Chapter 462: The Constant Trouble

The meeting lasted until five in the afternoon, during which Lu Liang contacted De Mei City businessman Cruick to ask him to send a few people over.

Just as with Panda's listing on Nasdaq, listing on the New York Stock Exchange also required at least three market dealers to act as underwriters, but DiDi was different due to its much larger scale.

At that time, Panda was valued at 3.8 billion US Dollars, and its initial offering price was only 1.98 US Dollars, allowing it only to enter the third-tier capital markets.

But DiDi was different, valued at 50 billion US Dollars, and if it passed the listing review, it was expected to see a premium of about 10%.

The offering price would also be above five US Dollars, allowing it to directly enter the global select markets and catch the eye of investors from all countries.

In this aspect, Lu Liang was not familiar.