Facebook has increased the price range in Silicon Valley's biggest initial public offering to raise more than $12 billion, giving the social network a valuation potentially exceeding $100 billion.
The company founded in a Harvard dorm room by Mark Zuckerberg raised the price target range to between $34 and $38 per share in response to strong demand, from $28 to $35, the company said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission today.
That would value Facebook at roughly $93 billion to $104 billion, rivalling the market capitalisation of internet powerhouses like Amazon.com and exceeding that of Hewlett-Packard and Dell combined.
At the mid-point of $36, Facebook would raise $12.1 billion, eclipsing Google’s debut in 2004.
Wall Street had expected the company to increase the price range, with investors keen to get a slice of a strong consumer brand. The IPO roadshow began last week and has drawn crowds of investors from coast to coast.
Facebook plans to close the books on its IPO later today, two days ahead of schedule, and in a signal that the landmark initial share sale is drumming up strong demand, a source familiar with the deal said/
The social network is scheduled to price its shares on Thursday and begin trading on Friday.
The IPO is already "well oversubscribed," which is why the company is closing its books earlier than anticipated, the source said.
Facebook plans to sell 337.4 million shares, or 12.3 per cent of the company. The capital-raising target far outstrips other big internet IPOs. Google raised just shy of $2 billion in 2004, while last year Groupon tapped investors for $700 million and Zynga raked in $1 billion.
The higher price range marks an increase of 21 per cent on the lower end.
The IPO comes amid concerns from some investors that Facebook hasn't yet figured out a way to make money from an increasing number of users who access the social network on mobile devices such as smart phones.
Company executives met with prospective investors in Chicago yesterday and are slated to travel to Kansas City and Denver, before returning to Menlo Park, California, where Facebook is headquartered.
Reuters