Clicky

  • Login
  • Register
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
Submit
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
No Result
View All Result
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result

Tech IPOs get ‘meh’ response from Wall Street: Arm, Instacart, Klaviyo

September 21, 2023
in News
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
Tech IPOs get ‘meh’ response from Wall Street: Arm, Instacart, Klaviyo
0
SHARES
ShareShareShareShareShare

READ ALSO

Michelle Obama: Trump DNC speech

Ukraine carries out one of largest-ever drone attacks on Moscow

Instacart celebrates their IPO at the Nasdaq on Sept. 19th, 2023.

Courtesy: Nasdaq

After a 21-month tech IPO freeze, the market has cracked opened in the past week. But the early results can’t be encouraging to any late-stage startups lingering on the sidelines.

Chip designer Arm debuted last Thursday, followed by grocery-delivery company Instacart this Tuesday, and cloud software vendor Klaviyo the following day. They’re three very different companies in disparate parts of the tech sector, but Wall Street’s reaction has been consistent.

Investors who bought at the IPO price made money if they sold right away. Just about everyone else is in the red. That’s fine if a company’s goal is just to be public and create the opportunity for employees and early investors to get liquidity. But for most companies in the pipeline, particularly those with sufficient capital on their balance sheet to stay private, it offers little allure.

“People are worried about valuations,” said Eric Juergens, a partner at law firm Debevoise & Plimpton who focuses on capital markets and private equity. “Seeing how those companies trade over the next couple months will be important to see how IPO markets and equity markets more generally are valuing those companies and how they may value comparable companies looking to go public.”

Juergens said that based on his conversations with companies the market is likely to open up further in the first half of 2024 simply because of pressure from investors and employees as well as financing requirements.

“At some point companies need to go public, whether it’s a PE fund looking to exit or employees looking for liquidity or just the need to raise capital in a high interest rate environment,” he said.

Arm, which is controlled by Japan’s SoftBank, saw its shares jump 25% in their first day of trading to close at $63.59. Every day since then, the stock has fallen, and it closed on Thursday at $52.16, narrowly above its $51 IPO price.

Instacart popped 40% immediately after selling shares at $30. But by the end of its first day of trading, it was up just 12%, and that gain was practically all wiped out on day two. The stock rose 1.8% on Thursday to close at $30.65.

Klaviyo rose 23% based on its first trade on Wednesday, before selling off throughout the day to close at $32.76, just 9% higher than its IPO price. It rose 2.9% on Thursday to $33.72.

None of these companies were expecting, or even hoping for, a big pop. In 2020 and 2021, during the frothy zero interest rate days, first-day jumps were so dramatic that bankers were criticized for handing out free money to their buy-side buddies, and companies were slammed for leaving too much cash on the table.

But the lack of excitement over the past week — amounting to a collective “meh” across Wall Street — is certainly not the desired outcome either.

Instacart CEO Fidji Simo acknowledged that her company’s initial public offering wasn’t about trying to optimize pricing. Instacart only sold the equivalent of 5% of outstanding shares in the offering, with co-founders, early employees, former staffers and other existing investors selling another 3%.

Tech IPOs get ‘meh’ response from Wall Street: Arm, Instacart, Klaviyo

“We felt that it was really important to give our employees liquidity,” Simo told CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa in an interview after the offering. “This IPO is not about raising money for us. It’s really about making sure that all employees can have liquidity on stocks that they work very hard for. We weren’t looking for a perfect market window.”

Odds are the window was never going to be perfect for Instacart. At the tech market peak in 2021, Instacart raised capital at a $39 billion valuation, or $125 a share, from top-tier investors including Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and T. Rowe Price.

During last year’s market plunge, Instacart had to slash its valuation multiple times and switch from growth to profit mode to make sure it could generate cash as interest rates were rising and investors were retreating from risk.

Growing into valuation

The combination of the Covid delivery boom, low interest rates and a decadelong bull market in tech drove Instacart and other internet, software and e-commerce businesses to unsustainable heights. Now it’s just a matter of when they take their medicine.

Klaviyo, which provides marketing automation technology to businesses, never got as overheated as many others in the industry, raising at a peak valuation of $9.5 billion in 2021. Its IPO valuation was just below that, and CEO Andrew Bialecki told CNBC the company wasn’t under pressure to go public.

“We’ve got a lot of momentum as a business. Now is a great time for us to go public especially as we move up in the enterprise,” Bialecki said. “There really wasn’t any pressure at all.”

Klaviyo’s revenue increased 51% in the latest quarter from a year earlier to $165 million, and the company swung to profitability, generating almost $11 million in net income after losing $11.7 million in the same period the prior year.

Watch CNBC's full interview with Klaviyo co-founders Ed Hallen and Andrew Bialecki

Even though it avoided a major down round, Klaviyo had to increase its revenue by about 150% over two years and turn profitable to roughly keep its valuation.

