Alibaba's
shares opened significantly above their initial price on the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) on Friday, a sign of the excitement surrounding the Chinese
internet giant.
Shares
in the company made their debut in the US at $92.70 (£57), after being priced
at $68 late on Thursday.
More
than 100 million shares were traded in the minutes after the stock was launched
- more than Twitter.
The
NYSE was festooned with the orange and white logos of the company to herald its
arrival on public markets.
The
company raised nearly $21.8bn in its share sale, indicating strong investor
appetite for China's e-commerce giant.
In
opening at $92.70 per share, Alibaba is now valued at $227bn - making it
significantly larger than Amazon and Facebook.
Investors
are eager to get a piece of
China's e-commerce market, which is expected to
grow significantly
If
Alibaba's bankers decide to take up an option in which they can purchase 48
million shares themselves, then Alibaba's launch will have raised nearly $25bn
- breaking the previous $22.1bn record set by China's Agricultural Bank in
2010.
Alibaba
operates a series of online marketplaces in China and elsewhere, handling more
transactions than Amazon and eBay combined.
It
is responsible for more than 80% of online e-commerce in China.
Alibaba's
share sale is being viewed as a way to invest in e-commerce growth in China.
Already,
the country is home to the largest population of internet users on the planet -
and most estimates say that only half of China's 1.3 billion residents have
signed online.
That
is why investors have been angling for some time to get a piece of Alibaba -
long the market leader in e-commerce in China.
However,
investors are not buying shares directly in Alibaba's companies operating in
China, but rather in a holding company in Cayman Islands which has a profits
contract with Alibaba.
That
has made some wary, and it is one reason why Alibaba did not list on Hong
Kong's stock exchange.
New millionaires
Like
other giant technology share sales of late, Alibaba's is expected to mint
several new millionaires
Either
way, the sale is expected to make millionaires out of a large number of the
company's managers, software engineers and other staff.
Currently
Alibaba's single largest shareholder is Japan's Softbank which holds a 32%
stake.
The
firm made a profit of almost $2bn in the three months to the end of June, with
sales up by 46% year-on-year to $2.54bn.
Wall
Street was painted orange this Friday, the colour of Alibaba. The distinctive
exterior of the New York Stock Exchange was hidden behind a giant sign for the
Chinese e-commerce giant. And the branding was even more visible inside.
Traders at the spot on the trading floor where Alibaba made its debut were
given branded raincoats. One told me 'it's raining cash'.
As
the start of trading got closer, those closest to the action shouted out prices
to nearby specialists - an old-fashioned method in a high tech market. Alibaba
founder Jack Ma stopped to chat and shake hands with several traders as
anticipation built up ahead of the first trade.
Such
is his cult status back home, there was also a crowd outside the exchange.
Chinese fans waited, hoping to catch a glimpse of the man whose success has
turned this internet fledgling into a company with a market capitalisation
close to that of supermarket giant Walmart.
BBC
Business
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