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Thursday 19 May 2011

Today Is Not The First Time Linkedin Shares Have Doubled


Now that LinkedIn has stock is trading publicly,, you can buy and sell shares of the company on the New York Stock Exchange. But its shares have traded before privately among wealthy individuals and other accredited investors on secondary markets such as SecondMarket.
The chart above shows the price history of LinkedIn’s stock between April, 2010 and March 2011 on SecondMarket.
On SecondMarket, LinkedIn’s value per share in April, 2010 came in at $14.50 and steadily rose to $35 by March, 2011. Yesterday, LinkedIn priced its IPO at $45 per share on the NYSE, giving the company a valuation of $4.5 billion. Today, the company began trading publicly at $83.00 per share, an 84 percent increase from $45 per share. That’s a $7.8 billion market cap. And shares have been trading as high as $122 per share today.
Here’s the exact data from SecondMarket on LinkedIn’s share value from April of last year:
April 2010 – $14.50/share
May 2010 – $17
June 2010 – $17
July 2010 – $21.50
August 2010 – $23
September 2010 – $25
October 2010 – $23
November 2010 – $25
December 2010 – $25
January 2011 – $34
February 2011 – $35
March 2011 – $35
So what does this mean? Basically, it shows the difference between private and public markets. There is very little relatively liquidity on SecondMarket; and it took a year for shares to double in value. Shares for LinkedIn on the public market more than doubled in value on the first day of trading.
Seeing how LinkedIn’s stock performed on public markets vs. on private markets has to make you wonder how much Facebook’s stock will be valued at in the public markets. On SecondMarket Facebook’s valuation has come as high as $85 billion, or $34 per share. There’s no telling how hot Facebook’s public stock could be considering that it is minting money and has 700 million users worldwide (LinkedIn has over 100 million users).

Nokia Drops OVI from It's Services

“By centralizing our services identity under one brand, not two, we will reinforce the powerful master brand of Nokia and unify our brand architecture— while continuing to deliver compelling opportunities and experiences for partners and consumers alike,” said Nokia’s chief marketing officer Jerri DeVard, in the company blog.