(Bloomberg) -- Yeahka Ltd., a Chinese payment technology services provider, is planning to raise about $300 million in an initial public offering in Hong Kong, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The company aims to seek a listing hearing as soon as February after it filed an application with the city’s bourse on Nov. 12, the people said, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private.

Tencent Holdings Ltd. became one of Yeahka’s shareholders in 2012, a year after the payment platform was founded, according to its preliminary prospectus. It also counts Japan’s Recruit Holdings and venture capital firm Greycroft Partners among its investors. Liu Yingqi, Yeahka’s chairman and co-founder, was the general manager of TenPay, Tencent’s payment infrastructure platform.

Yeahka is China’s second-largest non-bank independent QR code payment service provider, with about 12% of market share in 2018, according to the prospectus, citing data by Oliver Wyman. Yeahka had about 4.8 million active payment service customers as of June 30.

Details of the offering, including timeline and size, could still change as deliberations continue, the people said. Representatives for Yeahka and Tencent didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

CLSA Ltd., Nomura Holdings Inc. and ABC International Holdings Ltd. are the joint sponsors of the deal, according to the prospectus.

--With assistance from Zheping Huang.

To contact the reporter on this story: Carol Zhong in Hong Kong at yzhong71@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fion Li at fli59@bloomberg.net, Jonas Bergman

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