• chevron_right

      Reddit faces new reality after cashing in on its IPO

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 23 March - 10:10

    Steve Huffman

    Enlarge / Steve Huffman, u/spez on Reddit, sold 500,000 of his shares in Reddit’s IPO on Thursday (credit: AFP via Getty Images)

    In an interview on the New York Stock Exchange trading floor ahead of Reddit’s market debut on Thursday, chief executive Steve Huffman acknowledged that the mischievous retail investors that congregate on the social media platform might deliberately drive down its share price.

    “It’s a free market!” he said.

    For Reddit, as for Huffman, the bet on a public offering for a site he described as a “fun and special, but sometimes crazy place” has appeared to pay off.

    Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • chevron_right

      Reddit admits more moderator protests could hurt its business

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 23 February - 17:42

    Reddit logo on website displayed on a laptop screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on February 22, 2024.

    Enlarge (credit: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images )

    Reddit filed to go public on Thursday ( PDF ), revealing various details of the social media company's inner workings. Among the revelations, Reddit acknowledged the threat of future user protests and the value of third-party Reddit apps.

    On July 1, Reddit enacted API rule changes—including new, expensive pricing —that resulted in many third-party Reddit apps closing . Disturbed by the changes, the timeline of the changes, and concerns that Reddit wasn’t properly appreciating third-party app developers and moderators, thousands of Reddit users protested by making the subreddits they moderate private, read-only, and/or engaging in other forms of protest, such as only discussing John Oliver or porn .

    Protests went on for weeks and, at their onset, crashed Reddit for three hours . At the time, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman said the protests did not have “any significant revenue impact so far.”

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • chevron_right

      Report: 75K loyal Redditors can snag shares before Reddit goes public

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 21 February - 18:14

    Report: 75K loyal Redditors can snag shares before Reddit goes public

    Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket )

    Thousands of the most dedicated Reddit users will have a chance to snag shares when the company goes public in 2024, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

    Citing people familiar with the matter, The Journal reported that 75,000 of the "most prolific" Redditors will have an opportunity to buy "an as-yet-undetermined number of shares" before trading starts.

    This privilege, WSJ noted, is "normally" reserved for "big investors" who can stand to hugely profit if the share prices dramatically rise after Reddit begins listing shares on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), which is expected to happen this March.

    Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • chevron_right

      Raspberry Pi is preparing for an IPO in London for likely more than $500M

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 30 January - 17:40

    Raspberry Pi 5 with Active Cooler installed on a wood desktop

    Enlarge / Is it not a strange fate that we should suffer so much fear and doubt for so small a thing? So small a thing! (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    The business arm of Raspberry Pi is preparing to make an initial public offering (IPO) in London, bringing new capital into the company and likely changing the nature of the privately held, charity-controlled company.

    CEO Eben Upton confirmed in an interview with Bloomberg News that Raspberry Pi had appointed bankers at London firms Peel Hunt and Jefferies to prepare for "when the IPO market reopens."

    Raspberry previously raised money from Sony and semiconductor and software design firm ARM, and it sought public investment. Upton denied or didn't quite deny IPO rumors in 2021, and Bloomberg reported Raspberry Pi was considering an IPO in early 2022 . After ARM took a minority stake in the company in November 2023, Raspberry Pi was valued at roughly 400 million pounds, or just over $500 million.

    Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • chevron_right

      Qualcomm wants to buy a stake in Arm alongside its rivals

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 31 May, 2022 - 14:45

    Extreme close-up promotional image of computer component.

    Enlarge (credit: Arm )

    The US chipmaker Qualcomm wants to buy a stake in Arm alongside its rivals and create a consortium that would maintain the UK chip designer’s neutrality in the highly competitive semiconductor market.

    Japanese conglomerate SoftBank plans to list Arm on the New York Stock Exchange after Nvidia’s $66 billion purchase collapsed earlier this year. However, the IPO has sparked concern over the future ownership of the company, given its crucial role in the global technology sector.

