"I don't think it encourages anybody to hop on the bandwagon and go
public," said Robert Thomas, CEO of San Francisco-based security
startup CloudPassage.
SecureWorks priced below its indicated range and opened the day even
lower; it also cut the number of shares it was offering from 9
million to 8 million. The shares closed Friday at $14, slightly up
from their opening price of $13.89.
In the first U.S. technology IPO this year, ending the longest
drought in seven years, many investors and cyber security
entrepreneurs hoped SecureWorks would reinvigorate the market and
instill confidence in cyber firms.
Stock market volatility last year and early this year may have
scared off some listings. Cyber security companies that have put IPO
plans on hold include Carbon Black, Veracode, Blue Coat and Zscaler,
according to venture capitalists.
The recipient of billions of dollars of venture capital, both
private and public cyber security companies have come under
heightened scrutiny. Share of cyber firm FireEye, Barracuda
Networks, and Rapid7, the most recent high-profile cyber security
IPO, are all down by at least half.
"It's pretty tough sledding out there," said Matthew Prince, CEO of
CloudFlare, who has rejected weekly solicitations from investment
bankers encouraging him to take his company public.
By this time last year, six technology companies had priced IPOs,
raising a total of $1.6 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data.
In the first half of 2014, 23 technology IPOs had raised $3.7
billion, according to market intelligence firm Ipreo.
Demand for SecureWorks shares was hurt by factors unique to the
company - growing losses and an "overhang" of unsold shares from its
parent Dell, which is not publicly traded.
SecureWorks' operating loss nearly doubled to $72.4 million in
fiscal 2015 as revenue climbed 30 percent $339.5 million,
SecureWorks said in a U.S. regulatory filing.
Investors have an appetite for cyber security IPOs but are looking
to buy into companies that are more profitable than SecureWorks,
said Enrique Salem, managing director of Bain Capital Ventures.
[to top of second column] |
SecureWorks President and CEO Mike Cote said the mounting losses are
the result of investing heavily over the last two years, and the
company would begin to see gains from that spending this year.
Hope for a popping SecureWorks IPO dimmed late Thursday, when the
company priced shares at $14, below their indicated range of
$15.50-$17.50.
"It's a busted IPO," said Tim Ghriskey, who helps manage $1.5
billion as chief investment officer with Solaris Asset Management.
At its closing share price, SecureWorks was valued at more than $1
billion, a bit more than half the valuation it eyed when it filed
for an IPO in December, but still well above what Dell paid for the
company in 2011.
Still, "this doesn't mean that there won’t be more tech IPOs, or
they will all be weak, " Ghriskey said.
Indeed, SecureWorks has little in common with other tech IPO
contenders. The company is not backed by venture capitalists; it is
based in Atlanta, rather than Silicon Valley; and it was founded
nearly two decades ago.
Also, the IPO was to some extent forced by Dell's expensive merger
with EMC. Dell, however, won't have access to the proceeds from the
IPO.
"SecureWorks was an anomaly with the pricing and with the timing and
why they went out when they did," said Sean Cunningham, managing
director of Trident Capital Cybersecurity.
(Reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston, Heather Somerville in San
Francisco and Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza
and Nick Zieminski)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|