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

Monday, January 27, 2020

IPOs this week : Jan 27 - 31, 20 (wk 5)

IPOs expected to price
  • Annovis Bio (ANVS) is expected to price its IPO on January 28, 
  • Black Diamond Therapeutics (BDTX) and Avadim Health (AHI) on January 29. 
  • The biggest pricing of the week will be the $1.5B Reynolds Consumer Products (REYN) IPO on January 30. The household products seller generated net income of $135M off revenue of $2.2B for the first nine months of 2019. 
  • 1Life Healthcare (ONEM) and Arcutis Biotherapeutics (ARQT) are also due to price their IPOs on January 30. 
IPO lockup expirations
  • Borr Drilling (NYSE:BORR) on January 27, as well as 
  • Dynatrace (NYSE:DT), Kura Sushi USA (NASDAQ:KRUS), Sundial Growers (NASDAQ:SNDL) on January 28 and 
  • BioCardia (OTCQB:BCDA) on January 29.

Monday, August 26, 2019

IPOs this week : Aug 26 - 30, 19 (wk 35)

IPOs expected to price
No pricings are scheduled during the week as things stay relatively quiet in the IPO market.

IPO lockup expirations

  • IPO lockup periods expire on Super League Gaming (NASDAQ:SLGG) on August 26 and 
  • Kaleido Biosciences (NASDAQ:KLDO) on August 27. 
IPO quiet period expirations
  • IPO quiet period expirations arrive on Dynatrace (NYSE:DT), Borr Drilling (NYSE:BORR), Kura Sushi (NASDAQ:KRUS) and Sundial Growers (NASDAQ:SNDL) on August 26. 
There could also be confirmation from Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) that it will postpone plans to list its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The offering was expected to raise $10B to $15B.

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Kura Sushi USA (KRUS) began trading on the Nasdaq on Thur 1 Aug 2019

Kura Sushi, a  chain of 22 revolving sushi restaurants, sold 2.9 million shares of stock at $14 a share.
The  raised $41 million in the IPO.
Ticker: KRUS
  • That was the lower end of its expected range of $14 to $16, but there was plenty of interest on Thursday after trading began as shares soared past $19.
  • Kura Sushi opened for trading at $14.89. The first trade was 6.4% above the somewhat disappointing pricing of its initial public offering, before extending gains.  
  • It was the first IPO in the restaurant industry in four years, and the smallest concept to go public in a traditional offering in far longer. Kura Sushi USA, a subsidiary of 400-unit Kura Japan, generated just $4.5 million in adjusted EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. 



“We’re pretty happy” with the IPO, CEO Hajime “Jimmy” Uba said in an interview. He said the company plans to use the proceeds from the offering to help it expand. Kura Sushi believes it has the ability to grow to nearly 300 restaurants in the U.S.


Kura is one of the most unique companies to go public in a long time. The company is highly tech-dependent. In addition to the conveyor belts that deliver sushi to tables, allowing customers to take what they want, it uses touch screens that enable customers to make specific orders that are express-delivered.

In the back, the restaurants use robots to make the sushi. Kura also uses RFID readers and food replenishment algorithms to reduce labor and food costs.

That shields the company somewhat from growing labor costs that are proving to be a risk for many publicly traded chains at the moment.

 “We use a lot of technology to drive efficiencies in operations and costs,” Uba said. Through a translator, he added, “We believe that technology and automation to drive efficiencies are already part of other restaurants and will only continue to grow.”

Average unit volumes are about $3.5 million, and same-store sales have risen in 10 of the past 11 quarters.

The company’s menu features 140 dishes, most of which are priced below $3, even though average check was more than $19. The low price points of individual menu items make price increases seem like less of a problem while also giving customers more control over how much they spend.

The IPO is giving Kura Sushi more attention for its attributes, which the company believes will help it as it looks to grow. “That’s what we expected,” Uba said. BMO Capital Markets and Stephens were the joint bookrunners for the IPO.

The success of the offering, despite its relatively small size, will likely raise eyebrows in an industry that has been devoid of traditional IPOs since Wingstop and Fogo de Chao both went public in 2015.

Many of the chains that went public from 2013 to 2015 have struggled, notably Noodles & Co. and Potbelly, while some have gone private, including Papa Murphy’s, Bojangles’, Zoes Kitchen, Fogo de Chao and, soon, Del Frisco’s Restaurant Group.

That has scared many bankers and investors off of such offerings. What’s more, bankers typically don’t take public companies looking to raise a small amount like the $40 million Kura raised.

That it was able to orchestrate an IPO, and then get a welcome reception from investors, could well reopen the market for small chain offerings.

Saturday, July 27, 2019

IPOs this week : July 29 - Aug 2, 19 (wk 31)

IPOs expected to price
  • Fuqin Fintech (FQJR) on July 29 as well as 
  • Dynatrace (DT), Kura Sushi USA (KRUS), Rapt Therapeutics (RAPT) and Sundial Growers (SNDL) on August 1. 
IPO lockup expirations
  • New Fortress (NASDAQ:NFE) on July 30. 


A significant event for the IPO market will be Beyond Meat's (BYND) earnings report on July 29. Analysts will be watching revenue and EBITDA (break even?) guidance from the company to see what the expected impact is from the growing number of selling partnerships in place. Following the sputtering debuts this year of Uber (NYSE:UBER) and Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT), Beyond Meat has helped to focus some investor attention back to the IPO market. Still, there is the question if the next-gen meat deserves its lofty valuation, which now stands higher than the market caps of Post Holdings (NYSE:POST), Campbell Soup (NYSE:CPB), Lamb Weston (NYSE:LW) and J.M. Smucker (NYSE:SJM) to name a few well-known food sector stalwarts.