SenseTime postpones Hong Kong IPO after more U.S. sanctions

Business & Technology

Chinese AI giant SenseTime postponed a planned $767 million IPO in Hong Kong after a U.S. Treasury Department blacklisting. It was the second round of U.S. sanctions placed on the company, after it was accused in 2019 of developing facial recognition software targeting Uyghurs.

sensetime office picture
The logo of SenseTime is seen at a SenseTime office in Shanghai, China on December 13, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song

SenseTime, the Hong Kong-headquartered artificial intelligence giant, has postponed a $767 million initial share sale on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that had been expected for later this week, the Wall Street Journal reports.

  • The company was blacklisted by the U.S. three days ago, barring Americans from investing in the company.
  • This was the second round of U.S. sanctions against SenseTime: Back in 2019, the U.S. Commerce Department added several Chinese AI companies, including SenseTime, to its โ€œentity list,โ€ barring U.S. companies from supplying them.
  • Earlier that year, SenseTime was accused of โ€œautomated racismโ€ by making facial recognition software designed to detect Uyghurs, the highly repressed ethnic minority in Chinaโ€™s Xinjiang region, though the company quickly said that it had sold out of its Xinjiang security joint venture.
  • The newest sanctions are vague about what SenseTime is accused of, with no specific allegation of continuing abuses against Uyghurs. The U.S. Treasury Department writes:

SenseTime owns or controls, directly or indirectly, a person who operates or has operated in the surveillance technology sector of the PRCโ€™s economy. SenseTimeโ€ฆhas developed facial recognition programs that can determine a targetโ€™s ethnicity, with a particular focus on identifying ethnic Uyghurs.

โ€œThe accusations are unfounded and reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of our company,โ€ a SenseTime spokesperson said. โ€œWe regret to have been caught in the middle of geopolitical tension.โ€

  • Chinaโ€™s Foreign Ministry added (in English, in Chinese) that the โ€œsanctions by the U.S. fully expose its sinister intention of using Xinjiang to contain China.โ€

Whatโ€™s next for SenseTime?

The companyโ€™s IPO had already been downgraded from $2 billion to $767 million, the WSJ noted, and โ€œrepresented a fraction of the billions of dollars of private funding that the company received in the years since its inception.โ€

  • The company is โ€œplanning to relaunch the deal as soon as this month,โ€ per the WSJ.
  • The apparent insistence on a Hong Kong listing contrasts with โ€œMegvii Technology Ltd., a domestic rival of SenseTimeโ€™s, [which] scrapped its Hong Kong IPO plan after being added to the [U.S.] export blacklist and is applying for a listing on Shanghai Stock Exchangeโ€™s STAR Market.โ€

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