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Israeli company Mobileye soars after its Nasdaq debut

The share price rose 38% to $28.97 on the first day of trading, giving the company a market capitalization of $23.068 billion.

The New York Stock Exchange in Lower Manhattan. Photo by Roland Weber via Wikimedia Commons.
The New York Stock Exchange in Lower Manhattan. Photo by Roland Weber via Wikimedia Commons.

Mobileye Global (Nasdaq: MBLY), an Israeli self-driving car and advanced driver-assistance systems unit, had a lucrative Wall Street debut Wednesday.

Mobileye returned to Wall Street after five and a half years as an Intel-owned private company. The IPO (initial public offering) was the largest on Wall Street this year, making it the most valuable Israeli company, easily surpassing Check Point Software Technologies (Nasdaq: CHKP), valued at $14.6 billion.

The Mobileye share price rose 38% to $28.97 on the first day of trading, giving the company a market capitalization of $23.068 billion.

Despite Mobileye’s strong performance, it should be noted that the company initially planned to hold the IPO last year at a company valuation of $50 billion after Intel acquired it in 2017 for $15.2 billion.

However, the market’s poor performance this year forced Intel to reduce Mobileye’s valuation, and the flotation (the process of changing a private company into a public company by issuing shares and encouraging the public to purchase them) was held on Wednesday at a company valuation of just under $17 billion. Mobileye may have set a lower price in hopes of enticing investors and creating momentum that would raise the company’s market cap.

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