- May 4, 2023
- 7 minutes read
J&J’s consumer-health spinoff Kenvue jumps 20% in public market debut
Shares of Johnson & JohnsonKenvuemarket debut on the New York Stock Exchange, making it the biggest U.S. IPO in more than a year.
The new company opened at $25.53 per share after originally pricing its initial public offering at $22 Wednesday night, toward the high end of its target range.
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At its opening price, Kenvue had an implied valuation of nearly $48 billion.
Kenvue sold 172.8 million shares in the offering, raising $3.8 billion and putting the company at a valuation of roughly $41 billion. The company initially planned to sell 151 million shares.
The company, which trades under the ticker KVUE, holds a wealth of widely known consumer brands such as Band-Aid, Tylenol, Listerine, Neutrogena, Aveeno and J&J’s namesake baby powder.
“Millions of consumers around the world this morning wake up with a Kenvue product in their home,” CEO Thibaut Mongon, told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” Thursday morning ahead of the stock’s debut.
Mongon previously served as J&J’s executive vice president and worldwide chair of consumer health. He will sit on Kenvue’s board.
Meanwhile, the consumer-focused Kenvue is already profitable. The spinoff posted $14.95 billion in sales for 2022 and a net income of $1.46 billion on a pro forma basis, according to a preliminary prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission last week.
“We do this from a position of strength. Kenvue is a healthy business,” Mongon told CNBC.
For the first quarter, which ended April 2, Kenvue estimates it raked in sales of $3.85 billion and net income of around $330 million. Those results are preliminary.
It expects annual sales growth through 2025 to be about 3% to 4% globally, according to the filing.
The IPO still leaves J&J liable for thousands of allegations that its talc baby powder and other talc products caused cancer. Those products fall under the company’s consumer-health business, now Kenvue, but the spinoff will assume only talc-related liabilities that arise outside the U.S. and Canada, according to its IPO filing from January.
When asked about the liabilities, Mongon said Kenvue is “laser-focused on what we do best: serving our customers and also our portfolio with the brands that we mentioned.”
The debut raises hopes that the muted U.S. market for initial public offerings could be recovering after it collapsed last year.
Kenvue’s IPO raised more than every other offering so far this year, according to a report from Renaissance Capital. The 40 IPOs in 2023 have only raised a combined $2.4 billion.
The spinoff is also the largest IPO since the electric vehicle maker Rivian went public in November 2021.