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Top dog: Shares of online pet food store Chewy soar in debut

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Local dog Frankie poses for photos outside the New York Stock Exchange, decorated for the Chewy IPO. Chewy, the online seller of pet food and squeaky toys, went public Friday and its shares soared 71%.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The logo for Chewy appears above trading posts on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Chewy, the online seller of pet food and squeaky toys, went public Friday and its shares soared 71%.

NEW YORK >> It’s raining cats and dogs on Wall Street.

Chewy, the online seller of pet food and squeaky toys, went public today and its shares soared 64%.

The stock rise now puts the value of the 8-year-old company at more than $14 billion.

Demand for the initial public offering has been high, with investors banking on the growth of the pet market. Chewy raised just over $1 billion, with 46.5 million shares sold at $22 each. That’s above what the company had expected.

In afternoon trading Friday, its shares were trading at $36.11. The stock is trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “CHWY.”

Chewy may bring to mind the failed online pet stores of the 1990s, but a lot has changed since the days of Pets.com. People are accustomed to buying nearly anything online. And pets are more pampered: Americans spent $72.6 billion on their furry pals last year, more than triple the amount spent two decades ago, according to the American Pet Products Association.

The Dania Beach, Florida-based company says most of its sales comes from shoppers who have signed up for automatic shipments of their pet supplies, giving Chewy a steady stream of revenue and time to plan shipments from its seven warehouses around the country.

Chewy was founded in 2011 and was bought six years later by pet store chain PetSmart for more than $3 billion. Even after the IPO, PetSmart is still Chewy’s largest shareholder.

To grow, Chewy plans to create more in-house pet food brands, expand its year-old animal pharmacy and venture beyond the U.S.

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