THE HAGUE: Dutch electronics giant Philips set a price of 20 euros per share Thursday, a day ahead of a highly anticipated IPO of its lighting arm, and said it was expecting to raise 750 million euros.
"The total number of offered shares is 37.5 million, representing 25 percent of the shares," the Amsterdam-based Philips said in a statement.
"The total proceeds of the offering to be received by Royal Philips amount to 750 million euros ($839 million)," it added.
The electronics group said earlier this month it would float its lighting arm on the Amsterdam stock market on Friday in a "historic" initial public offering after failing to find a buyer over the last 18 months.
Philips announced in September 2014 that it was selling off its core lighting business -- a mainstay of its income for more than a century -- to focus more on medical equipment.
It said it was making the move into medical technology where margins are strong and less vulnerable to competition from emerging markets.
Earlier this month Philips, a household name around the world for its home appliances, acknowledged its lighting arm would still carry some 4.32 to 4.92 billion euros in debt.
Philips sold its first light bulb a few years after it was founded in 1891, but for the past dozen years has increasingly shifted its focus to medical equipment, which now accounts for more than 40 percent of sales.
But its lighting business, which produces LED lights, halogen and fluorescent lamps and other electronic components, remains a major money-spinner, selling products in around 180 countries.
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