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

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Surf Air Mobility (SRFM) began trading on the NYSE on Thur 27 Jul 23

  • This was a direct listing on the NYSE.  Unlike an initial public offering, in a direct listing shares are not sold in advance. Shareholders are allowed to sell shares directly to the public and net any proceeds from the sale.
  • Shares debuted on the New York Stock Exchange at $5 per share below its reference price of $20.
  • Aug 19, 2024: reverse split of 1-for-7
  • Oct 3, 2024: Palantir has recently invested nearly $1.6 million in Surf Air Mobility   
Sector(s): Industrials
Industry: Airlines
Full Time Employees: 786

Surf Air Mobility is a Los Angeles-based regional air mobility platform expanding the category of regional air travel to transform flying through the power of electrification. In an effort to substantially reduce the cost and environmental impact of flying and as the owner of the largest commuter airline in the U.S., Surf Air Mobility intends to develop powertrain technology with its commercial partners to electrify existing fleets and bring electrified aircraft to market at scale. 

 
 



Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Roblox (RBLX) to go public through a direct listing around March 10

Roblox, which had delayed its initial public offering, has set a date for a direct listing of its shares.

The videogame company is now going public “on or about March 10,” according to an amended prospectus filed on Monday. Roblox is seeking to sell 198,917,280 shares, but has not specified a price. In January, the company sold nearly 12 million shares of convertible preferred stock in a private placement at $45 a share. Renaissance Capital said that a listing at that price would value the company at more than $29 billion. Roblox said in the prospectus that the opening price of the roughly 199 million shares would be “determined by buy and sell orders collected by the NYSE from broker-dealers.”

Roblox will be the fifth company to go public using a direct listing. Palantir Technologies (PLTR), Asana (ASAN), Slack Technologies (WORK), and Spotify Technology (SPOT) all used a direct listing when they made their public equity markets debuts.

Roblox will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker RBLX. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America are acting as financial advisers on the deal. 

Founded in 2004, Roblox hosts child-friendly games focused on digital characters resembling Lego blocks. An average of 37.1 million people come to Roblox daily to play games.

The company is not profitable. Losses widened to $253.3 million for the year ended Dec. 31, compared with $71 million in losses for the same period in 2019. Revenue rose nearly 82%, to $923.9 million, for the Dec. 31 period. It has 960 full-time employees. David Baszucki, Roblox co-founder, president and CEO, has 70.1% total voting power, the prospectus said. 

Roblox’s path to a direct listing wasn’t straightforward. In November, the company initially filed to go public using a traditional initial public offering. Then, in December, it delayed the offering after the strong debuts of Airbnb (ABNB) and DoorDash (DASH) made it too difficult to determine the right price for shares.

Roblox in January changed its mind about a traditional IPO, choosing to go public through a direct listing.

Roblox’s switch came after the Securities and Exchange Commission approved a rule change from the New York Stock Exchange that allowed direct floor listings in December. Companies that use direct floor listings can now sell new shares and raise fresh capital in a single large transaction directly on the exchange without underwriters. 

Direct listings aim to level the playing field for investors. The pricing is set by the orders received by the exchange. For example, a designated market maker will determine Roblox’s opening public price based on buy and sell orders the NYSE collects from broker-dealers. The market maker will decide Roblox’s opening price in consultation with its financial advisers, Goldman, Morgan, and BofA.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

SEC approves NYSE proposal allowing for direct listings

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved a proposed rule change that allows the direct listing offering.

  • Intercontinental Exchange's (ICE) New York Stock Exchange will be allowed to offer issuers the ability to raise primary capital through direct listings, said NYSE President Stacey Cunningham.
  • Direct listings offer an alternative to initial public offerings for taking a company public. A direct listing sells existing shares, rather than issuing new shares, as is done in an IPO. It also bypasses underwriters in the process of selling the shares, thereby reducing the cost of the offering.
  • Companies will not lose gains if their stock pops.
  • Since new shares aren't sold through direct listings, companies can't raise capital through them. Rather companies that use direct listings may be seeking other benefits of being a publicly traded company, such as increasing liquidity for existing shareholders.
  • Recent direct listings include Palantir and Asana, which went public in September. 
  • The change, following months of industry haggling, will help reduce what critics call excessive underwriter fees, a major barrier to companies looking to go public. It is especially important to technology companies and start-ups, both of which would stand to gain greatly from the new SEC ruling.
NYSE President Stacey Cunningham on CNBC, Dec 22, 2020

  • “This is a game changer for our capital markets, leveling the playing field for everyday investors and providing companies with another path to go public at a moment when they are seeking just this type of innovation,” NYSE President Stacey Cunningham said in a statement.
  • In 2018, music streaming business Spotify Technology SA was the first major company to go public via that route. Direct listings had also been limited to companies wanting to give early investors or management the opportunity to cash out by selling stock.
  • Peter Thiel-backed Palantir Technologies and Asana are some of the high-profile, cash-rich private start-ups to choose the direct listing route this year.
  • Under the NYSE plan, issuers can sell shares directly on the exchange in an auction, which would increase opportunities for more investors to purchase shares at the initial offering price, rather than having to wait to buy in the aftermarket.
  • NYSE rival Nasdaq Inc has a filed a similar direct listing proposal with the SEC.

