Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Stock Price Closes at $93.89, Up 38% in Debut

The Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (NYSE: BABA) stock price closed at $93.89, a 38% gain from the company's offer price of $68 per share. BABA shares closed up 1.2% from their opening price of $92.70.

When BABA stock opened at $92.70, early shareholders had an immediate return of 36.3% from the offer price.

Shortly after hitting the market at 11:53 a.m., BABA stock hit a high of $99.25, a 46% jump from the $68 offer price.

BABA stock priceInvestor demand for BABA stock was overwhelming. More than 100 million shares exchanging hands in the first 10 minutes, and a total of 271million shares were traded in the first day.

Institutional investors were the biggest winners from today's historic IPO. According to The Wall Street Journal, nearly 50% of all Alibaba shares were offered to just 25 accounts. The top 40 accounts got almost 80% of BABA shares.

Alibaba finished its first day of trading with a valuation of $231 billion. That means the Chinese e-commerce company is already bigger than Facebook Inc. (Nasdaq: FB) which is valued at $200 billion. Competitors Amazon.com Inc. (Nasdaq: AMZN) and eBay Inc. (Nasdaq: EBAY) have market caps of just $153 billion and $65 billion, respectively.

"We want to be bigger than Wal-Mart," Alibaba Founder Jack Ma told CNBC this morning. "We hope in 15 years people say this is a company like Microsoft, IBM, Wal-Mart; they changed, shaped the world."

At the offer price, the Alibaba IPO raised $21.8 billion. That price could climb much higher - possibly to $25 billion - depending on how many shares the deal's underwriters purchase following the IPO.

"Alibaba is a historic stock deal," Money Morning's Executive Editor Bill Patalon said. "Profit opportunities like this come along once, maybe twice, in an investor's lifetime."

Jack Ma and other company officials rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange this morning. In early trading, Ma's stake in Alibaba was worth more than $19 billion.

Ma also spoke live on CNBC before BABA stock hit the market, and told investors who are worried about Alibaba's corporate structure to "Trust us. Trust the market. Trust the young people. Trust the technology."

Alibaba has an unorthodox corporate structure that does not provide shareholder much voting rights. The decision-making will remain squarely in the hands of Alibaba's board, which was a turn off to some Wall Street pundits. However, tech giants like Facebook and Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG) also offer investors little say in company decisions.

For early investors, the initial return from BABA stock has been a resounding success. But that could just be the start for the Alibaba stock price...

Long-Term Outlook for Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Stock Price

"I think with the Alibaba stock price, the issue isn't what it will do on Friday, I think it's what it will do over the long haul," Patalon said. "I think Alibaba has the potential to become a trillion-dollar company. When the stock debuts on Friday, you're looking at a value of about $168 billion. For the stock to reach my target it's going to have to go up seven-fold. That's a huge return. You just don't find those every day."

One of the biggest reasons Money Morning experts are so bullish on the BABA stock price is the explosive growth the Chinese market is experiencing...

"The number of Internet users in China is now greater than 632 million people, roughly twice the entire U.S. population, according to the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC)," Money Morning's Chief Investment Strategist Keith Fitz-Gerald said. "It will hit 800 million by 2016 or sooner."

But it isn't just the traditional Internet user base in China that's growing. Globally, the use of smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices is soaring.

"More than 4.6 billion people worldwide will use a smartphone this year, according to E-Marketer, and that number will rise to 5.1 billion by 2017, or roughly 70% of the world's population," Fitz-Gerald said. "Most are going to be using e-commerce for the very first time."

"The Alibaba IPO really represents the future of the Internet as we know it," Fitz-Gerald continued. "Already bigger than Amazon.com Inc. (Nasdaq: AMZN) and eBay Inc. (Nasdaq: EBAY) combined, Alibaba's IPO is really about who will control the Internet's core markets and payment mechanisms - two areas that U.S. investors have traditionally held sacrosanct."

In 2013, roughly 80% of all transactions that took place in China took place over one of Alibaba's sites. The market's growth and Alibaba's market share will be primary drivers of the BABA stock price in the long-term.

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