initial public offerings (IPOs) trading on American exchanges
Showing posts with label CSPR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CSPR. Show all posts

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Tailwind Acquisition Corp files for $300 Million Blank-Check IPO

(Bloomberg) -- Casper Sleep Inc.’s chief executive officer Philip Krim has filed to raise $300 million for a blank-check company after seeing shares of the mattress company he founded tumble 30% since its February debut.

Tailwind Acquisition Corp., a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday to sell 30 million units at $10 each. Jefferies Financial Group Inc. is the sole underwriter for the initial public offering, the filing shows.

Casper Sleep CEO Philip Krim is the chairman of Los Angeles-based Tailwind Acquisition, which intends to focus on finding targets in consumer internet, digital media and marketing technology sectors, according to the filings. Venture capitalist Chris Hollod is the CEO of the blank-check firm.

SPAC deals, which rely on the sponsor’s dealmaking expertise, have become charisma-driven investments on Wall Street this year amid pandemic concerns and market volatility. Bill Ackman and Michael Klein are among the big-name financiers who have drawn in big checks with the promise that a good deal will emerge down the line.

Seventy-four SPACS account for more than $28 billion of the $72 billion raised in IPOs on U.S. exchanges this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While the vast majority of those firms are still jockeying for deals, Boston-based sports-betting company DraftKings Inc. went public in April through a $3.3 billion SPAC deal. Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. went public through a deal in October.

Casper Sleep, a bed-in-a-box retailer, went public in a $100 million IPO after slashing the target for the listing by more than a third. Its $1.1 billion valuation in an earlier private funding round fell to $476 million in the IPO and has since shrunk to $338 million.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

IPOs this week : August 3 - 7, 20 (wk 32)

IPOs expected to price
  • Rocket Companies (RKT) is expected to price its IPO on August 5. The parent of Quick Loans is looking to raise $3.15B at an expected pricing range that would value the company at just under $40B. 
  • Cloud hosting services provider Rackspace Technology Global (RXT) will price its IPO of 33.5M shares on August 5 in an expected range of $21 to $24. Apollo Global Management's stake in Rackspace will fall to 63.5% from 78.3% if underwriters sell their full allotment of shares. 
  • Oak Street Health (OSH) and BigCommerce (BIGC) on August 5,
  • Ibex (NASDAQ:IBEX) on August 6. 
IPO lockup expirations
  • Beam Therapeutics (NASDAQ:BEAM), Casper Sleep (NYSE:CSPR), PPD, Inc. (NASDAQ:PPD), Schrödinger (NASDAQ:SDGR) Silk Road Medical (NASDAQ:SILK) on August 4, 
  • as well as NexPoint Real Estate Finance (NYSE:NREF), OneWater Marine (NASDAQ:ONEW) and Professional Holding (NASDAQ:PFHD) on August 5. 
IPO quiet period expirations
  • Nkarta (NASDAQ:NKTX), Quhuo (NASDAQ:QH) and Inventiva SACA (NASDAQ:IVA) on August 4.

Saturday, February 29, 2020

IPOs this week : March 2 - 6, 20 (wk 10)

IPOs expected to price
  • GFL Environment (GFL) is expected to price its $1.77B IPO on March 3. 

IPO quiet period expirations
  • The analyst quiet period expires on Casper Sleep (NYSE:CSPR) on March 2. Shares of Casper closed at $9.02 on Friday vs. the IPO pricing level of $12. Will analysts boost the online bedding stock with bullish reports? 
  • Schrodinger (NASDAQ:SDGR) and PPD (NASDAQ:PPD) on March 2 
  • OneWater Marine (NASDAQ:ONEW), Nexpoint Real Estate (NYSE:NREF) and Professional Holding (NASDAQ:PFHD) on March 3. 

Also, watch for news on DoorDash (DASH) after the company disclosed that it filed confidentially for an IPO. The DoorDash IPO could be of interest to Uber Eats (NYSE:UBER), Postmates (POSTM) and GrubHub (NYSE:GRUB).

