Muyuan launched its Hong Kong IPO with a planned 274 million H-share offer at up to HKD39.00 and an expected February 6, 2026 listing. Its prospectus names 14 cornerstone investors taking half the deal, representing 2.39% of post-offering shares, led by CPF (USD 200 million), Fidelity (USD 80 million), and Wilmar (USD 70 million).
Muyuan Foods (002714.SZ), China’s—and the world’s—largest hog producer, opened its public offering in Hong Kong on January 29. The company plans a global offering of about 274 million H shares, with the offer price capped at HKD39.00 per share, and an expected listing date of February 6, 2026.
Muyuan opted for an H-share stock code that mirrors its A-share ticker: 2714. The subscription period will run through February 3, with final pricing expected the following day.
According to the prospectus, Muyuan lined up 14 cornerstone investors ahead of the launch. Together, they intend to subscribe for half of the H shares, representing 2.39% of the company’s total issued share capital after completion of the global offering. At the maximum offer price, those shares would be valued at about HKD5.342 billion (USD685 million).

Cornerstone investors are a standard feature in international IPOs, typically taking a long-term, strategic view. By committing to buy a defined portion of shares, they provide a stability signal to the wider market, help pre-sell a meaningful block of stock, and can lower the risk of a weak deal. Strategic (industry) cornerstone investors may also bring practical resources—cooperation opportunities, technology sharing, or market development support—while institutional investors’ longer-term mindset is often seen as a counterweight to short-term trading.

Biggest tickets: CPF, Fidelity, and Wilmar
Among Muyuan’s cornerstone lineup, the largest commitment came from CPF, a unit of Thailand’s CP Group, at USD200 million. Next were global asset manager Fidelity at USD80 million and Singapore-listed Wilmar International at USD70 million.
CPF is the CP Group’s main operating platform for its agri-livestock-food businesses and is listed in Thailand. It has production bases in 17 countries, including Thailand, Vietnam, China (including Taiwan), the UK, the US, Russia, Cambodia, India, the Philippines, Türkiye, Malaysia, Laos, Sri Lanka, and Belgium, and has joint ventures in Poland, Canada, and Brazil.
Wilmar is a Singapore-listed, Asia-based agribusiness group with a wide footprint spanning palm cultivation, oilseed crushing, edible oil refining, flour and rice flour milling, sugar production and refining, consumer products, ready-to-eat foods, central kitchen products, specialty fats, oleochemicals, biodiesel, fertiliser, and “food park” operations. Its A-share listed subsidiary, Yihai Kerry Arawana Holdings (300999.SZ), has been one of Muyuan’s raw material and main ingredient suppliers since 2016.

Strategic capital also includes Sinochem Hong Kong and Yunun International
Two other industry-backed cornerstone investors were Sinochem Hong Kong and Yunun International, with subscription amounts of USD65 million and USD50 million, respectively.
Sinochem Hong Kong is the wholly owned overseas investment holding platform of Sinochem Holdings. The state-owned group operates across eight fields: life sciences, materials science, petrochemicals, environmental science, rubber and tyres, machinery and equipment, urban operations, and industrial finance. It also has an A-share listed feed additive company, Bluestar Adisseo (600299.SH).
Yunun International is a Hong Kong-based investment platform controlled by Henan’s State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), under Henan Agricultural Investment Group. The group was formed in 2023 through the integration of multiple provincial agriculture entities, and in pork it controls Zhengyang Breeding Pig Farm in Henan and holds a stake in Henan Nongtou Animal Husbandry.

The rest: mostly asset managers, many already A-share shareholders
Muyuan’s remaining cornerstone investors are mainly asset management institutions. They include Dajia Insurance Group, controlled by China’s Ministry of Finance, as well as Midea Development Holding (BVI) Co, controlled by the founder family of Midea Group.
Many of these institutions were already investors in Muyuan’s A shares, including Fidelity; Perseverance Asset Management; Shanghai GaoYi; Huatai Capital Investment; Ping An Life Insurance; Dajia Life; UBS Asset Management Singapore; Midea Development Holding (BVI); and Millennium.
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