The
company specialises in DNA sequencing and provides rapid
COVID-19 tests.
The London Stock Exchange (LSE) has enjoyed a strong run of IPOs
this year yet biotech firms have traditionally opted to list in
New York over London, or have listed on the LSE's junior AIM
bourse rather than the main market.
"We went through a thorough and rigorous process and went for
London," CEO Gordon Sanghera told journalists this month. "For
many, many reasons is the right place to float, and some of the
government moves are encouraging."
Oxford Nanopore is the LSE's first major biotech listing since
2014 when allergy specialist Circassia went public and fetched a
valuation of 581 million pounds, according to Reuters
Breakingviews.
"This will be seen as a vote of confidence for the London Stock
Exchange as a worthy launch pad for both tech and pharmaceutical
companies, particularly given the NASDAQ's dominance in this
space," Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter said in an
email.
The company reached a value of about 4.95 billion pounds at the
session's high after opening 28% above their initial public
offering (IPO) price of 425 pence.
Oxford Nanopore, whose stated vision is to enable the "analysis
of any living thing, by anyone, anywhere," sells a range of
devices for DNA and RNA sequencing - an essential tool in
medicine, biology and forensics.
More recently, the company has sold technology for genome
sequencing of the novel coronavirus that helps identify
variants, besides providing rapid COVID-19 tests to Britain's
national health services.
"The company has really hit a sweet spot since it makes devices
to sequence COVID variants, and it's in a sector that will only
become more important, attract more attention and more
investment over the coming years," Markets.com analyst Neil
Wilson said.
Oxford Nanopore sold 524 million pounds worth of shares in the
IPO. It had set its issue price towards the upper end of an
earlier range.
It issued 82.4 million new shares, raising 350 million pounds,
while existing shareholders sold 41 million shares, it said in a
statement.
($1 = 0.7311 pounds)
(Reporting by Yadarisa Shabong and Aditi Sebastian in Bengaluru,
Abhinav Ramnarayan in London; editing by Sachin Ravikumar and
Jason Neely)
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