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

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

N-able Technologies (NABL) completes its spin-off from parent company SolarWinds (SWI)

 Open $14.95
Close $12.50



SolarWinds completes spin-off of managed service provider business into N-able 
  • SolarWinds and N-able, a provider of cloud-based software solutions for managed service providers, today announced the completion of the previously announced spin-off of the SolarWinds managed service provider ("MSP") business into a standalone, separately-traded public company named N-able.
  • Following the separation, which was completed on July 19, N-able will provide cloud-based software solutions for MSPs, enabling them to support digital transformation and growth within small and medium-sized enterprises. SolarWinds will retain its Core IT Management business focused primarily on providing IT infrastructure management software to corporate IT organizations.

Monday, April 15, 2019

IPOs this week : April 15 - 19, 19

Expected IPO pricings: 
  • A big week is on tap for IPO pricings, led by Pinterest (PINS) which has set a pricing target of $15 to $17 to bring in around $1.2B and value the company at around $9B. Pinterest saw revenue jump 60% last year to $756M and is projected to see 45% growth this year to about $1.1B. 
  • Other pricing during the week include Palomar (PLMR) and Brainsway (BWAY) on April 16 
  • as well as Zoom Video Communications (ZM), Brigham Minerals (MNRL), Turning Point Therapeutics (TPTX) and Hookipa Pharmaceuticals (HOOK) on April 17.

IPO lockup expirations: 
  • SI-Bone (NASDAQ:SIBN) on April 15; 
  • Osmotica Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:OSMT), Studio City (NYSE:MSC) and PhaseBio Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:PHAS) on April 16; 
  • LogicBio Therapeutics (NASDAQ:LOGC), Niu Technologies (NASDAQ:NIU) and SolarWinds (NYSE:SWI) on April 17.

IPO quiet period expirations: 
Analysts will start buzzing about Levi Strauss (NYSE:LEVI) on April 15. Levi's priced its IPO at $17, above the target range of $14 to $16. Shares closed at $22.22 on Friday. It doesn't appear that Levi's management is getting ahead itself after the company posted a solid Q4 and seeing the share price bounce. "We're still facing some headwinds, including anticipated door closures at traditional wholesale customers, unrest in Europe, as well as Brexit, continued uncertainty around China tariffs, and declines in U.S. retail traffic," stated CEO Chip Bergh on the earnings call.

Friday, October 19, 2018

SolarWinds (SWI) began trading on the NYSE on 19 October 2018

  • SolarWinds priced 25 mln share IPO at $15.00, the low-end of the reduced $15.00-16.00 range
  • Opened for trading at $15.30



SolarWinds Corp. CEO Kevin Thompson and employees celebrate the company's IPO during the Opening Bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., October 19, 2018.


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Any thoughts on Solarwinds going public tomorrow? Small float and high growth? Thanks a lot!

Yes sure.  First, this isn't a clean new from scratch IPO.  This was a formerly public company which got taken private.  And what I can say is that it wasn't one of my favorite cloud companies back then -- as I def. favored names like WDAY, SPLK, CYBR, DATA, NEWR, VRNS etc...  And all those names did just as well if not magnitudes better than SWI (Solarwinds) did.  There were times I had looked at SWI as it was trading at a pretty attractive valuation vs. it's growth rate.  

However, back then 2015-16ish (before it was acquired), a name like SPLK and VRNS as just a couple examples lined up much better on a Price/Growth basis.  So in short, I have to see where they price SWI and how much it pops.  As given it's growth I don't think it should garner a mega premium multiple.  Just doing some back of the napkin math... just a 20% pop off the IPO price would put this name around 7X forward REV's.  That's not super cheap for a sub 20%ish grower. 

Bottom line, at or below the 'lowered' IPO price there's definitely value.  However, if they really pop it, I'll avoid it at first and see if it sets up for a ST IPO "runner" trade.  However, on a big pop I'm more likely to trade this just like I did with SVMK -- where I avoided the early pop/hype.  Then I let it drop and drop and drop and ended it picking it up in the high $11's or almost 40% below where they traded their first day.  

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

SolarWinds' IPO Raises Hope

The successful IPO of SolarWinds, a maker of software for monitoring and repairing computer networks, offers hope to other venture-backed startups

SolarWinds (SWI) sells neither solar nor wind technology, but it landed in the spotlight and caught a puff of air when it went public on the New York Stock Exchange on May 20. The maker of software for monitoring and repairing computer networks went out at $12.50 per share, quickly rose above $14, and later closed at $13.75 in spite of declines in the broader market.


It was only the second technology company to go public this year and offered hope to other venture-backed startups hoping to sell shares publicly. "It's exciting to be a company that maybe helps break the logjam and creates excitement in new issues coming back," Chief Executive Mike Bennett said in an interview. Rosetta Stone (RST), a maker of computer disk-based language instruction products, went public on Apr. 16. After climbing initially, it is now trading just below its initial public offering price of $25. Another tech company, OpenTable, which provides online reservations for restaurants, is expected to go public on May 21. "This is great. I just hope it unleashes a more substantial flow rather than a trickle," says Tasso Roumeliotis, CEO of startup WaveMarket, a mobile-phone software company that hopes to go public in the next couple of years.

If this is a turning point, it could help revitalize a stagnant venture capital industry. There were only six venture-backed IPOs last year, a drop from 86 in 2007 and 56 in 2006, according to the National Venture Capital Assn. In the face of a brutal economic environment, venture capital firms have been pressuring their portfolio companies to cut costs and have been investing less in startups. VCs invested just $3 billion in 549 deals in the first quarter of this year, a 47% decline from a year earlier.

NOT SCARED BY THE ECONOMY
Yet SolarWind may be better poised than other companies to withstand the harsh market conditions. The 10-year-old company makes software tools for use by network engineers and administrators. Its products can be installed quickly, and the lower-end products cost just $2,000. That helps explain why the company remains profitable in spite of the recession. SolarWind logged net income of $22 million on revenue of $93 million last year. In the first quarter, the company's sales rose a healthy 18%, to $24 million. "The IT world is focused on efficiency and optimization these days, and SolarWinds plays into that story. What they do is help out with cost avoidance," says analyst Abner Germanow of market researcher IDC.

The company was started in Tulsa, Okla., and co-founders Donald Yonce and David Yonce chose SolarWinds as the name because of their affection for outer space lore. A solar wind is material ejected at a very high velocity from the Sun. After investment firms Bain Capital Ventures and Insight Venture Partners bought controlling interest in the company three years ago, it was moved to Austin, Tex., for greater access to talent. That's also when veteran executive Bennett was brought in to run it.

Bennett said he expected the IPO would raise approximately $150 million for the company and investors. "The current economic conditions don't scare me," he says. "We have lived through the worst part, we hope, and have a solid sense of the impact on our potential customers." Sales volumes dipped late last year and early this year, but have picked up recently, he said.

SolarWinds has a low-cost business model. It has no field salesforce but instead sells products directly to networking professionals via its corporate Web site. It also has an online community, www.thwack.com, where techies help each other solve networking problems and provide SolarWinds with feedback. So far, the company has more than 80,000 customers, ranging from small businesses to giant corporations.