LONDON - The specialty insurer Brit said Friday that it raised 240 million pounds, or about $400 million, as part of an initial public offering on the London Stock Exchange.
Brit is the latest private equity-owned company to seek to publicly float its shares in recent months amid buoyant stock markets eager for new listings.
The insurer, which is based in the Netherlands, priced its I.P.O. at 240 pence a share, giving it a market capitalization of £960 million. The companyâs shares were trading up slightly at 240.25 pence early Friday.
Brit was taken private by Apollo Global Management and CVC Capital Partners in 2010.
âI am pleased that our offering has been well received by investors,â said Mark Cloutier, the Brit chief executive. âHaving transformed Brit into a successful global specialty insurer operating solely through Lloydâs of London, we have built a strong foundation for future profitable growth and continued success.â
Since going private, the company has sold several business lines, including its general insurance business in Britain in 2012.
It now focuses on specialty insurance and reinsurance for businesses, and it has a large presence in the Lloydâs of London underwriting marketplace.
In 2013, Brit posted a 20.1 percent increase in profit, to about 102 million pounds, or $169 million.
Private equity firms have engaged in a series of sales and I.P.O. announcements of their portfolio companies in the past year as stock markets have recovered.
Earlier this month, Poundland, a British discount retailer that sells everything for £1 or less, ISS, a Danish outsourcing company, and Pets at Home, a British pet supply retailer, all went public.
Apollo and CVC will remain Britâs largest shareholders following the I.P.O.
JPMorgan Chase was sole sponsor and served as global co-coordinator and bookrunner with UBS on the offering.