Xinjiang Xinxin Mining Industry Co., Ltd.
3833.HK · HKSE
Company research
Xinjiang Xinxin Mining Industry Co., Ltd. (3833.HK) is a China-based industrial materials company principally engaged in the full-cycle mining, ore processing, smelting, refining, and sale of nickel, copper, and other nonferrous metals, with its primary product being nickel cathode and secondary product being copper cathode. Founded in 1950 and listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in October 2007, the company is the second largest producer of electrolytic nickel in Mainland China, operating key assets including a 100% interest in the Kalatongke nickel-copper mine in Fuyun County, Xinjiang, as well as the Huangshandong, Huangshan, and Xiangshan nickel-copper mines in Hami, Xinjiang. In addition to nickel and copper, the company produces cobalt, gold, silver, platinum, and palladium, and also holds interests in two vanadium mines in Shangnan, Shaanxi. Headquartered in Urumqi, People's Republic of China, Xinjiang Xinxin Mining reported total revenue of approximately RMB 2.561 billion for fiscal year 2025, with operations conducted predominantly in the domestic Chinese market under the leadership of CEO Jiangping Li.
Research reports
Automated fundamental and valuation analysis for 3833 that highlights strong 1‑year share price gains, modest profitability, and significant share price volatility, while flagging multi‑year revenue decline, high payout ratio, and earnings quality concerns as key risks.
Simply Wall St · December 1, 2025Xinjiang Xinxin Mining Industry (SEHK:3833) – Stock Analysis – Simply Wall StModel-based equity report reviewing fundamentals, price history, and analyst coverage, emphasizing rapid share price appreciation over the past year, low net margin and moderate leverage, and elevated weekly volatility, without presenting a clear actionable valuation call beyond directing readers to fair value analysis.
Simply Wall St · September 17, 2025Xinjiang Xinxin Mining Industry (SEHK:3833) – Stock Analysis – Simply Wall StEarlier iteration of the automated analysis focusing on recent performance and shareholder returns, noting that 1‑year returns exceed both the Hong Kong metals and mining industry and the broader market while stressing that price volatility is higher than most Hong Kong stocks and that valuation and growth metrics score poorly in the Snowflake model.