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Luxury sports carmaker Porsche raced onto the Frankfurt stock exchange Thursday with one of Europe's biggest listings in years, leveraging its brand power to defy global market turmoil.
Its shares rose to 84 euros ($81) at the start of trading, bettering the 82.50 euros price set by its parent company Volkswagen, and outperforming a weak Frankfurt market.
Even as markets worldwide suffer from surging inflation and mounting recession fears, the maker of the 911 sports car has pushed ahead with the bold flotation that gives Porsche a valuation of more than 76 billion euros.
"This is a historic moment for Porsche," said the carmaker's chief Oliver Blume, who is also CEO of the wider German auto group Volkswagen.
"Fulfilling the dreams of our customers is what drives us... With the completion of the listing, we are opening a new chapter in the history of our company."
Volkswagen is set to raise 9.4 billion euros ($9.2 billion) from the listing, with some of the cash to be ploughed into the group's high-speed drive towards electric vehicles.
In terms of value of shares issued, Porsche's is the biggest stock market debut in Germany since Deutsche Telekom's in 1996, and the largest in Europe since the 2011 flotation of Switzerland-based commodities giant Glencore.
- 'Crazy, cool' -
Analysts have looked to the carmaker's market entry for some cheer against a morose economic backdrop, with investment bank Berenberg saying it could "offer a catalyst in an industry sorely lacking positive surprises".
It has generated buzz in Porsche's home market of Germany, where top tabloid Bild described it as "crazy, cool, fast-paced".
"Sports car icon Porsche goes full throttle and races onto the stock market," read a column in the paper.
It has also drawn interest from major investors, including Qatar and Abu Dhabi's public investment funds, Norway's sovereign wealth fund and US asset management firm T. Rowe Price.
The IPO has seen 113.9 million shares of "Porsche AG" issued.
While the carmaker's valuation is below some earlier estimates, it still catapults it above rivals such as BMW, with a valuation of 47 billion euros, and Mercedes-Benz, with a 56-billion-euro capitalisation.
- Electric drive -
Porsche has joined the electric drive of the Volkswagen group, whose brands also include Audi and Skoda, in earnest.
The electric "Taycan" has been the brand's best-selling model since January, an electric version of the "Macan" is due in 2024, as well as the launch of a new SUV in the middle of the decade.
The electric strategy includes building battery factories across Europe and the US. Volkswagen announced this week it will work with Belgian group Umicore to produce battery materials.
The IPO sees preferential shares sold to investors, which have no voting rights, while Volkswagen is also selling 25 percent of the carmaker to Porsche SE.
The eponymous company is a listed holding controlled by the Porsche-Piech family, who in turn are the main shareholders in Volkswagen.
This means that Porsche SE will have a blocking minority that will allow it to steer the future of the company.
Volkswagen hopes that listing a minority stake in Porsche will push up its own stock market value, which is 85 billion euros -- just a fraction of US rival Tesla's, at just over $900 billion.
C.M.Harper--TFWP