“We think companies should be profitable,” Bialecki said. “That way you can be in control of your own destiny.”

While profitability is great for showing sustainability, it isn’t what tech investors cared about during the record IPO years of 2020 and 2021. Valuations were based on a multiple to future sales at the expense of potential earnings.

Cloud software and infrastructure businesses were in the midst of a land grab at the time. Venture firms and large asset managers were subsidizing their growth, encouraging them to go big on sales reps and burn piles of cash to get their products in customers’ hands. On the consumer side, startups raised hundreds of millions of dollars to pour into advertising and, in the case of gig economy companies like Instacart, to entice contract workers to choose them over the competition.

Instacart was proactive in pulling down its valuation to reset investor and employee expectations, while Klaviyo grew into its lofty price. Among high-valued companies that are still private, payments software developer Stripe has cut its valuation by almost half to $50 billion, and design software startup Canva lowered its valuation in a secondary transaction by 36% to $25.5 billion.

Private equity firms and venture capitalists are in the business of profiting on their investments, so eventually their portfolio companies need to hit the public market or get acquired. But for founders and management teams, being public means a potentially volatile stock price and a need to update investors every quarter.

Given how Wall Street has received the first notable tech IPOs since late 2021, there may not be a ton of reward for all that hassle.

Still, Aswarth Damodaran, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said that with all the skepticism in the market, the latest IPOs are performing admirably enough because there was a fear they could drop 20% to 25% out of the gate.

“At one level the people pushing these companies are probably heaving a sigh of relief because there was a very real chance of catastrophe on these companies,” Damodaran told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday. “I have a feeling it will take a week or two for this to play out. But if the stock price stays above the offer price two weeks from now, I think these companies will all view that as a win.”

WATCH: NYU professor explains why he doesn’t trust SoftBank-backed IPOs

NYU's 'Dean of Valuation': I'm skeptical of companies entering market with a SoftBank-based pricing

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin
Previous Post

Biden pushes to scrub medical debt from credit scores so people will be ‘better be able to invest in their future’

Next Post

Rupert Murdoch left Fox after its stranglehold on conservative media splintered into a cacophony of more Trump-friendly outlets

Related Posts

Michelle Obama: Trump DNC speech
News

Michelle Obama: Trump DNC speech

August 21, 2024
Ukraine carries out one of largest-ever drone attacks on Moscow
News

Ukraine carries out one of largest-ever drone attacks on Moscow

August 21, 2024
Volatility spike was a ‘huge overreaction,’ but more could be ahead, strategist says
News

Volatility spike was a ‘huge overreaction,’ but more could be ahead, strategist says

August 21, 2024
Japan trade on deck, Wall Street rally pauses
News

Japan trade on deck, Wall Street rally pauses

August 21, 2024
GMC targets electric truck leadership against Tesla, Ford, Rivian
News

GMC targets electric truck leadership against Tesla, Ford, Rivian

August 21, 2024
Brits snap up lower mortgages as BOE cut boosts market
News

Brits snap up lower mortgages as BOE cut boosts market

August 20, 2024
Next Post
Rupert Murdoch left Fox after its stranglehold on conservative media splintered into a cacophony of more Trump-friendly outlets

Rupert Murdoch left Fox after its stranglehold on conservative media splintered into a cacophony of more Trump-friendly outlets

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

What's New Here!

New GP platform leverages AI for note-taking, care planning and more briefs

New GP platform leverages AI for note-taking, care planning and more briefs

August 16, 2024
A’ja Wilson calls Kahleah Copper ‘that bitch’ after Olympic heroics

A’ja Wilson calls Kahleah Copper ‘that bitch’ after Olympic heroics

August 11, 2024
J.D. Vance’s publisher plans ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ reprint to meet surging demand

J.D. Vance’s publisher plans ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ reprint to meet surging demand

July 25, 2024
Cathie Wood buys falling tech stocks: Amazon, Meta, Tesla

Cathie Wood buys falling tech stocks: Amazon, Meta, Tesla

August 9, 2024
What Kevin Durant’s mom thinks of his chance at Olympic history

What Kevin Durant’s mom thinks of his chance at Olympic history

August 10, 2024
VP Kamala Harris secures enough delegates to be Democratic nominee: AP tally

VP Kamala Harris secures enough delegates to be Democratic nominee: AP tally

July 23, 2024
Trump stops short of establishing a bitcoin strategic reserve

Trump stops short of establishing a bitcoin strategic reserve

July 28, 2024

About

World Tribune is an online news portal that shares the latest news on world, business, health, tech, sports, and related topics.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Michelle Obama: Trump DNC speech
  • France to donate 100,000 mpox vaccines as nation prepares for outbreak at home
  • Ukraine carries out one of largest-ever drone attacks on Moscow
  • Aaron Boone on how Yankees’ catching situation will play out down stretch

Newslatter

Loading
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In