IPOs

At least four IPOs price in New York despite jarring market volatility

Key Points
  • IPO pricings that had been scheduled in New York for Cactus, Evolus, Victory Capital Holdings, and Mudrick Capital went ahead Wednesday.
  • The pricings defied this week's stock market volatility, which led to three other stock market flotations being postponed.
People walk by the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) before the Opening Bell on February 6, 2018 in New York City
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At least four companies managed to price their initial public offerings (IPOs) in New York on Wednesday, defying this week's stock market volatility which led to three other stock market flotations being postponed.

The S&P 500 and the Dow saw their sharpest drop in more than six years on Monday, and volatility has continued even as the indexes recovered some of their losses. This has made the steady investor demand typically required for an IPO scarce.

IPO pricings that had been scheduled for Wednesday in New York for Cactus, Evolus, Victory Capital Holdings, and Mudrick Capital went ahead.

However, Victory Capital's IPO was priced well below its $17 to $19 indicated price range, at $13 per share. Quintana Energy Services postponed its IPO on Wednesday, while Chinese wearable technology Huami had yet to publicly give an update on its IPO as of late Friday.

"When the market has that kind of a swing, it has a negative effect on the IPO market," said Kathleen Smith, principal at Renaissance Capital, which manages IPO-focused exchange-traded funds.

"The IPO market will probably not be closed, but it's going to affect the deals that are on the calendar," Smith added.

On Tuesday, Turkish fast-food chain operator TFI Tab Food Investments postponed its planned $220 million initial public offering in New York.

Argentine biotechnology firm Bioceres this week extended by one day the offer period on its IPO in the U.S. market.

Last year saw an 84 percent pickup in the proceeds raised from IPOs on the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq after a weak 2016, according to consultancy E&Y.

The uptick continued last month with 20 new listings worth $9.95 billion, the biggest January haul on record, Thomson Reuters data showed.

However, U.S. security company ADT, owned by private-equity firm Apollo Global Management, last month priced its IPO well below its expected range.