000. In late May, Shanghai-based Hanbell said it was establishing a subsidiary in Georgia with $100 million for selling its vacuum pump products in the U.S. The Taiwan-invested company is listed in Shenzhen. Those are just a few of more than 30 such filings so far this year for declarations of U.S.-related overseas business establishments, according to a screen using Wind Information of mainland China-listed stocks accessible via Hong Kong’s Shenzhen and Shanghai stock connect programs. There were just over 50 such filings in 2023. BCA Research cautioned that as Harris is surging in polls, it’s certainly not a given that Trump will win the U.S. presidential election in the fall. “Should investors buy or sell anything? No. Not yet. Wait for the trade war hysteria to set in with Trump back in power and fade all ‘Trump trades’ related to the trade war,” the report said. “In particular, we would fade any appreciation in small caps and the USD induced by the restart of the trade war.” Harris is due to speak at the Democratic National Convention on Thursday night, following Tim Walz on Wednesday, according to NBC News . Studies of Chinese companies also point to an inclination to invest in the U.S. An annual survey this spring by the China General Chamber of Commerce in the U.S. found about 30% of respondents plan to increase investment . Nearly 60% of companies aim keep investment stable, the report said. Chinese companies’ interest in expanding overseas has accelerated since the pandemic as growth slowed domestically. Electric car companies such as BYD are also opening factories in Europe and Southeast Asia as the European Union and U.S. ramp up tariffs on Chinese electric car imports. More than 80% of Chinese companies surveyed by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade chose to maintain or increase their outbound investment in 2023 — nearly 10 percentage points higher than in 2022, Oxford Economics said in an Aug. 12 report. “Top sectors that received Chinese investment have shifted from tertiary to manufacturing industries,” the report said. “Interestingly, while Chinese companies have become more active in expanding business in ASEAN countries, they tend to maintain their presence in the West, suggesting the ‘ASEAN+1’ strategy may have increased.” Even in the U.S, where new investment from China has fallen sharply, the report said that “Chinese companies have not materially withdrawn from the US market either.” — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.
EToro, a stock brokerage platform that’s been ramping up in crypto, has priced its IPO at $52 a share, as the company prepares to test the market’s appetite for new offerings.
The company had planned to sell shares at $46 to $50 each.
IPOs looked poised for a rebound when President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January after a prolonged drought spurred by rising interest rates and inflationary concerns. CoreWeave’s March debut was a welcome sign for IPO hopefuls such as eToro, online lender Klarna and ticket reseller StubHub.
But tariff uncertainty temporarily stalled those plans. The retail trading platform filed for an initial public offering in March, but shelved plans as rising tariff uncertainty rattled markets. Klarna and StubHub did the same.
EToro’s Nasdaq debut, under ticker symbol ETOR, may indicate whether the public market is ready to take on risk. Digital physical therapy company Hinge Health has started its IPO roadshow, and said in a filing on Tuesday that it plans to raise up to $437 million in its upcoming offering. Also on Tuesday, fintech company Chime filed its prospectus with the SEC.
Founded in 2007 by brothers Yoni and Ronen Assia along with David Ring, eToro competes with the likes of Robinhood and makes money through fees related to trading, including spreads on buy and sell orders, and non-trading activities such as withdrawals and currency conversion.
Net income jumped almost thirteenfold last year to $192.4 million from $15.3 million a year earlier. The company has been ramping up its crypto business, with revenue from cryptoassets more than tripling to over $12 million in 2024. One-quarter of its net trading contribution last year came from crypto, up from 10% the prior year.
This isn’t eToro’s first attempt at going public. In 2022, the company scrapped plans to hit the market through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) during a sharp downturn in equity markets. The deal would have valued the company at more than $10 billion.
CEO Yoni Assia told CNBC early last year that eToro was still aiming for a market debut but “evaluating the right opportunity” as it was building relationships with exchanges, including the Nasdaq.
“We definitely are eyeing the public markets,” he said at the time. “I definitely see us becoming eventually a public company.”
EToro said in its prospectus that BlackRock had expressed interest in buying $100 million in shares at the IPO price. The company said it planned to sell 5 million shares in the offering, with existing investors and executives selling another 5 million.
