(Bloomberg) — SenseTime Group Inc. filed plans for an initial public offering that would list China’s largest artificial intelligence company on the Hong Kong exchange.
China International Capital Corp., Haitong Securities and HSBC Holdings Plc are joint sponsors on the proposed offering, the company said in documents filed with the exchange on Friday. The IPO could raise at least $2 billion, depending on the valuation the company is seeking, people familiar with the matter have said.
Read More: AI Firm SenseTime Said to Tap HSBC For $2 Billion Hong Kong IPO
The SoftBank Group Corp.-backed company, which makes AI technology for interpreting images, has thrived during the Covid-19 pandemic. The need to enforce lockdown measures increased demand for its facial-recognition software in China. SenseTime’s cameras have been used by the government to tell whether people are wearing masks, to read their temperatures and to determine their identities when their faces are covered.
“The Covid-19 pandemic is expected, in the long run, to accelerate the digital transformation of enterprises and city management, indicating more opportunities for the AI industry,” SenseTime wrote in the filing.
Still, the company, which isn’t using U.S. banks in the IPO, ran afoul of former President Donald Trump’s administration and was blacklisted in 2019. SenseTime was put on the Commerce Department’s “Entity List,” prohibiting U.S. companies from providing it with crucial supplies like semiconductors.
SenseTime sought to raise money at an $8.5 billion pre-funding valuation last year, people familiar with the matter said at the time.
In the filing Friday, the company said its 2020 revenue rose 14% to 3.45 billion yuan ($533 million), while its operating loss widened to 1.81 billion yuan.
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