Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Coupons.com sizzles on Wall Street debut

-

The stock market debut of Coupons.com brought out bargain-seekers on Friday, shooting the online discount firm up a stunning 87 percent.

The digital coupon firm, which raised $168 million in its public offering, had doubled at one point in trading but still ended with a remarkable opening-day gain, closing at $30 after its offering price of $16 a share.

The gains on the New York Stock Exchange debut give the California group a market value of $2 billion.

Coupons.com was founded in 1998 as a way to help shoppers find online deals with discount codes which are typed in as consumers complete a transaction.

The company says it had 1.3 billion transactions last year and revenues of $168 million. But its net loss for the year was $11 million.

The stock market debut of Coupons.com brought out bargain-seekers on Friday, shooting the online discount firm up a stunning 87 percent.

The digital coupon firm, which raised $168 million in its public offering, had doubled at one point in trading but still ended with a remarkable opening-day gain, closing at $30 after its offering price of $16 a share.

The gains on the New York Stock Exchange debut give the California group a market value of $2 billion.

Coupons.com was founded in 1998 as a way to help shoppers find online deals with discount codes which are typed in as consumers complete a transaction.

The company says it had 1.3 billion transactions last year and revenues of $168 million. But its net loss for the year was $11 million.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

A push to reduce reliance on foreign compute and give researchers access to more power

Tech & Science

Since the human brain is five orders of magnitude more energy efficient than a digital computer, it makes sense to look to the brain...

Business

New peer-reviewed research finds that actively questioning and refining AI output, not avoiding it, is what keeps people's reasoning sharp.

Tech & Science

Student alert: AI can conceal poor literacy or numeracy; hide gaps in foundational knowledge; and disguise learning difficulties.