Snapchat's IPO is ready for takeoff, and there's enough fuel for it to soar or burst into flames

Business Insider

Published Mar 01, 2017 10:21PM ET

Updated Mar 02, 2017 09:32AM ET

It's showtime for Snapchat.

After five years of enchanting its teenage users, the mobile app-maker will put on a show for the Wall Street crowd on Thursday when it begins trading as a public company.

Will parent company Snap's (NYSE:SNAP) stock have a big first-day pop, in the style of other big internet IPOs?

Or will it take a nosedive, emulating Facebook (NASDAQ:FB)'s surprise fizzle a few years ago?

At its offering price of $17 a share, Snap is coming out with a valuation of $24 billion. That's a rich valuation for a company that lost half a billion dollars last year and which has only been generating significant revenue for one year.

But fundamentals may not matter much at a time when internet IPOs have been scarce and the overall market is at historic highs.

"Would I be surprised to see it double on the first day? Absolutely not," said one fund manager who believes the stock is actually overpriced but could benefit from strong sentiment in the short term.

"Investors know they're buying it at an insane valuation, but you're counting on the tape driving it higher," he said.

Eric Jackson, a hedge fund manager who is in the process of starting a new fund, says he wouldn't be surprised to see Snap's stock finish its first day in the low $20s, suggesting up to a 40% pop from the $17 IPO price.