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Top 10 internet IPOs of the last 10 years Posted: 23 Apr 2012 09:02 PM PDT Initial Public Offering (IPO) can be defined as the first sale of stock by a private company to the public. This usually is issued by smaller companies seeking money and capital to expand. However large companies have now invested their time in IPOs as well. This article intends to examine the top 10 IPOs of the last 10 years From Google to Zynga to Facebook, who will make it to # 1.
1. Facebook
The company hopes to raise $10 billion and has given potential buyers their first look at the financials. Financials showed that Facebook produced a $1 billion profit last year from $3.71 billion in revenues. 85% of those revenues come from advertisement, with the rest from social gaming and other fees. However, there is only one way to define Facebook and that is with a cliché called "social Bazaar" where friends chitchat, play games and can exchange 250 million photos a day.
2. Google
In its public offerings, the company intended to distribute 19,605,052 shares at a price $85 each. They were sold at a unique online auction using a system built by Morgan Stanley and Credi Suisse. The shares hit $700 after the 2007 IPOs. Strong sales and earnings were the causes of the surge.
3. Alibaba
The New York Times and Wall Street Journal both reported on the IPO for the company. The offering was significant as it was the biggest by any Chinese company, raising approximately $2 billion. Yahoo owns 39% of the company and offered to buy 10% of the available shares.
4. Yandex
In May of 2011, the company filed for an IPO on NASDAQ under YNDX at $20 to $22 per share. The company hopes to raise $1.2 billion from the sale of 15, 400, 000 shares.
5. ShandaGame
In 2009, the company began offering IPOs. The company was able to raise $1 billion in the richest U.S. Stock Market debut in 2009. Shanda was also able to sell more than 13 million American Depositary Shares. However, by September of the same year the company began to slip by 14%.
6. Zynga
The company began offering IPOs in December of 2011. 100 million shares were offered at $10 each. The deal size was $1 billion and the valuation was $8.3 billion. Performance has not been good as the first day did not see any rise, but a loss of 5%. Performance since IPO has also been optimal at 44.8%.
7. Giant
The company went public in October of 2007 with a deal size of $887 million. The valuation of shares was $3.3 billion and each share was offered at $15.50. There was a slight raise the first day by 17.6%, but since then has not been doing well with performance at -71.9%.
8. Renren
The company went public in May of 2011 with a deal size of $743 million. The valuation of shares was $4 billion and each share was offered at $14. There was a slight raise the first day by 28.6%, but since then has not been doing well with the performance at 60.9%
9. Groupon
The company went public in November of 2011 with a deal size of $700 million. The valuation of shares was $4 billion and each share was offered at $14. There was a slight raise the first day by 28.6%, but since then has not been doing well with performance at 60.9%
10. LinkedIn
The company went public in May of 2011 with a deal size of $353 million. The valuation of shares was $4 billion and each share was offered at $45. There was a slight raise the first day by 109.4%, but since then has been doing well with performance at 99.3%.
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