Alibaba beats Facebook
Alibaba beats Facebook, raises $21.7 bn in biggest-ever IPO
NEW
YORK: Alibaba made its long-awaited Wall Street debut Friday on the
heels of a record stock offering that opens the door to global expansion
for the Chinese online retail giant.
Company founder Jack Ma
was on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as trading opened, while
a group of Alibaba customers rang the opening bell.
A trading price was not available in the early minutes after the opening, which is not uncommon for stock market debuts.
By raising as much as $25 billion, Chinese online giant Alibaba is
poised to break the record for the largest initial public offering in
history.
Priced at $68 a share, Alibaba would raise $21.7
billion with the offering of 320 million shares. If underwriters
exercise the option for 48 million additional shares, the amount would
top $25 billion, breaking the 2010 record set by China's AgBank.
Speaking to CNBC television from the trading floor, Ma said he was
"very honored, and so excited" by the market debut and that he sees
enormous growth potential for Alibaba.
"We have a dream," he said. "We hope in the next 15 years the world will change. We want to be bigger than Wal-Mart."
He added that he sees Alibaba as a company that will have a huge
impact: "We hope people say in 15 (years) this is a company like
Microsoft, like IBM."
Some analysts were also upbeat about Alibaba, which dominates the Chinese online retail space with Taobao.com and TMall.com.
"Alibaba has become the biggest e-commerce firm in the world in terms
of gross merchandise volume," the research firm Trefis said, setting a
target price of $80 per share.
"Alibaba will continue to retain the mammoth share of online shoppers, even if it is not able to increase it much."
Youssef Squali at Cantor Fitzgerald recommending buying Alibaba with a target price of $90.
Alibaba "starts trading today and with it comes the opportunity to
invest in China's largest e-commerce platform, which we believe has the
potential to dominate global online commerce over time," the analyst
said in a note to clients.
"While the stock's not cheap, we
believe the company's outsized growth and margin profiles, if sustained,
should support higher valuation over time."
The IPO allows investors to get a piece of the huge Chinese market, but it also will fuel Alibaba's international ambitions.
Alibaba's consumer services are similar to a mix of those offered by US
Internet titans eBay, PayPal and Amazon, and it also operates services
for wholesalers.
The company earlier this year announced plans for a US marketplace called 11 Main, which is currently in a test phase.
Alibaba Group made a profit of nearly $2 billion on revenue of $2.5
billion in the quarter ending June 30. Revenue rose 46 percent from the
same period a year earlier.
Alibaba decided to list in New York
because it wanted an alternative class share structure to give selected
minority shareholders extra control over the board; the Hong Kong
bourse declined to change its rules to allow this.
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