Two years ago, foreign investors were pulling money out of China.
Now they're handing over billions for a chance to own Chinese stock later.
Midea Group is the appliance maker behind window AC units, washers, fridges, and robots. It sold $2.2 billion in convertible bonds on Tuesday.
The deal grew from an early $2 billion target. Demand came in stronger than expected.
That's a major signal about where global capital is willing to go in 2026.
What Midea Sold
A convertible bond is a loan that can later be swapped for stock. Buyers get a steady cash payment now. They also get the right to swap into shares if the stock rises above a set price.
The deal works in two ways.
Midea gets cheaper borrowing. Buyers are paying for the swap option. They also get downside cover plus stock upside if Midea keeps climbing.
Midea trades as 0300.HK in Hong Kong and 000333.SZ in Shenzhen.
The firm's shares are up about 53% since its Hong Kong listing in late 2024. That listing raised $4 billion, the city's biggest IPO in years.
That stock run is what made the bond deal possible. Higher share prices mean less dilution risk if bonds later convert.
Why This Matters Beyond Midea
Midea is part of a wave. Chinese firms have raised more than $10 billion through convertible bond sales in 2026 alone.
That list includes deals from SF Holding, China Pacific, and Tianqi Lithium.
The deal flow says two things at once. Chinese firms need cash for AI, factory upgrades, and growth abroad.
At the same time, global funds are willing to chip in again after years of pulling back.
For a long stretch, U.S. and EU fund managers cut their China bets. They worried about global policy, new rules, and the housing bust.
The convertible boom is a sign that some of that money is rotating back. Just in a more cautious form than buying stock outright.
Hedge funds and convertible bond experts are leading the demand. The bonds are easier to hedge than buying stock outright.
The Investor Takeaway
For U.S. investors, this deal is less about AC units and more about access. Convertibles are how foreign cash gets back into China. The bonds avoid the full risk of buying stock.
It's a structure designed for exactly this kind of cautious thaw.
Names like Midea, BYD, and Alibaba are the most common ways global funds tap the Chinese consumer story. They get access without buying right into the broader market.
Midea itself is more than just appliances now. It owns German robotics firm KUKA and is pushing into factory robots, smart logistics, and cooling tech for data centers.
What To Watch
The next test is whether more Chinese firms line up to issue convertibles in the second half of 2026. Bankers in Hong Kong say the pipeline is strong, especially in tech and consumer names.
Foreign capital didn't leave China. It just changed shape.
The shift is also a sign that big Chinese firms now have more ways to fund growth. They can sell stock at home or in Hong Kong, then top it up with bonds sold to global buyers.
That's a fresh playbook for the world's second largest economy. Investors who write off China may be writing off the wrong story.
