Article Entry
11 May 2009
Comments:3
DigitalGlobe to IPO This Week
Added by USGIF Category: Daily Intelligence Brief, General, Guest Q&A
It is certainly exciting when a major player in the GEOINT space decides to go public. And, that is exactly what is happening with USGIF member, DigitalGlobe. The company just announced that it will officially IPO later this week. With the Obama administration’s plans to use more commercial satellite imagery for intelligence gathering, it seems that the timing is right for the public offering, which is slated to happen on Thursday. DigitalGlobe will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DGI.
Stay tuned for updates on the IPO and we will surely let you know how they do opening day!
Tags: Digital Globe IPO, DigitalGlobe, DigitalGlobe Initial Public Offering, GEOINT, Satellite Imagery









Isn’t most of this geared toward the warm earther/cold earther war? The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) creation and funding justified at Congress?
Since we are now interested in satellites again; does this mean we’re not as interested in the HUMINT we needed so badly under Tenet? Does this reflect on the Air Force service careers(Satellites vs. HUMINT) of the CIA Directors and CIA’s move to DoD?
DigitalGlobe Closes Up 13% After IPO >DGI
MAY 14, 2009
By Lynn Cowan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
DigitalGlobe Inc. (DGI) had a successful IPO launch Thursday, with the satellite imagery firm’s stock closing up 13%.
DigitalGlobe’s performance follows the same trajectory of the four initial public offerings that preceded it this year, and seals its status as the fifth IPO to make first-day gains in 2009.
The stock closed at $21.50 a share on the New York Stock Exchange, up from its $19-a-share IPO price. A total of 14.7 million shares were sold at a price above its expected range of $16 to $18, which was set by underwriters Morgan Stanley (MS) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM).
Analysts say that a big draw for investors is DigitalGlobe’s steady stream of revenue from government contracts, as well as the expected launch of a new satellite this autumn that will nearly double its imagery collection capability.
“There is always hunger for a company with significant visible top-line revenue growth with good margins,” said Francis Gaskins, president of research site IPODesktop.com. “It’s going to be mid-year 2009 pretty soon, so people are going to be looking into 2010 for companies whose top-line revenue have a chance of popping.”
Of the shares sold, almost all – 13.3 million – came from private investors in the company, so those proceeds won’t benefit DigitalGlobe. Among the sellers were founder Walter S. Scott, now the company’s chief technical officer; Ball Corp. (BLL), a packaging and aerospace company located about 15 miles away from DigitalGlobe’s Longmont, Colo., headquarters; and a private-equity unit of underwriter Morgan Stanley.
DigitalGlobe, which is poised to benefit from the Obama administration’s plans to use more commercial satellite imagery for intelligence gathering, went public just three days after rival GeoEye Inc. (GEOY) reported rising revenue and a wider net loss related to the costs associated with a new satellite’s operations. GeoEye’s stock fell 13% afterward, but has since regained some of its losses.
DigitalGlobe, which currently has two satellites in orbit, plans to launch a third this autumn. In 2008, its revenue rose 81% to $275 million and operating income more than doubled to $92 million, compared with a year earlier, although tax expenses knocked its net income 44% below 2007 levels. In the first quarter of 2009, revenue declined 2% as sales slowed in its smaller commercial customer segment, and net income went down 25% as compensation expenses rose compared with the same period a year ago.
DigitalGlobe derived three-quarters of its 2008 revenue from the U.S. government, and says demand is increasing for its satellite images from all its customers – from emerging foreign countries updating maps to Google Inc.’s (GOOG) mapping features.
-By Lynn Cowan, Dow Jones Newswires; 301-270-0323; lynn.cowan@dowjones.com
From Linked-In:
DigitalGlobe Inc. (DGI) had a successful IPO launch Thursday, with the satellite imagery firm’s stock closing up 13%.
DigitalGlobe’s performance follows the same trajectory of the four initial public offerings that preceded it this year, and seals its status as the fifth IPO to make first-day gains in 2009.
The stock closed at $21.50 a share on the New York Stock Exchange, up from its $19-a-share IPO price. A total of 14.7 million shares were sold at a price above its expected range of $16 to $18, which was set by underwriters Morgan Stanley (MS) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM).
Analysts say that a big draw for investors is DigitalGlobe’s steady stream of revenue from government contracts, as well as the expected launch of a new satellite this autumn that will nearly double its imagery collection capability.