KANZHUN LIMITED, the Nasdaq and Hong Kong dual-listed operator of BOSS Zhipin, deployed RMB 40.6 million in its most recent repurchase tranche, acquiring 845,498 shares and lifting year-to-date buybacks above RMB 1.63 billion. The Q2 interim update marks the sixth consecutive quarter of capital return execution since the program launched in late 2024, with cumulative purchases now representing roughly 3.2% of the company's outstanding equity at the program's inception.
The repurchase pace—approximately RMB 272 million monthly through the first six months of 2026—exceeds the initial board authorization threshold and suggests management is routing operating cash directly into share reduction rather than holding reserves for M&A or geographic expansion. BOSS Zhipin operates China's largest online recruitment platform by monthly active users, connecting white-collar job seekers with employers through a direct-chat interface that bypasses traditional headhunter intermediaries. The platform generated RMB 7.8 billion in revenue for fiscal 2025, with adjusted EBITDA margins approaching 32%, according to the company's most recent annual filing.
The sustained buyback velocity tells two stories. First, KANZHUN's management sees the stock trading below intrinsic value despite a 47% rally from its October 2025 low, when regulatory concerns over data privacy in China's HR-tech sector compressed valuations across the category. Second, the company is generating enough free cash flow to fund repurchases without tapping its USD 1.4 billion cash reserve, suggesting the core recruitment business remains resilient even as China's youth unemployment rate hovers near 18% and tech hiring volumes remain 22% below pre-pandemic peaks. The buyback arithmetic matters: if KANZHUN maintains this RMB 1.63 billion half-year run rate through December, the full-year 2026 capital return would exceed USD 450 million, or roughly 6.5% of current market capitalization at recent trading prices.
Allocators tracking China's consumer-internet cohort should watch three data points over the next ninety days. KANZHUN's Q2 earnings release, expected late July, will clarify whether revenue per enterprise client is holding or compressing as small and medium businesses reduce hiring budgets. The Hong Kong listing now accounts for 38% of average daily volume, up from 19% in Q1 2025, which may signal mainland institutional accumulation ahead of potential MSCI China A-share inclusion reviews in August. Third, any modification to the buyback authorization—either an increase or a pause—would surface in regulatory filings within fifteen days of board action, providing early signal on management's updated capital allocation priorities.
The company has not announced a dividend, and the repurchase program remains the sole mechanism for cash return to shareholders. If China's Q3 GDP print exceeds consensus 4.8% and corporate hiring intentions recover, KANZHUN's platform leverage—higher transaction volumes with minimal incremental infrastructure cost—could push operating margins above 35%, making the current buyback price look conservative by year-end.