By Christiana Sciaudone
Investing.com -- Cloud-data software maker Snowflake more than doubled in its trading debut, opening at $245. It traded up to more than $276, and is now traded for volatility.
The Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) rival raised $3.4 billion in the year’s biggest U.S. initial public offering. It is also the biggest software IPO ever.
SNOW sold 28 million shares Tuesday for $120 apiece, after being marketed at $100 to $110 apiece, boosted from $75 to $85 earlier.
Snowflake is valued in the IPO at more than $33 billion based on the outstanding shares listed in its prospectus. That compares with a valuation of $12.4 billion in a private funding round announced in February, according to Bloomberg. Demand was oversubscribed by 40 times, according to CNBC.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) and Salesforce Ventures, of Salesforce.com (NYSE:CRM), each committed to buy $250 million of the company’s Class A common stock in a private placement. Berkshire also agreed to buy 4 million shares in a secondary transaction, according to Snowflake’s filing.