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Hubei Bank's "Epic Capital Injection": 7.6 Billion Yuan Placement Completed, State-Owned Assets Holding Exceeds 84%! Can a Decade-Long IPO Marathon Cross the Finish Line?
Everyday Economic News Reporter | Liu Jukai Editor | Huang Sheng
Recently, a disclosure of Hubei Bank’s targeted issuance report added another example to the “capital replenishment wave” in the banking industry since 2026. The bank successfully completed an issuance of 1.8 billion shares, raising a total of 7.614 billion yuan, making it one of the larger bank capital increases this year.
The most notable aspect of this private placement is the addition of 35 new state-owned legal entity shareholders among the 53 corporate shareholders, with over 96% of the capital subscribed by state-owned entities. This is expected to increase the bank’s state-owned shareholding from 81.21% to over 84%. This is not just a simple capital boost but also a significant morale boost during a critical stage of its A-share IPO review, which has been under process for over ten years.
Deep State Capital Involvement: From “Credit Backing” to “Strategic Collaboration” in Equity Restructuring
The core feature of this private placement is the deep and broad participation of provincial state-owned capital in Hubei. According to the report, among the 35 new shareholders, besides Hubei Yulong Water Conservancy and Hydropower Engineering Co., Ltd., which is a provincial state-owned enterprise, the remaining 34 are from 15 cities and prefectures within the province, including Jingzhou, Huanggang, Wuhan, Huangshi, and Xianning. Among them, Jingzhou has 6 participating companies, Huanggang has 5, covering major economic regions of Hubei. These local state-owned enterprises collectively invested 5.18 billion yuan, accounting for 68% of the total subscription. The largest new shareholder, Hubei Jingjiang Industrial Investment Group Co., Ltd., contributed 495 million yuan, followed by Wuhan Wuchang State-Owned Capital Holding Investment Operation Group with 423 million yuan.
The largest shareholder, Hubei Hongtai Group Co., Ltd., invested about 1.523 billion yuan, maintaining a 19.99% stake after the capital increase. The previous second, third, and fourth largest shareholders did not participate in the subscription, resulting in their shareholding being diluted accordingly. The issuance price was 4.23 yuan per share, slightly below the bank’s net asset per share of 4.43 yuan at the end of 2024. After the capital increase, Hubei Bank’s total shares rose from 7.612 billion to 9.412 billion, with registered capital also increasing accordingly.
A senior banking analyst pointed out that this private placement far exceeds typical financial investment. Over 96% of the new funds come from local state-owned capital, forming a comprehensive shareholder network across the province.
“This not only provides strong credit backing, helping to reduce the bank’s financing costs, but also means that in future projects with local governments and major infrastructure financing, Hubei Bank may gain more direct and stable business channels and resource support,” the analyst said. This deepens the bank’s strategic positioning of “based in Hubei, serving the whole province,” and strengthens its collaborative relationship with local governments at all levels from an equity perspective, laying a unique resource foundation for future business development.
Capital Pressure Eases and IPO Long Road: Easy to Raise, Hard to Generate Internal Capital
This large-scale “capital replenishment” is driven by urgent practical needs.
The targeted issuance report shows that by the end of 2025, this capital increase will raise Hubei Bank’s core Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio from 7.94% at the end of 2024 to 8.96%, an increase of 1.02 percentage points; the overall capital adequacy ratio will rise to 12.62%. This improvement is crucial because, as of the third quarter of 2025, the bank’s core Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio had once dropped to 7.74%, very close to the regulatory red line of 7.5%.
The ongoing pressure on capital adequacy is directly related to the bank’s rapid asset expansion. By the end of 2025, Hubei Bank’s total assets reached 621.456 billion yuan, an 18.8% increase from the beginning of the year, marking two consecutive years of crossing the trillion-yuan threshold.
However, capital replenishment only addresses immediate constraints. Hubei Bank’s IPO journey has been ongoing for many years. The bank began preparing for listing as early as 2015. It submitted an application in October 2020, and in March 2023, it switched to a registration-based review, with the current status being “accepted.”
A banking industry analyst warned that completing the capital increase is just a milestone in the IPO process. The prospectus highlights risks, showing that the bank’s non-performing loan ratio remains above the industry average. As of the third quarter of 2025, non-performing loans totaled 6.499 billion yuan, with a non-performing loan ratio of 1.85%. Although this ratio has decreased from 1.95% at the end of 2024, the absolute amount of non-performing loans is still rising, and the risk clearance process has not yet been completed.
Media reports indicate that Hubei Bank has set a strategic goal of “surpassing 1 trillion yuan in assets by 2027.” “This means maintaining an annual growth rate of about 20% over the next two years, which will put continuous pressure on capital consumption,” the analyst further explained. How to balance scale expansion with capital consumption and improve internal “self-generation” profitability—rather than relying solely on shareholder “blood transfusions”—will be a core long-term challenge for management.
Additionally, within Hubei Province, Hubei Bank faces fierce competition with Hankou Bank in terms of asset size and IPO progress. This race to become “Hubei’s first listed bank” involves not only speed but also operational quality and risk management.
Hubei Bank’s recent capital increase is also a microcosm of the 2026 wave of “capital replenishment” among small and medium-sized banks. According to disclosures from the National Financial Regulatory Administration and related market data, by early March 2026, over 80 city and rural commercial banks had changed their registered capital, mostly through capital increases.
In the context of narrowing net interest margins and limited endogenous capital-raising capacity, direct capital injections through share issuance have become a common choice for regional small and medium-sized banks to meet regulatory requirements and strengthen risk resilience. The completion of Hubei Bank’s 7.6 billion yuan private placement marks a phased strengthening of its capital base, but the ultimate goal of entering the capital markets still depends on transforming this capital advantage into sustainable competitiveness and maintaining asset quality.