FACTBOX: Facebook's IPO: who gets rich?
Reuters
By
Poornima Gupta and Gerry Shih
From SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The rich are going to get richer when Silicon Valley's
biggest IPO starts trading on Friday.
Facebook this
week raised the number of shares it intends to float by 25 percent to 421
million shares, and lifted the target price range to $34-$38 per share as
investors clamored for a slice of the third-largest
IPO in U.S. history.
As a
result, the No. 1 social network and its shareholders will now collectively
reap more than $15 billion from the initial public offering - a $5 billion hike
from early May, when Facebook sought an IPO of roughly
$11 billion.
The
company itself will not float extra stock, Facebook said in a Wednesday filing
with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. But early investors like
venture capital firm Accel Partners; Tiger Global Management, the hedge
fund; Goldman Sachs (GS.N); PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel; and
companies tied to Russian tycoon Yuri Milner are cashing out with additional
sales to the tune of as much as $3.8 billion.
The
largest seller remains Accel Partners, which will make almost $1.77 billion if
the shares sell at $36, the mid-point of its indicative price range.
Milner's Digital
Sky Technologies Global Ltd will unload an additional 19 million shares,
bringing the value of its sale to more than $1.6 billion. Mail.ru (MAILRq.L),
another firm controlled by the Russian mogul, will sell a stake worth $705 million.
And
Goldman is more than doubling the number of shares it is selling, from 13.2
million to 28.7 million. The new sale amount will bring the bank more than $1
billion.
Those
holding onto their stakes for now include: Napster co-founder and Facebook
founding president Sean Parker; co-founder and Zuckerberg's Harvard roommate
Dustin Moskovitz; various Facebook executives; and venture capital firm
Andreessen Horowitz.
Zuckerberg,
who started Facebook in 2004 from his Harvard dorm room, is selling shares
worth a little over $1 billion.
Mark
Pincus, co-founder of the gaming company Zynga Inc (ZNGA.O), is set to get his
second payout in six months. He still stands to make almost $32 million, on top
of his take when the social gaming giant he co-founded went public last year.
Assuming
a mid-point price of $36, following are details on the amount the selling
stockholders will make:
Accel
Partners total $1.77 billion
Digital
Sky $1.6 billion
Technologies
Mark
Zuckerberg $1.08 billion
Goldman
Sachs $1.03 billion
Tiger
Global Management $842.7 million
MAIL.RU
$706 million
Peter
Thiel $606 million
Meritech
Capital $252 million
Greylock
Partners $274 million
Microsoft
Corp $236 million
Elevation
Partners $166.4 million
Mark
Pincus $36.3 million
Reid
Hoffman and family $34 million
(Reporting
By Poornima Gupta and Gerry Shih; Editing by Richard Chang)
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