    “We’re an interested party in investing,” Cristiano Amon, Qualcomm’s chief executive, told the Financial Times. “It’s a very important asset and it’s an asset which is going to be essential to the development of our industry.”

    Read 16 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • Te chevron_right

      CrowdStrike’s CEO on how to IPO, direct listings and what’s ahead for SaaS startups

      news.movim.eu / TechCrunch · Sunday, 5 January, 2020 - 19:53 · 4 minutes

    A few days before Christmas, TechCrunch caught up with CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz to chat about his company’s public offering , direct listings and his expectations for the 2020 IPO market. We also spoke about CrowdStrike’s product niche — endpoint security — and a bit more on why he views his company as the Salesforce of security .

    The conversation is timely. Of the 2019 IPO cohort, CrowdStrike’s IPO stands out as one of the year’s most successful debuts. As 2020’s IPO cycle is expected to be both busy and inclusive of some of the private market’s biggest names, Kurtz’s views are useful to understand. After all, his SaaS security company enjoyed a strong pricing cycle , a better-than-expected IPO fundraising haul and strong value appreciation after its debut.

    Notably, CrowdStrike didn’t opt to pursue a direct listing; after chatting with the CEO of recent IPO Bill.com concerning why his SaaS company also decided on a traditional flotation, we wanted to hear from Kurtz as well. The security CEO called the current conversation around direct listings a “great debate,” before explaining his perspective.

    Pulling from a longer conversation, what follows are Kurtz’s four tips for companies gearing up for a public offering, why his company elected chose a traditional public offering over a more exotic method, comments on endpoint security and where CrowdStrike fits inside its market, and, finally, quick notes on upcoming debuts.

    The following interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

    How to go public successfully

    Share often

    What’s most important is the fact that when we IPO’d in June of 2019, we started the process three years earlier. And that is the number one thing that I can point to. When [CrowdStrike CFO Burt Podbere] and I went on the road show everybody knew us, all the buy side investors we had met with for three years, the sell side analysts knew us. The biggest thing that I would say is you can’t go on a road show and have someone not know your company, or not know you, or your CFO.

    And we would share — as a private company, you share less — but we would share tidbits of information. And we built a level of consistency over time, where we would share something, and then they would see it come true. And we would share something else, and they would see it come true. And we did that over three years. So we built, I believe, trust with the street, in anticipation of, at some point in the future, an IPO.

    Practice early

    W e spent a lot of time running the company as if it was public, even when we were private. We had our own earnings call as a private company. We would write it up and we would script it.

    You’ve seen other companies out there, if they don’t get their house in order it’s very hard to go [public]. And we believe we had our house in order. We ran it that way [which] allowed us to think and operate like a public company, which you want to get out of the way before you come become public. If there’s a takeaway here for folks that are thinking about [going public], run it and act like a public company before you’re public, including simulated earnings calls. And once you become public, you already have that muscle memory.

    Raw numbers matter

    The third piece is [that] you [have to] look at the numbers. We are in rarified air. At the time of IPO we were the fastest growing SaaS company to IPO ever at scale. So we had the numbers, we had the growth rate, but it really was a combination of preparation beforehand, operating like a public company, […] and then we had the numbers to back it up.

    TAM is key, even at scale

    One last point, we had the [total addressable market, or TAM] as well. We have the TAM as part of our story; security and where we play is a massive opportunity. So we had that market opportunity as well.


    On this topic, Kurtz told TechCrunch two interesting things earlier in the conversation. First that what many people consider as “endpoint security” is too constrained, that the category includes “traditional endpoints plus things like mobile, plus things like containers, IoT devices, serverless, ephemeral cloud instances, [and] on and on.” The more things that fit under the umbrella of endpoint security, CrowdStrike’s focus, the bigger its market is.

    Kurtz also discussed how the cloud migration — something that builds TAM for his company’s business — is still in “the early innings,” going on to say that in time “you’re going to start to see more critical workloads migrate to the cloud.” That should generate even more TAM for CrowdStrike and its competitors, like Carbon Black and Tanium .


    Why CrowdStrike opted for a traditional IPO instead of a direct listing