Underwriters for the deal include Goldman Sachs, Jefferies and UBS.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday: Nvidia — The chipmaker jumped 6% following the announcement it will sell more than 18,000 of its artificial intelligence chips to Saudi Arabian company Humain to be used in the latter’s 500 megawatt data center. UnitedHealth Group — The insurance stock tumbled 16% to trade at lows not seen since February 2021. The sell-off came after the company said CEO Andrew Witty is stepping down for “personal reasons.” The company also pulled its 2025 guidance partly due to higher medical costs, which dragged down other insurance stocks. Coinbase — Shares rallied 22% after S & P Dow Jones Indices announced that the crypto exchange operator will be added to the benchmark S & P 500 stock index before trading begins on May 19, replacing Discover Financial Services . Boeing — Shares of the aircraft company jumped 3%. Bloomberg reported Tuesday that China has lifted its ban on Boeing deliveries, citing people familiar with the matter. The company also announced it delivered 45 commercial jets in April, which is nearly twice the 24 airplanes the company delivered during the same month a year ago. On Holding — U.S.-listed shares of the Swiss-based maker of Hoka sneakers rose 12% after the company posted an earnings and revenue beat. First Solar — The solar stock soared 22%. Wolfe Research upgraded First Solar to outperform from peer perform, citing better clarity on the 45X tax credits for clean energy production. The firm said First Solar stands to earn $10 billion from the tax credit. Hertz Global Holdings — The rental car stock tumbled 15% after first-quarter results were worse than analyst expected. Hertz reported an adjusted loss of $1.12 per share on $1.81 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expected a loss of 97 cents per share and $2 billion of revenue. Revenue fell from $2.1 billion a year ago. Rigetti Computing — The quantum computing stock dropped nearly 11% after the firm posted first-quarter revenue of $1.5 million, far below the $2.6 million that analysts polled by FactSet were expecting. Earnings, however, came in better than expected for the quarter. Intuitive Machines — The Houston-based space startup soared almost 25% after its first-quarter operating income came in better than expected. While its revenue missed estimates, its free cash flow topped expectations. Caterpillar — Shares of the construction equipment giant popped almost 4% after being upgraded by Baird to outperform from neutral. The firm said the easing of tariffs is likely to drive multiple expansion for Caterpillar. Valero Energy — The stock gained 4% following an upgrade at Goldman Sachs to buy from neutral. Goldman said the oil refiner can benefit from more attractive supply-and-demand trends. Calumet — The maker of specialty products such as oils and solvents popped about 5% on the back of Bank of America’s initiation at a buy rating. The bank said Calumet shares can see notable upside through growth in its biofuels business. Sea Limited — Shares added 8% after the consumer internet company reported adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, of $946.5 million for its first quarter, beating the $710.9 million consensus estimate, per FactSet. Revenue, however, missed expectations. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed reporting.
Brian Armstrong, chief executive officer of Coinbase Global Inc., speaks during the Messari Mainnet summit in New York, on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Coinbase shares soared more than 20% on Tuesday and headed for their sharpest rally since the day after President Donald Trump’s election victory following the crypto exchange’s inclusion in the S&P 500.
S&P Global said in a release late Monday that Coinbase is replacing Discover Financial Services, which is in the process of being acquired by Capital One Financial. The change will take effect before trading on Monday.
Stocks added to the S&P 500 often rise in value because funds that track the benchmark will add it to their portfolios. For Coinbase, it’s the latest sharp move in what’s been a volatile few months since Trump was elected to return to the White House.
Coinbase shares rocketed 31% on Nov. 6, the day after the election, on optimism that the incoming administration would adopt more crypto-friendly policies following a challenging and litigious four years during President Joe Biden’s term in office.
The company and CEO Brian Armstrong were key financial supporters in the 2024 campaign, backing pro-crypto candidates up and down the ticket. Coinbase was one of the top corporate donors, giving more than $75 million to a PAC called Fairshake and its affiliates. Armstrong personally contributed more than $1.3 million to a mix of candidates.
While the start of the Trump term has been mostly favorable to the crypto industry, through deregulation and an executive order to establish a strategic bitcoin reserve, legislation has thus far stalled. That’s due in part to concerns surrounding Trump’s personal efforts to profit from crypto through a meme coin and other family initiatives.
Coinbase has been on a roller coaster as well, plummeting 26% in February and 20% in March as Trump’s tariff announcements roiled markets and pushed investors out of risk. With Tuesday’s rally, the stock is now up about 2% for the year.
Since going public through a direct listing in 2021, Coinbase has become a bigger part of the U.S. financial system, with bitcoin soaring in value and large institutions gaining regulatory approval to create spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds.
Bitcoin spiked last week, topping $100,000 and nearing its record price reached in January. The crypto currency surpassed $104,000 on Tuesday.
To join the S&P 500, a company must have reported a profit in its latest quarter and have cumulative profit over the four most recent quarters.
Coinbase last week reported net income of $65.6 million, or 24 cents a share, down from $1.18 billion, or $4.40 a share a year earlier, after accounting for the fair value of its crypto investments. Revenue rose 24% to $2.03 billion from $1.64 billion a year ago.
The company last week also announced plans to buy Dubai-based Deribit, a major crypto derivatives exchange for $2.9 billion. The deal, which is the largest in the crypto industry to date, will help Coinbase broaden its footprint outside the U.S.