By Kate Gibson
The much-touted stock-market debut of Rosetta Stone Inc. is
living up to its billing, with the language-software maker's
initial public offering the first to price above its expected range
in nearly a year and its shares on Thursday rising more than
40%
"Rosetta could end up being the best-performing U.S. IPO since
fertilizer company Intrepid Potash Inc. (IPI) rose 58% on its debut
in April 2008," said Scott Sweet, senior managing partner at IPO
Boutique.
Of course given the dearth of IPOs in recent months, the
competition is limited. "After the first quarter of last year the
IPO market went into a virtual dormant state. This is amongst the
slowest periods in decades," said Sweet.
"An increase in successful IPOs is probably a good sign for the
markets but at the same time, we have a long way to go before a
sense of normalcy is restored," said Dan Greenhaus, equity strategy
Group, Miller Tabak & Co.
In the second public offering this week and fourth for the year,
Rosetta Stone (RST) on Wednesday priced its IPO at $18, with the
sale of 6.25 million shares raising $112.5 million. It was the
first IPO to price above its range since valve company Colfax Corp.
(CFX) went public last May.
In afternoon trade, shares of Rosetta Stone were up $7.37, or
nearly 41%, at $25.37, near an earlier high of $26.27.
Bridgepoint Education Inc. (BPI) drew a colder reception from
investors, with the San Diego-based educational services provider's
offering of 13.5 million shares on Tuesday priced at $10.50 a
share, well under the expected range of $14 to $16.
Bridgepoint's closed at $11.90, up 80 cents, or 7.2%, on
Wednesday, its first day of trade.
And Bridgepoint rival Grand Canyon Education Inc. (LOPE) also
priced substantially under its initial filing range and fell 1%
when its shares debuted in November.
On Thursday, shares of Bridgepoint gained 7.9% to nearly $12.00,
while Grand Canyon Education climbed 5.1% to $15.47.
The company's marketing campaign, which first featured Olympic
swimmer Michael Phelps and now includes commercials airing in prime
time, has translated into a brand awareness more than seven times
that of its closest competitor, closely held Berlitz International
Inc., said Sweet.
Stocks wavered between gains and losses on Thursday, with
telecommunication services and health care fronting afternoon
losses and consumer discretionary shares leading the gains.
At 2:15 p.m. Eastern, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was
up 20.15 points at 8,049.77. The S&P 500 Index (SPX) gained
6.03 points to 858.07, while the technology-laden Nasdaq Composite
(RIXF) added 26.15 points to stand at 1,652.95.