Google seeks to raise $2bn in stock sale

Google is hoping to raise $2 billion by selling another 5

Google is hoping to raise $2 billion by selling another 5.3 million shares of its prized stock to finance its ambitious plan to expand beyond its Internet-leading search engine.

The move comes just two days before Google's stock will be added to the Standard & Poor's 500 index - a breakthrough that snapped the company's shares out of a recent low and presented management with an opportunity to capitalise on the surging demand.

In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing late yesterday, Google said it expects to sell the 5.3 million shares primarily to index funds who must own a stake in the company because it's now in the S&P 500.

Google's market value has climbed by more than 15 per cent since Standard & Poor's said it would include the company's stock in the blue-chip bellwether.

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Based on yesterday's closing price of $394.98 on the Nasdaq Stock Market, Google's offering would raise about $2.1 billion.

But news of the offering raised a red flag for some investors worried that extra shares will make it harder for Google to reach the lofty earnings-per-share target set by analysts. Google's shares dropped $12.09, or 3.1 per cent, in extended trading.

The additional shares sold in the offering means Google will probably have to earn an additional $45 million to $50 million this year to match the average earnings estimate of $8.82 per share among analysts polled by Thomson Financial.

The company expects to have 305.4 million shares outstanding after the latest offering, up from 271.2 million shares at the time of its IPO. Google's market value has increased by about $100 billion since the company went public.

Google's SEC filing indicated the company will sell its latest round of stock some time next month.

AP