Monday, September 28, 2020

IPOs this week : Sept. 28 - Oct. 2, 20 (wk 40)

IPOs expected to price

  • The big debut of the week is Palantir Technologies (PLTR), which is expected to start trading in a direct listing on the NYSE on September 30. Bankers think the software/data analytics company could start off in the $10 range, which would give it a lush market cap of just under $22B. The Denver-based company lost $580M in 2019. 
  • Academy Sports and Outdoors (ASO), 
  • Asana (ASAN),  (direct listing?)
  • Boqii Holding (BQ), 
  • Chindata Group Holdings (CD),  (data centers?)
  • Immunome (IMNM), 
  • WiMi Hologram Cloud (NASDAQ:WIMI), 
  • Mission Produce (AVO), 
  • Pulmonx (LUNG) and 
  • Yalla Group (YALA
IPO quiet period expirations
  • PainReform (NASDAQ:PRFX) on September 29.

Sunday, August 23, 2020

The IPO is being reinvented

(source: The Economist; Aug 22, 2020)

Over the past two decades fewer firms in America have listed on the stockmarket, opting instead to stay in the shadows for longer. Entrepreneurs and venture capitalists (vcs) make two complaints. First, initial public offerings (ipos) are a rip-off. Second, the degree of outside scrutiny firms face can be uncomfortable. Now a new wave of tech firms are expected to go public, including Airbnb, a home-rental firm, and Palantir, which does data analytics (see article). Some plan to use one of two alternative techniques for floating: direct listings and blank-cheque companies. This disruption to the conventional ipo market is risky but welcome. However, in the long run these newcomers won’t be able to escape ruthless outside scrutiny of their business models.

The decline of ipos is striking. On average in the 25 years to 2000, 282 firms staged one each year, but since 2001 the figure has fallen to 115. This has made the economy more opaque and prevented ordinary people from investing in young firms. The underlying cause is a shift in the balance of power towards companies. Tech startups tend to be asset-light and need less capital, while the vc industry has grown and can fund firms for longer. Startups can thus delay going public. Amazon floated in 1997 when it was three years old, but the typical firm listing now is 11. There is a backlog of 225 unicorns—private startups worth over $1bn—which are supposedly worth a total of $660bn.

If firms are not acquired, they need to go public eventually. Staff want to sell their shares. Their vc backers are sitting on bloated portfolios and need to return cash to their investors. The push to clear this backlog began in 2019 and is gaining steam again. As well as Airbnb and Palantir, many other flotations are planned. In China stars such as Ant, a fintech giant, are listing, too. The pandemic has led to more buzz about the digital economy—Walmart has just reported soaring e-commerce sales. Central-bank stimulus has ginned up markets. And in America there is excitement about alternatives to ipos.

In an ipo Wall Street banks act as middlemen between the firm and investors, negotiating a price. It’s a gruelling and expensive ordeal. Investors and regulators grill managers for months. Banks charge fees of 4-7% of the proceeds and sometimes sell firms’ shares too cheaply in order to please their clients at investment funds, who get a quick profit, or “pop”, on the first day of trading. Companies have thrown away $43bn of value in this way in the past decade, reckons Michael Mauboussin of Morgan Stanley. According to Bill Gurley, a vc investor, “that pop you hear is money going out of your pocket.”

One alternative to an ipo is a direct listing. Instead of a banker, a stock exchange sets the initial price, automatically balancing supply and demand just before the shares start trading. Last year Slack, a software firm, listed this way, and Palantir could follow. Another method involves blank-cheque companies known as “special-purpose acquisition companies”, or spacs: listed shell companies that acquire private firms, instantly bypassing the ipo process. Virgin Galactic, a space firm, took this route in 2019. Both approaches have drawbacks. In a direct listing, the law says you cannot raise fresh capital, and without underwriters the share price can be volatile. Blank-cheque firms, meanwhile, have a patchy history, with sponsors often awarding themselves piles of shares, although one newcomer, a $5bn-7bn vehicle backed by Bill Ackman, an investor, says it will keep costs low.

These experiments put pressure on banks and regulators to improve the ipo process. The twist is that they are made possible by frothy markets (see Buttonwood). Some firms that have floated look overvalued—take Nikola, an electric-lorry firm, which has no material revenues but is valued at $16bn after a blank-cheque listing. Entrepreneurs and vcs love getting an easy ride, but they should be under no illusion: over time, the stockmarket hammers weak firms. Shares of Uber and Lyft, ride-hailing firms that floated in 2019, languish 35% and 61% below their listing price. WeWork, an office-rental firm, abandoned its listing last year after being exposed as a dud. By the end of the great flotation boom of 2020, the hope is that America will have established ways to make it easier for firms to go public. But make no mistake, some of the pioneer companies will be flops.■

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Spotify (SPOT) began trading on the NYSE on Tue 3 Apr 18

Spotify went public on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) via a direct listing rather than an IPO. This means the company listed and offered shares without any underwriting from the banks. In doing so, Spotify pioneered the direct listing.
  • Opened at $165.90 per share, or approximately 25.7% higher than the reference price of $132.00
  • Ticker: SPOT