Didi Prices Its IPO at $14. Shares of the Chinese Ride-Hailing Giant Start Trading on Wednesday.
Didi Global, the Uber of China, has set the stage for one of the year’s biggest IPOs.
The Chinese ride-hailing behemoth on Wednesday said it sold 316.8 million American depositary shares at $14 each, the top of its $13 to $14 price range. Four such shares represent one class A ordinary share. The company announced on Wednesday morning that it had increased the size of the deal; it had planned on offering 288 million shares.
At $14 a share, Didi would have a $67 billion market capitalization. On a fully diluted basis, Didi’s valuation rises to about $73 billion
The Beijing company has raised $4 billion in the offering. The shares will start trading on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker DIDI.
Didi was one of nine companies expected to price their IPOs on Tuesday and trade Wednesday.
More on Didi and IPOs
SentinelOne, the AI-powered cybersecurity platform, collected $1.2 billion after selling 35 million shares at $35 each, above its expected price range. The company had filed to offer 32 million shares at $26 to $29 each, which it boosted to $31 to $32 a share on Monday. It will trade Wednesday under the ticker S on the New York Stock Exchange.
Others scheduled to price Tuesday and trade Wednesday include LegalZoom, the online legal services company.
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and J.P. Morgan are the underwriters on the Didi offering.
Didi provides a smartphone app that lets users connect with vehicles and taxis for hire. Founded in 2012, it operates in nearly 4,000 cities, counties, and towns across 16 countries, its prospectus said. It had more than 493 million annual active users as of March 31.
At $4 billion, Didi would deliver the second biggest IPO of the year. Coupang (ticker: CPNG), which collected about $4.6 billion in March, remains the year’s biggest IPO, Dealogic said.
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