MetaX Launch Poised to Spark Chinese AI Chip Frenzy

China's semiconductor sector just got its newest contender—and it's aiming straight for the AI gold rush.
The New Player in the Arena
MetaX isn't just another chipmaker. It's a direct challenge to the established order, built from the ground up to handle the crushing computational demands of next-generation artificial intelligence. The debut signals a strategic pivot within China's tech ecosystem, one that prioritizes domestic capability in a field currently dominated by Western giants.
Why This One's Different
Forget generic processors. This architecture is specialized, designed to slash through AI training times and bypass traditional bottlenecks. It's not about keeping pace; it's about setting a new one. Early whispers suggest performance metrics that could force a market-wide reassessment of what's possible—and affordable—in localized hardware.
The Ripple Effect
The anticipation is already sending shockwaves through related stocks and venture portfolios. Analysts are dusting off their spreadsheets, predicting a sector-wide rally as investors scramble to find the next MetaX or its key suppliers. It's the classic tech playbook: back the ecosystem around a potential winner, and hope the hype lasts longer than the average funding cycle. After all, nothing gets capital flowing like the plausible promise of a monopoly, even if most bets end up funding lavish office snacks instead of breakthroughs.
One launch. One chip. And a whole lot of people suddenly very interested in silicon real estate.
AI Chip market heats up as MetaX targets Nvidia rivals
MetaX manufactures graphics processing units for artificial intelligence developers similar to Moore Threads. The trend is a growing industry and expanding at a rapid clip as consumers and businesses adopt AI services. The stock is expected to attract investors who weren’t lucky enough to get an allotment in the notoriously tough IPO lottery.
Moore Threads climbed more than 500% in eight trading sessions since its debut, with the stock rising five times in just its opening day of trading. Investors are betting on national champions who could seem like legitimate local rivals to global leader Nvidia Corp., whose most cutting-edge chips are blocked by the US from being sold to China.
Worth 104.66 yuan per share at its IPO, MetaX will open at a market capitalization of 41.8 billion yuan ($6 billion), significantly below Moore Threads’ current valuation of 341 billion yuan. MetaX’s price-to-sales ratio stands at 56.4, compared with an average of 127.4 for peer companies like Cambricon Technologies Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc., according to the company’s exchange filing.
“If we use Moore and Cambricon’s market caps as a yardstick, then MetaX might have a 10-12 times upside potential,” said Xu Dawei, a fund manager at Jintong Private Fund Management in Beijing. “MetaX’s listing may potentially spearhead a rally in tech stocks and create more excitement around new and secondary listings.”
Chinese tech listings draw investors amid record oversubscriptions
MetaX’s roots can be found at AMD, with three of its founding members having previously worked for the US chipmaker. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Chen Weiliang is one of those.
A Chinese company that designs and sells GPUs for AI workloads and graphics rendering in gaming and other visualization applications. Its AI-focused Xiyun C500 series, which the company claimed was comparable to Nvidia’s A100, made up almost 98% of total revenue in 2024.
The new generation, called C588, has significantly narrowed the performance gap with Nvidia’s H100, according to MetaX. Last year, MetaX captured approximately 1% of China’s AI chip market, according to the company’s prospectus, which cites data from an industry consultancy.
Chinese IPOs have been robust this year, with an average first-day trading jump of 250%, according to Bloomberg data. That has at least partly been because Chinese officials have been quelling issuances to prevent sapping liquidity in the broader market.
At the same time, a softer risk appetite in the secondary market and year-end profit-taking have also increased interest in new offerings, which are seen as a reliable opportunity to capture gains in the first few days of trading. Radio frequency chipmaker Beijing Onmicro Electronics Co. more than doubled on its debut on Tuesday, after filing in a 2,899-times oversubscribed IPO.
Changxin Memory Technologies Inc. and Yangtze Memory Technologies Co. are among chipmakers that could consider listing in China. They could each seek a valuation of 200 billion yuan to 300 billion yuan.
In Hong Kong, too, a swarm of companies in the AI space is gearing up for market debuts. MiniMax and Zhipu, backed by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Tencent Holdings Ltd., and others, aim to complete their IPOs as soon as January.
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