Facebook\'s initial public offering of stock is shaping up to be one of the largest ever. The world\'s definitive online social network is raising at least $16 billion, a big windfall for a company that began eight years ago with no way to make money. Also Check: Full coverage of Facebook\'s mega IPO Facebook priced its IPO at $38 per share on Thursday, at the high end of its expected range. If extra shares reserved to cover additional demand are sold as part of the transaction, Facebook Inc. and its early investors stand to reap as much as $18.4 billion from the IPO. The IPO values the company at around $104 billion, slightly more than Amazon.com, and well above well-known corporations such as Disney and Kraft. The $38 is the price at which the investment banks orchestrating the offering will sell the stock to their clients. Facebook\'s stock is expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market sometime Friday morning under the ticker symbol ``FB.\'\' That\'s when so-called retail investors can try to buy the stock. Facebook is the third-highest valued company to ever go public, according to data from Dealogic, a financial data provider. Only the two Chinese banks have been worth more. At $16 billion, the size of the IPO is the third-largest for a U.S. company, squeezed between No. 2 power company Enel and No. 4 General Motors, according to Renaissance Capital. The largest U.S. IPO was Visa, which raised $17.86 in 2008. For the Harvard dorm-born social network that reimagined how people communicate online, the stock sale means more money to operate the data centers that hold the trove of status updates, photos and videos shared by Facebook\'s 900 million users. It means more money to hire the best engineers to work at its sprawling Menlo Park, California, headquarters, or in New York City, where it opened an engineering office last year. And it means early investors, who took a chance seeding the young social network with start-up funds six, seven and eight years ago, can reap big rewards. Peter Thiel, the venture capitalist who sits on Facebook\'s board of directors, invested $500,000 in the company back in 2004. He\'s selling nearly 17 million of his shares in the IPO, which means he\'ll get some $640 million. The offering values Facebook, whose 2011 revenue was $3.7 billion, at as much as $104 billion. The sky-high valuation has its skeptics. Google Inc, whose revenue stood at $38 billion last year, has a market capitalization of $207 billion.