Tesla IPO revs to $19 open, raises $226M
Tesla Motors Inc. opened trading on its first day at $19 a share after selling its shares above expectations at $17, raising $226.1 million.
The closely watched Palo Alto electric car maker's shares rose nearly 12 percent on their first day on NASDAQ with the TSLA symbol.
Tesla sold 13.3 million shares instead of the 11.1 million originally planned and exceeded its previous estimated range of between $14 and $16 a share.
The company plans to use the money to help it bridge its offerings from the flashy two-door $109,000 Roadster that was its first car to a $50,000 Model S sedan that it plans to make at the former New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. plant in Fremont.
The company has yet to make a profit and doesn't expect to until after it begins selling the sedan in volume. It has lost $290.2 million since it was founded in 2003.
The IPO is expected to trigger a $50 million investment by Toyota Motor Corp., which previously ran the NUMMI plant in a 25-year partnership with General Motors Co. GM pulled out of the plant last summer and Toyota made its last Corolla there on April 1.
Tesla also has the backing of the U.S. government, with a $465 million loan.
Read the full story, and more details about the Tesla-Toyota partnership in the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal.


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