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Investors flock to DigitalGlobe offering

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The still-anemic market for initial public offerings got a boost after shares of satellite-imaging firm DigitalGlobe Inc. were priced above expectations and then surged 13% on their first day of trading Thursday.

The stock, priced late Wednesday at $19 a share, closed up $2.50 on Thursday at $21.50 a share. Early in the session it spiked as high as $25.

The Longmont, Colo., company provides satellite photography to the federal government and to commercial users including Google Inc.

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The deal is just the fifth IPO in the U.S. market this year. The last one was from Rosetta Stone, a producer of self-study language programs. Rosetta went public at $18 a share April 15; it’s now trading around $22.

In a market starved for true growth opportunities, investors see one in the satellite-imagery business: The so-called remote sensing market is expected to grow from $7.3 billion in 2007 to $9.9 billion in 2012, according to a study that DigitalGlobe quotes in its prospectus.

The firm earned $54 million in 2008 on sales of $275 million.

The company had projected an IPO price of $16 to $18 a share, but its underwriters were able to get $19.

Of the 14.7 million shares sold in the deal, DigitalGlobe offered 1.3 million, raising about $25 million. The rest were sold by hedge funds and other investors that had backed the company.

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tom.petruno@latimes.com

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