BYD Wang couldn't sit still, and Lei Busi from Xiaomi was not far behind, quietly announcing that they would go public in Hong Kong on April 9.
It seemed unrelated to the new energy industry, but insiders knew that Xiaomi originally planned to go public in July, only to move up the timeline by three months.
They had planned the IPO, and at the end of last year, they suddenly distributed dividends of 9.9 billion, making the chances of a price drop quite high. Now with the advance announcement, a price drop seems almost certain.
However, insiders revealed that Xiaomi's early IPO was to enter the new energy sector, as they had already secured a thousand acres of industrial land in Beijing Yizhuang.
New energy is the hottest topic right now, and with the two counterbalancing each other, whether the stock will drop on the first day is still unknown.
The external disputes had nothing to do with Lu Liang; he had been guarding the factory for two days and nights.