If there’s one lesson Silicon Valley can learn from Snap’s trading debut, it’s that investors in initial public offerings are again willing to stomach the uncertainty of betting on hopeful, young companies.
While concerns still loom about growth and profitability at the maker of disappearing-photo app Snapchat, interest in the IPO is undeniable. After pricing the offering above the range at $17, the stock surged 44 per cent in its debut and another 11 per cent on its second day of trading to $27.09, valuing the company at more than $31 billion. Demand for the shares outpaced the number offered by a multiple of 10.
By going public at just five years old — an early iteration of the company was formed in 2010 but it didn’t become Snapchat until two years later — Snap is bucking the trend of companies staying private for as long as possible. It only added advertising to the platform about two years ago. Ride-sharing app maker Uber Technologies, data-mining start-up Palantir Technologies and Airbnb are all older than Snap and have hit higher valuations in funding rounds. They’re also all private.
Instead, Snap mirrors the likes of Amazon.com, Netflix or Alphabet’s Google, all of which decided to come of age in the public view.
"There are certainly a lot of companies that have the size and scale to go public” said Hemant Taneja, managing director at venture capital firm General Catalyst, which invested in Snap. "Snap’s offering indicates that there’s investor interest.”
Snap raised $3.4 billion in the first US technology listing this year. The company is not profitable, with a net loss that outpaces its revenue: It lost $515 million in 2016 on sales of $404 million. For now, investors are having to bet on the vision of co-founders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy, who must continue to engage the company’s coveted millennial audience while increasing how much money it makes from each user.
Lethargic listings
The deal comes on the back of a slow 2016 for IPOs, which saw the amount raised in technology listings plunge by 60 per cent from the prior year. Lethargy among companies ripe for a public exit has put a damper on Silicon Valley, impacting everything from investor morale to private company funding and business strategies
Don’t blame the scarcity of IPOs on a lack of worthy candidates. There are more than 170 private technology businesses valued at at least $1 billion, according to data from CB Insights. There just aren’t many that feel ready to face public markets, or to test the valuations they fetched in private funding rounds.
The largest companies have been some of the most vocal about wanting to stay private. Nine-year-old Uber, which boasts a valuation of $69 billion and a projected $5.5 billion in revenue last year, said an IPO is still some way off. That was before recent claims related to harassment and questions about the CEO’s leadership abilities.
Palantir, a $20 billion data-mining start-up founded back in 2004, only recently changed its tune as it approaches profitability. The Palo Alto, California-based company is considering an IPO, private equity deal or another option to allow employees to cash out their shares.
Private funding
One deterrent has been a private funding market flush with cash in recent years, letting companies raise private rounds that outsize most tech IPOs. Seeing a large, relatively young — and crucially, unprofitable — peer choose instead to pursue a listing could spur others to follow suit.
"Snap going public shows that it’s a natural part of the evolution of companies, and it’s done a lot to demystify the normal progression," said Rick Heitzmann, managing partner at FirstMark Capital. "It’s shown that you can still be innovative, cool and progressive while being a public company.”
While its fellow unicorns straggle on their routes to an IPO, Snap investors must instead look back more than a decade for examples of success under public scrutiny.
Amazon, founded in 1994, went public in 1997 with just $147.8 million in revenue and a loss of $31 million. In transitioning from an online bookseller to an all-out marketplace, losses finally began to narrow in 2001 and the company was profitable two years later. An investor who got in at the IPO would’ve seen a total return of more than 56,000 per cent.
Netflix went public in 2002 as a five-year-old company, making $152.8 million in revenue that year with a net loss of $20.9 million. The total return over the life of the DVD-shipper-turned-streaming company? More than 13,000 per cent.
Then there’s Google. The search company’s IPO was in 2004, six years after its founding. Google was actually profitable that year, posting net income of $399 million on $3.2 billion in revenue. It’s since added endeavours like cloud services and self-driving cars and rebranded itself as Alphabet. The total return is more than 1,500 per cent.
Big leagues
Of course, Snap’s snazzy debut doesn’t guarantee that it’ll one day be in the same league as today’s tech giants. Investors and analysts alike have concerns about whether it can continue growing its user base and edge toward profitability. At the same time, Facebook has been replicating Snapchat features in its own apps, fighting for users’ eyeballs.
Of the five analysts covering the stock so far, none have issued buy ratings. Two have the equivalent of hold ratings on the shares, while three advise clients to sell. The average 12-month price target of $16.80 shows they expect the current excitement to fizzle out.
"Euphoria could cause a short-term disconnect between fundamentals and valuation,” Shyam Patil, an analyst at Susquehanna Financial Group wrote in a March 3 note. "Longer-term we struggle to see Snap as an investment with meaningful upside potential from current levels.”
Source : Times Of Oman
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