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Casper Sleep (CSPR) began trading on the NYSE on Thur 6 Feb 20

Casper Sleep Inc. offers a range of Casper mattresses, pillows, sheets and duvets, bedroom furniture and accessories, sleep technology, and related services through its e-commerce platform, 60 Casper retail stores, and 18 retail partners.
The company was formerly known as Providence Mattress Company and changed its name to Casper Sleep Inc. in January 2014.
  • Sector: Consumer Cyclical
  • Industry: Furnishings, Fixtures & Appliances
  • Full Time Employees: 597
  • Incorporated in 2013 
  • Headquartered in New York, New York
  • http://www.casper.com
Casper Sleep opened at $14.50 after pricing IPO at $12, the low end of the $12-13 range that was expected.
CSPR finished the trading day at $13.50 after rising as high at $15.85.

Philip Krim, co-founder and CEO of mattress company, Casper, holds his son as he prepares to celebrate the companies IPO on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shortly after the opening bell in New York, U.S., February 6, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson



2nd day of trading

Philip Krim, CEO and co-founder of sleep product company Casper, right, is applauded as he rings the New York Stock Exchange opening bell, before their IPO, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2020.

Co-founders of Casper: Luke Sherwin, Gabe Flateman, CEO Philip Krim, Jeff Chapin and Neil Parikh.

Philip Krim, CEO and co-founder
  • Casper estimated that the global sleep economy was worth about $432 billion last year.
  • One potential investor who went into the company’s Thursday presentation at the St. Regis hotel in Midtown said he decided to pass on Casper after hearing executives like Chief Executive Philip Krim talk about their planned expansion to brick-and-mortar shops. “It doesn’t make sense,” the investor said on his way out. “Isn’t the whole thesis about being a disruptor?”
  • Casper lost $67 million during the first nine months of last year on $312 million in revenue, and was on track to lose more for the full year than in 2018, according to Casper’s public filing.
Casper once occupied the same strata as other “unicorns,” or startups valued above $1 billion, but is now closer to $600 million. The IPO’s reception is an effective temperature read for other Silicon Valley hopefuls like Airbnb that may also go public this year.

According to its regulatory filing, Casper is hoping to raise just under $125 million with its IPO, and hopes to capitalize on the growing emphasis on health and wellness — estimating the “global sleep economy” is worth about $432 billion. Last year, the company raised over $300 million from a list of big name investors, including actor Leonardo DiCaprio, rapper 50 Cent and retail giant Target (TGT).

Casper retail store

However, investors have laid siege to a wide range of companies with lofty visions and valuations — but no actual profits. Casper reported $312.3 million in revenue in the first nine months of last year, but lost over $67 million as it expanded its retail footprint, and spent lavishly on marketing to fend off challenges from competitors like Sleep Number (SNBR).

The long and growing list of newly-minted public companies that have tumbled sharply since their debuts include Uber (UBER), Lyft (LYFT) , Peloton (PTON) and Slack (WORK). All of those stocks crashed in their market debuts, and continued to slide afterward.

Meanwhile, the debacle of WeWork’s aborted IPO is still fresh in the minds of chastened investors.

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The mattresses range in price from $695 for a twin to $3,495 for the king size of its most advanced mattress, the hybrid wave. Casper also has 20 retail stores around the country and says it has plans for 200 more. With retail partners including Costco, Nordstrom, Target, as well as American Airlines, its mattresses, pillows, bed frames and accessories are available at more than 1,500 retail destinations nationwide. Its latest product — Glow — is what the company calls a “magical light for better sleep.”
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Casper box

The foam mattresses are made by Leggett & Platt, a Missouri-based bed-parts behemoth with $4.65 billion in revenue. Leggett also makes bed parts for several Casper competitors, including bed-in-a-box mattresses for Leesa, a privately owned mattress startup, and Serta Simmons’ Tuft & Needle, according to sources.

Leggett also makes springs for Sealy, Serta and Simmons — all of which are far bigger clients.

There are other manufacturers that make foam: Carpenter, Future Foam and Innocor Foam Technologies. Still, the relatively small pool is a sign that Casper may struggle to cut its manufacturing costs in the future.

The mattress space becomes increasingly crowded with deep-pocketed competitors like Walmart, Amazon and Ikea.

Casper lost $67 million during the first nine months of last year on $312 million in revenue, and was on track to lose more for the full year than in 2018, according to Casper’s public filing.