By Sam Nussey
TOKYO (Reuters) -Tokyo Metro's shares shot up 44% in their market debut on Wednesday after Japan's largest initial public offering in six years bagged it $2.3 billion with promises of generous dividends.
The stock's price was 1,722 yen ($11.35) at the midday trading break giving Tokyo Metro, one of the capital's two major subway operators, a valuation of roughly 1 trillion yen.
The company raised 348.6 billion yen in an IPO that was more than 15 times oversubscribed and priced at the top of an indicative range at 1,200 yen apiece.
"It's a well-known, well respected and stable business which offered a decently high dividend yield at IPO and excitement around that is reflected in the first day of trading," said Travis Lundy, a special situations analyst who publishes on Smartkarma.
Tokyo Metro forecasts a dividend of 40 yen per share for the financial year ending March 2025 and also offers perks to shareholders such as toppings at its noodle eateries.
While at the IPO price Tokyo Metro's dividend yield was 3.3%, at 1,722 yen the yield is a more modest 2.3%, comparable to peer Kyushu Railway.
There was a large increase in the opening of brokerage accounts targeting the IPO, said senior market analyst Tomoichiro Kubota at Matsui Securities.
The company's history dates back to 1920 with the establishment of the Tokyo Underground Railway Company. Seven years later, it opened Japan's first subway line, between the Asakusa and Ueno districts of Tokyo.
Tokyo Metro runs 195 kilometres (120 miles) of lines carrying 6.5 million passengers daily and its business includes real estate and retail.
"The listing of a large company familiar to individual investors has a large merit in broadening the investor base," Toshio Morita, CEO of the Japan Securities Dealers Association and former president of Nomura Securities, said before the debut.
The IPO was the largest in Japan since SoftBank Group listed its telecoms unit in late 2018.
Rigaku Holdings, a maker of X-ray testing tools, raised $863 million in its IPO after pricing shares at the top of the range and will debut on Friday.
There have been $4.9 billion worth of IPOs year to date in Japan, LSEG data shows, the largest amount in six years.
The stock market has been volatile following a surprise interest rate hike and change of Prime Minister.
Bain Capital scrapped its plan for an IPO of chipmaker Kioxia in October after investors pushed for a lower valuation than the buyout firm was targeting, Reuters has reported.
The benchmark index was flat on Wednesday. It has gained 15% year-to-date.
($1 = 151.6900 yen)
(Reporting by Sam Nussey, Noriyuki Hirata and Miho Uranaka; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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