Alibaba's Big Winners: Banks, Jack Ma And NYSE

International Business Times

Published Sep 19, 2014 05:35PM ET

Updated Sep 19, 2014 06:15PM ET

Alibaba's Big Winners: Banks, Jack Ma And NYSE

By Michael Learmonth - Now that the dust has cleared on the Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd (NYSE:BABA) IPO, some perspective: the Chinese e-commerce giant is now worth $230 billion making it the fourth-largest tech company in the world behind Apple, Google and Microsoft, by market cap.

The public offering raised $21.8 billion for Alibaba, more than Visa's $17.8 billion in 2008 and more than Facebook's $16 billion in 2012. After briefly soaring close to $100 a share, the stock settling back in the $91 to $91 range and closed at $93.89, slightly higher than the $92.70 opening price, but up 38 percent from the IPO price of $68.

In other words, a pretty perfect debut for a little-understood company whose current business is almost entirely based in China, where it controls an estimated 80 percent of the e-commerce market. Given the 36 percent pop, one could argue the offering was underpriced, and that the owners of Alibaba -- namely Jack Ma and Yahoo -- sold it too cheaply.

"The selling shareholders left $5 billion on the table for other people to take," said Tim Loughran, professor of finance at the University of Notre Dame Mendoza School of Business. "All the institutions got that money; it's quite a transfer of wealth that happened there."