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Nasdaq stock falls as Borse Dubai set to sell shares in secondary offering

Shares of Nasdaq fell 3% in extended trading on Tuesday following the statement of a secondary share offering that will enable Borse Dubai to slash its minority stake in the U.S. stock market.

Borse Dubai had actually been the biggest single shareholder in Nasdaq. It said it will lower its ownership stake to 10.8% from 15.5%.

Borse Dubai will offload about 26.96 million shares of the exchange operator as part of a secondary offering, according to a declaration released after the closing bell on Tuesday.

Nasdaq shares closed the routine session up 3.6% at $62.46. At that price, Borse Dubai would get about $1.7 billion from the share sale.

Subject to completion of the offering, Borse Dubai plans to agree to an 18-month lock-up of its remaining shares managed by Nasdaq, with a right to designate a nominee to the Nasdaq board of directors so long as it continues to own at least 10% of Nasdaq's exceptional shares as of the date hereof, the statement stated.

Following the offering, Borse Dubai will end up being the second-largest shareholder in Nasdaq, with about 62.4 million shares or about 10.8% of the company's impressive shares.

U.S. personal equity company Thoma Bravo will end up being Nasdaq's. biggest investor, holding a 12.5% stake in the U.S. exchange. with about 71.6 million shares.