Money | Larry Ellison NetSuite Doubles IPO Price Surge of interest sees the price for the on-demand software vendor soar to $26 By Jim O'Neill Posted Dec 20, 2007 5:11 AM CST Copied The U.S. BMW Oracle racing syndicate owner Larry Ellison answers a journalist question during a press conference at the team base in the America's Cup port in Valencia , Spain, Tuesday, July 24, 2007. (Associated Press) On-demand software vendor NetSuite has doubled the price on its IPO after a Dutch-auction-style bidding war over the past two days saw investor interest surge. After originally pricing the offering at $13-$16, NetSuite bumped it to $16-$19 Tuesday and then $19-$22 yesterday. Late last night the company set a target at $26 for today’s sale, MarketWatch reports. NetSuite, backed by Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, who own 61% or the company, plans to sell 6.2 million shares of common stock, raising an estimated $161.2 million when it opens today under the symbol “N” on the NYSE. Analysts generally are positive on the company’s outlook but say “overzealous” investors may have driven the price higher than it should be. Read These Next Trump laid a 'trap' for Democrats, and GOP aims to pounce. CNN boss asks workers not to 'jump to conclusions' about deal. Christina Applegate pulls back the curtain on her real life. Men's, women's hockey players stick together after Trump joke. Report an error