The second big initial public offering of the week has gotten off to a more auspicious start than the first.
The billboard business may be less sexy than a hot, rainbow-colored gaming app, but shares of CBS Outdoor opened 7 percent higher from their I.P.O. price on Friday morning. Â That was in stark contrast to the disappointing debut of King Digital Entertainment on Wednesday. King, the maker of Candy Crush Saga, opened sharply lower and ended its first trading day down 15.6 percent.
Shares of CBS Outdoor opened around $30, up from its I.P.O. price of $28 in trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
The new public company raised about $560 million in the offering.
The CBS subsidiary is one of the largest advertising companies in the country, operating thousands of billboards, airport signs and digital displays from New York to Los Angeles. But as David Gelles reported on DealBook, the business hasnât been quite a seamless fit within what is largely a television company:
âAs much as we like that business, we are really a content company â" thatâs where our future is and our growth is,â said Leslie Moonves, chief executive of CBS. âOutdoor doesnât quite fit with us because itâs sales, but not content. The synergies didnât really exist.â
CBS will still own about 83 percent of CBS Outdoor, or 81 percent if underwriters exercise their option to buy all of their additional shares, for at least the next six months. When CBS eventually fully divests its stake, CBS Outdoor will convert into a real estate investment trust, a tax-efficient structure that is required to return most profits to shareholders.
CBS Outdoor competes with JCDecaux, Clear Channel Outdoor and Lamar Advertising.
Goldman Sachs, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley are leading the underwriting of the offering. Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo are acting as book runners.