As the new year of 2026 begins, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange welcomes a unique applicant—Sunny Sunday (Hunan) Group Co., Ltd. This toy company, referred to within the industry as the "Mixue Ice City of the cultural and creative sector," has officially submitted its listing application.
Compared to its IPO prospectus, Sunny Sunday's products appear remarkably ordinary, with an average price of 9.9 yuan, readily available on the shelves of convenience stores and supermarkets.
This seemingly insignificant small business has been transformed by its founder, Yang Jie, into a commercial marvel generating annual revenues of hundreds of millions of yuan and spanning over 20 countries globally.
From early entrepreneurial failures and acting as an OEM for promotional gifts for international giants, to leveraging a proprietary technology to tap into the blue ocean of domestic IP trends, and then securing a 235 million yuan investment from Hillhouse Capital, leading to a valuation soaring to 4 billion yuan, Sunny Sunday's journey is marked by the resilience and shrewdness of an industrialist.
The rise of Sunny Sunday is often simplistically labeled by outsiders as the "affordable alternative to POP MART." This stems from the overlap in their core customer bases, both targeting the emotional consumption needs of young consumers and relying heavily on the appeal of IP. The vast majority of the brand's products are anchored in the 9.9 yuan and below price range.
The brand has repositioned IP toys from being "collectible figurines" or "surprise blind boxes" back into the more mass-market track of "easily purchasable little joys," thereby being seen as an affordable alternative choice.
In 2014, customer complaints arose about a paint smell from promotional toys produced by the brand, prompting Yang Jie to personally handle the situation. This incident sparked the brand's pursuit of technological innovation to address the critical shortcomings in safety, environmental impact, and efficiency of traditional toy painting processes.
In 2017, Sunny Sunday successfully developed a multi-color, multi-material injection molding integration process for food-grade toy molds. This technology was undoubtedly disruptive; it eliminated the painting step by fusing different colored eco-friendly materials like ABS and TPR in a single molding cycle. The effects were immediate: products directly met food-contact grade safety standards, completely eliminating risks of odor and harmful substances. Production efficiency increased exponentially, with the daily output of a single machine equivalent to that of 20 skilled painters.
Third-party data indicates that in the affordable 3D IP toy market priced under 20 yuan, the brand's sales volume already ranks first in China. This validates the assessment in its prospectus: the vast lower-tier market holds significant, yet unmet, demand for officially licensed IP toys.
Sunny Sunday's charge towards a Hong Kong listing signifies that a value-priced toy brand, driven by "core technology + extreme efficiency," has stepped into the spotlight of the capital markets. Its success is not built on marketing hype, but on solving a specific industry pain point—safety and cost—thereby unlocking the potential of a massive market for IP consumption demand among the lower-tier population.
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