Confident GM adds 20m shares to IPO

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A confident General Motors has added 20 million shares of preferred stock to its initial public offering, and it raised the estimated price range for common shares by about 14 percent to US$32 to US$33. 



A confident General Motors has added 20 million shares of preferred stock to its initial public offering, and it raised the estimated price range for common shares by about 14 percent to US$32 to US$33.

The Detroit auto maker, just 16 months out of bankruptcy protection, will now sell 80 million shares of preferred stock for US$50 each when its offering takes place tomorrow. Common shares will be sold by the United States government and two other owners, who inherited the stock for helping GM get through a painful restructuring last year.

GM announced the changes in a statement issued yesterday. It gave no reason for the increases, but people briefed on the sale say it's because of high investor demand. One person said bankers handling the sale had seven times more orders for the common stock than shares.

Earlier this month, GM said its owners will sell 365 million common shares for US$26 to US$29 each, and sell 60 million preferred shares for US$50 each.

The increase in preferred shares lifts the amount GM will raise in the sale from US$3 billion to US$4 billion, according to the statement. Final pricing is to be set today, and bankers may stop taking orders for the shares as early as yesterday afternoon, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because he is not authorized to speak publicly about the sale.

GM and its owners could sell even more preferred and common shares in the offering. Bankers have yet to exercise an option to sell 15 percent more of the shares due to high demand.

The preferred stock price will stay at US$50, but GM's total cost for those shares will remain about the same because it's reducing the expected dividend rate from a range of 5.5 to 6 percent to between 4.75 and 5.25 percent, the person said. The preferred shares will be converted to common stock in 2013.

Bankers have the option to sell roughly 55 million more common shares, although they have not yet decided to do that, the person said.

The common stock price hike is a boon for the US government, which is GM's largest stockholder.

Read more: http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=454825&type=#ixzz15UyLR4uq

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