
3SBio spin-off Mandi banks on hair-loss and weight-loss drugs in Hong Kong IPO bid

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Mandi, a consumer healthcare arm of 3SBio backed by Alibaba Health, filed for an IPO in Hong Kong, focusing on its minoxidil hair-loss products. The IPO aims to leverage Hong Kong's booming market, with plans to use the capital for product expansion and R&D. 3SBio will exit its stake in Mandi, which will raise funds through a global offering. Mandi's net profit rose 14.5% to 390.3 million yuan in 2024, and it is developing new drugs in phase III trials.
Mandi, the Alibaba Health-backed consumer healthcare arm being spun off from mainland drug maker 3SBio, filed for an initial public offering in Hong Kong on Friday, betting that its market-leading minoxidil hair-loss products will attract investors.\nThe deal aims to tap into a red-hot Hong Kong market that has seen US$73 billion in equity capital market activity this year, a 232 per cent surge from the same period in 2024, according to data from the London Stock Exchange Group.\nThe company did not disclose its fundraising target or listing timeline. Mandi appointed Huatai International as the sole sponsor for its listing.\nThe capital raised was expected to fund product expansion, refine the company’s digital operating model, strengthen marketing and support early-stage research and development.\n3SBio currently held an 87.16 per cent stake in Mandi, with Alibaba Health (Hong Kong) Technology owning 2.65 per cent, according to a filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday. Alibaba Group Holding owns the Post.\nOther minority shareholders include Hero Grand Management and the China healthcare-focused private equity firm GL Wecan Investment.\nThe spin-off would result in 3SBio completely exiting its stake in Mandi through an in-specie distribution to existing shareholders, while Mandi would raise capital through a global offering of new shares, the company said.\n\nIn November, Mandi closed a series A financing round worth about US$50 million led by Alibaba Health, GL Wecan IV, Sunshine Mandi and 3SBio, according to a separate document on Friday.\nFounded in 1997, the Chinese pharmaceuticals company develops and provides skin-health and weight-management products.\nIts flagship Mandi-branded products, which are based on minoxidil – one of the world’s leading topical treatments for pattern hair loss – is aimed at Chinese consumers under the age of 35.\nThe brand was the top seller in China’s hair-loss drug market for 10 consecutive years since 2014, capturing a 57 per cent market share in 2024, according to the prospectus.\nIn its novel drug pipeline, Mandi was developing clascoterone cream, an acne treatment described as “the world’s first and only-in-class topical androgen receptor inhibitor for acne vulgaris”.\nThe company was also developing a semaglutide injection, a long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonist for weight management.\nBoth drugs were in phase III clinical trials in China to confirm efficacy, with regulatory submissions targeted for the first half of 2026 for semaglutide and 2027 for clascoterone, according to the filing.\nThe failure to develop and launch new products, or achieve widespread market acceptance, could have a detrimental impact on its business operations, the company warned.\nMandi’s net profit rose 14.5 per cent year on year to 390.3 million yuan (US$54.9 million) in 2024.\nChina’s consumer healthcare market last year grew to 1.64 trillion yuan and was projected to reach 4.06 trillion yuan in 2035, according to industry consultant China Insights Consultancy.\nMore than 60 late-stage diabetes drugs were undergoing clinical trials in China, potentially competing with products of incumbents such as Denmark’s Novo Nordisk and US-based Eli Lilly, Boston-based global consultancy L.E.K. Consulting said in a report in May.\nInnovent Biologics, based in eastern China’s Jiangsu province, was the first domestic firm to win approval to market a weight-loss drug in the country.\n

