The company, trading under the symbol JD on the Nasdaq exchange, jumped 10.5 per cent to USD 21 from its initial public offering price of USD 19.
The retailer, number two in the online space behind Alibaba, raised USD 1.78 billion in the IPO, making it the third largest of the year after Ally Financial and Santander Consumer USA, according to Renaissance Capital.
The new IPO price "places a value of about USD 26 billion on JD.Com, far below the value of USD 153 billion assigned to Alibaba back in February, but impressive nevertheless," said Paul Ausick at 24/7 Wall Street.
Alibaba has filed papers for its IPO, expected to be one of the largest in history, but has for the time being left out key details and financial data. Some analysts expect it to raise USD 15 billion.
