Khaleej Times

TWITTER IS WALL STREET HIT

IPO assigns a market value of around $14.4 billion to company

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new york city — Twitter made a spectacula­r Wall Street debut on Thursday but analysts warned of challenges ahead for the popular messaging service vying to become the next fixture for global Internet users.

The shares shot up by more than 90 per cent in early trade to as high as just over $50. In the end, the stock closed with a one-day gain of 73 per cent at $44.90, from the initial public offering (IPO) price of $26.

But analysts cautioned that the success of the IPO was just a first step for Twitter, which must now justify its hefty valuation.

“Kudos to Twitter for orchestrat­ing a highly successful IPO,” said Lou Kerner of the Social Internet Fund.

“However, as Facebook showed, an IPO success, or disaster in Facebook’s case, is really just noise in the long term. Twitter’s success as a stock is going to be based on how the company performs.”

Kerner said Twitter “needs to perform extraordin­arily well, in terms of user growth, user engagement, and user monetizati­on to justify its price.”

Appropriat­ely, #TwitterIPO was among the top trending topics on the social network for much of the day.

The key Twitter founders attended the opening on the New York Stock Exchange, along with “Star Trek” actor Patrick Stewart and a nine-year-old girl who operates a lemonade stand.

“Honoured to join @ev @jack @ biz @dickc & the @Twitter team at their historic IPO this morning,” Stewart tweeted, referring to founders Evan Williams, Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone, and Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo.

“We have a lot of work ahead of us,” Costolo told CNBC television from the floor of the stock exchange. “All the capital raised by this is going into the company.”

Asked about Twitter’s growth potential, Costolo said “it’s all about making it very simple and easy for new users to come to the platform... we all have examples of why this service can be useful to everyone on the planet.”

Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Youssef Squali was upbeat about the company, saying in a note to clients that “Twitter is based on a one-to-all, all-the-time broadcast distributi­on model, and as such, fulfills an unmet need.”

“This model is highly complement­ary to traditiona­l media outlets (especially TV), and fulfills the need for up-to-the-minute, trending informatio­n in real time,” it said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Actor Patrick Stewart, nine-year-old Vivienne Harr, Cheryl Fiandaca of the Boston Police Department and NYSE executive vice-president and head of global listings Scott Cutler pose before ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange in New York. —
Reuters Actor Patrick Stewart, nine-year-old Vivienne Harr, Cheryl Fiandaca of the Boston Police Department and NYSE executive vice-president and head of global listings Scott Cutler pose before ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange in New York. —

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