Snap's shares pop after
year's biggest IPO
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[March 03, 2017]
By Lauren Hirsch
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Snap Inc's shares ended up 44 percent on their first
day of trading as investors flocked to buy into the hottest technology
stock offering in three years, overcoming doubts about the loss-making
messaging app company's slowing user growth.
The stock closed at $24.48 on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday,
well above the initial public offering price of $17 per share on
Wednesday, giving the company a market value of $28.3 billion, on a par
with CBS Corp and Target Corp .
At one point the stock hit a high of $26.05 and a market value of $29.1
billion.
The owner of Snapchat, an app popular with young people for its
disappearing messages, raised $3.4 billion in its IPO on Wednesday, more
than the $3 billion Facebook Inc <FB.O> offered to pay for the company
in 2013.
With a full greenshoe option to issue more shares likely to be
exercised, the company is poised to increase its deal size to $3.9
billion.
That makes it the biggest U.S. technology IPO since Alibaba Group
Holding Inc <BABA.N> in 2014, despite the fact that Snap has never made
a profit.
Secretive Snap co-founder Evan Spiegel, who usually favors sweats or a
button-down shirt, showed up to the floor of the exchange in a suit and
tie to ring the opening bell before leaving the building to watch
festivities away from the spotlight he famously avoids. He earned $272
million on the offering.
Among the traders on the floor, men and women carried the company's
video-camera glasses called Spectacles and stuffed versions of Snap's
smiling ghost mascot.
The IPO has tested investor appetite for a social media app that is
popular among people under 30 for applying bunny faces and vomiting
rainbows onto selfies, but has yet to convert the cool factor into cash.
Despite a nearly seven-fold increase in revenue, Los Angeles-based
Snap's net loss widened 38 percent last year to $514.6 million. It faces
intense competition from larger rivals such as Facebook's Instagram as
it grapples with decelerating user growth.
KEEN HUNGER
Snap launched its shares into a hungry market. The order book was more
than 10 times oversubscribed and Snap could have priced the IPO at as
much as $19 a share, but the company wanted to focus on securing mutual
funds as long-term investors rather than hedge funds looking to quickly
sell, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Underwriters often price their IPOs below where they estimate demand in
order to maximize the chances of a first-day spike.
Such a pop, though it can be positive for a company's morale, does not
ensure long-term success. Shares of social media company Twitter Inc <TWTR.N>
surged 93 percent when they first opened on the New York Stock Exchange
in 2013, but are now trading at $15.84, down nearly 40 percent from the
$26 IPO price and nearly 70 percent from the opening price of $50.09.
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Employees sit around a table atop a Snap Inc. office in Venice, a beach
community of Los Angeles, California, U.S., March 1, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The
New York Stock Exchange carried out a trial run last week to make sure the
third-biggest technology IPO ever went smoothly. Nasdaq Inc <NDAQ.O> received
intense criticism for botching Facebook's 2012 IPO when its technology was
unprepared for the level of demand for the shares.
Jeffrey Sprecher, chief executive of Intercontinental Exchange IncN>, the owner
of the New York Stock Exchange, stood in front of the trading post to monitor
the hours-long pricing process, emphasizing the importance of the IPO going
smoothly.
ANIMAL SPIRITS
Snap's offering was well timed, with investors clamoring for fresh opportunities
after 2016 marked the slowest year for tech IPOs since 2008. The broader market
has also been buoyed in the months following the election of U.S. President
Donald Trump, with the benchmark S&P 500 <.SPX> surging more than 11 percent
since the Nov. 8 election, helped by optimism about the Republican
administration's domestic proposals, including plans to reform taxes paid by
businesses.
The
S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq Composite all hit record highs
on Wednesday.
"The environment is terrific. Animal spirits are running through the streets
here," said Stephen Massocca, senior vice president at Wedbush Securities. "What
better time to price?”
The launch could encourage debuts by other so-called unicorns, tech startups
with private valuations of $1 billion or more.
Investors bought the shares despite them offering no voting power, an
unprecedented feature for an IPO at odds with rising concerns about corporate
governance from fund managers looking to gain influence over executives.
To justify its relatively high valuation and fend off concerns about slowing
user growth, Snap has emphasized how important Snapchat is to its users, how
long they spend on the app and the revenue potential of the emerging trend for
young people to communicate with video rather than text.
(Reporting by Lauren Hirsch in New York; Additional reporting by Lance Tupper
and John McCrank in New York; Editing by Bill Rigby and Meredith Mazzilli)
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