JP Morgan Chase hired two sponsor-principal qualified bankers to expand its Hong Kong IPO team. Benjamin Seto and Gary Lam joined as executive directors, reporting to Nelly Pai. The hires come as Hong Kong's IPO market shows early signs of recovery.
JP Morgan Chase hired two sponsor-principal qualified bankers to expand its Hong Kong IPO team. Benjamin Seto and Gary Lam joined as executive directors, reporting to Nelly Pai. The hires come as Hong Kong's IPO market shows early signs of recovery.

JP Morgan Chase & Co. hired two sponsor-principal qualified bankers to expand its Hong Kong IPO team, targeting a rebound in listings.
Benjamin Seto, formerly a director at Citi, and Gary Lam, formerly an executive director at China Merchants Securities, have joined JP Morgan as executive directors. They report to Nelly Pai, Head of the Hong Kong IPO and Corporate Finance Group at JP Morgan.
The hires are part of JP Morgan's broader push to strengthen its Hong Kong investment banking presence. The bank previously attempted to recruit Serena Yang from CGS (06881.HK) as head of Greater China consumer and retail investment banking, though that effort did not succeed.
Sponsor principals are senior bankers authorized to lead IPO underwriting mandates on Hong Kong's Main Board, a role that requires regulatory approval from the Securities and Futures Commission. The addition of two such qualified bankers expands JP Morgan's capacity to take on lead manager roles in new listings.
Hong Kong's IPO market has shown early signs of recovery after a prolonged downturn. BofA Securities recently cut its price target on Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd. (00388.HK) to HKD500, noting strong first-half IPO activity but a lack of mega listings.
The hires deepen JP Morgan's bench as it competes with Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and local firms for a share of recovering deal flow. Both Seto and Lam bring experience from global and Chinese financial institutions, giving the bank a mix of international and local market expertise.
The expansion shows JP Morgan's commitment to Hong Kong as a listing destination despite competition from other financial centers. The bank's upcoming mandate wins in the second-half IPO pipeline will test whether the team build-out translates into market share gains.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.