A cleaner waters flowers below a logo of Alibaba at the company’s headquarters on the outskirts of Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. The Chinese firm’s initial public offering now ranks as the world’s biggest at $25bn, netting underwriters of the sale a more than $300mn windfall after the e-commerce giant and some shareholders parted with additional shares.

Reuters

Alibaba’s initial public offering now ranks as the world’s biggest at $25bn, netting underwriters of the sale a more than $300mn windfall after the e-commerce giant and some shareholders parted with additional shares.

The fees are equivalent to 1.2% of the total deal, with Alibaba paying $121.8mn in commissions. Selling shareholders are set to pay another $178.6mn, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday.

Overwhelming demand saw the IPO initially raise $21.8bn, and then sent Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s stock surging 38% in its debut on Friday. That prompted underwriters to exercise an option to sell an additional 48mn shares, a source with direct knowledge of the deal said.

That means the IPO has surpassed a previous global record set by Agricultural Bank of China Ltd in 2010, when the lender raised $22.1bn.

According to its prospectus, Alibaba had agreed to sell 26.1mn additional shares under the option, and Yahoo Inc an additional 18.3mn, netting the two companies an extra $1.8bn and $1.2bn respectively.

Alibaba’s Jack Ma had agreed under the same option to sell an extra 2.7mn shares and company co-founder Joe Tsai agreed to 902,782 additional shares.  The source declined to be identified as the details of the additional sale have yet to be made official.

Alibaba declined to comment.

Citigroup Inc, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Morgan Stanley acted as joint bookrunners of the IPO. Rothschild was hired as Alibaba’s independent financial advisor on the deal.