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August 14, 2007 8:41 AM PDT

IPO takes VMware investors on a rocket ride

by Dawn Kawamoto
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Investors in VMware's initial public offering got a rocket ride Tuesday morning, as the highly anticipated IPO launched out of the gate with an initial trade of $52 a share.

VMware investors who snapped up shares at $29 a pop as part of the IPO offering reaped a profit of 79 percent on that first trade.

Not bad, noted Richard Peterson, director of capital markets research for Thomson Financial.

"VMware is poised to be the No. 1 first-day gainer for the year," Peterson said. "And although it was anticipated to be well-received, it came out on a day when the overall markets are down by 150 points, making its debut all the more impressive."

VMware joins 43 other tech IPOs that have debuted this year, which are part of the overall group of 142 deals that have gone out to date. Fortress Investment, a financial services company, gained 67 percent at the close of its first day of trading and VMware appears on track to beat the figure.

VMware, which develops virtualization software for servers, has grabbed investors attention for several reasons. One, the company's IPO comes at a time when virtualization is playing a greater role in the computing world. VMware's software, for example, is designed to allow a single server to run a number of operating systems simultaneously on different "virtual machines." And two, it was an established operation that was spun out of storage titan EMC, which had acquired the company for $635 million back in late 2003.

VMware's software aims to put this virtualization technology on lower-priced servers, rather than leaving it for the more expensive mainframe computers and older Unix servers.

VMware, which sold 33 million shares to the public and raised $975 million, currently has a market value of $19.5 billion based on its first trade of the day.

Looks like EMC got its money worth, before setting the company free.

Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.
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