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						Silicon Valley's obscure 
						unicorns could boost 2017 IPO market 
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		 [December 30, 2016] 
		By Liana B. Baker, Heather Somerville and Lauren Hirsch 
 (Reuters) -
		 
		Social 
		media firm Snap Inc may be the highest profile tech IPO planned for 
		2017, with the potential to raise billions.
 
 But more than a dozen expected stock offerings of relatively obscure 
		software firms targeting business customers - little-known names such as 
		Apttus, Tintri and Okta - could be just as important in thawing a 
		long-frozen IPO market, according to investment bankers and advisers who 
		work on IPOs.
 
 Such firms are a "leading indicator" of broader investor demand for 
		market debuts, said Justin Smolkin, head of Americas technology equity 
		capital markets at UBS Group AG.
 
 "They tend to be viewed as cream of the crop, and where investors make 
		the most money," he said.
 
 Such enterprise software companies generally sell their services through 
		subscriptions that produce reliable revenue streams. They aim to sign 
		contracts lasting several years, giving investors more predictable 
		returns than many Internet or consumer-oriented companies that depend on 
		advertising or high volumes of individual transactions.
 
		
		 
		The firms provide a range of back-of-the-house services, such as 
		automating business processes, security, accounting, training software 
		and expense management.
 Although such companies have moderate valuations, between about $500 
		million and $4 billion, the sector accounts for most of the tech IPO 
		market, said Will Connolly, Goldman Sachs Group Inc's <GS.N> head of 
		U.S. technology equity capital markets.
 
 "Most of the technology IPO activity is actually not big, large-cap 
		companies going public," Connolly said. "It's small and midcap growth 
		companies going public that are innovators in their own markets and are 
		helping drive the next generation of technology."
 
 Reuters has identified more than a dozen U.S. enterprise software 
		companies that are making preparations for a 2017 IPO including Avalara, 
		MuleSoft, ForeScout Technologies Inc, AppDynamics and Yext.
 
 In 2016, only six software companies went public, Thomson Reuters data 
		showed.
 
 For a graphic showing software IPO trends over the past two decades, see 
		http://tmsnrt.rs/2ifhc3n
 
 Greg Becker, chief executive of Silicon Valley Bank, a lender to venture 
		capital-backed companies, predicted that between 30 to 45 venture 
		capital-backed technology companies could go public in 2017, compared to 
		15 in 2016.
 
 These companies could also be aiming to get ahead of tech giants Airbnb 
		Inc and Uber Technologies Inc, whose long-anticipated IPOs would require 
		ample investor dollars and attention.
 
 If the enterprise software firms' IPOs succeed, it could offer a boost 
		to early-stage investors who provided key funding in the hopes of 
		profiting by selling shares down the line. Only 20 technology companies 
		went public in 2016, less than any year since 2008, according to Thomson 
		Reuters data.
 
		
		 
		
 "It will be important for everyone that these deals work well in the 
		market to create positive momentum for the year," said Anthony Kontoleon, 
		global head of syndicate in the equity capital markets group of Credit 
		Suisse Group AG.
 
			
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			The Wall St. sign is seen outside the door to the New York Stock 
			Exchange in New York's financial district February 4, 2014. 
			REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			 
If 
technology IPOs don’t take off in 2017, some venture capital fund managers could 
struggle to keep their investors happy. Startups that have attracted and 
retained talented employees with the promise of a lucrative IPO could also 
suffer.
 The handful of technology companies that managed to go public near the end of 
2016 have shown strong stock performances. Twilio Inc, Coupa Software Inc, 
Nutanix Inc and Blackline Inc are now trading above their offer prices, boosting 
the confidence of their private peers that there is pent-up demand for such IPOs.
 
 The recent stock market rally and companies beginning to accept a more modest 
pricing of offerings for IPOs has more tech companies ready to test the waters. 
Many had put IPO plans on hold in 2016 because they did not want to go public at 
lower valuations than the private fundraising rounds preceding them.
 
Enterprise software companies recognize that an IPO could be a major marketing 
event that gives them clout with potential customers that are publicly traded 
companies themselves - and conduct extensive due diligence before choosing a 
software vendor. 
 "The greatest benefit of an IPO is the transparency it creates. It comes a much 
greater sense of legitimacy," said Rob Bernshteyn, chief executive of Coupa 
Software <COUP.O>, a spend management tech company that went public in October.
 
 Dheeraj Pandey, chief executive of Nutanix <NTNX.O> said he believes the 
company's IPO in 2016 won the hybrid cloud software maker new enterprise 
customers.
 
 
“Customers want to know you're going to be around for a long time,” Pandey said.
 Similar firms now looking to go public realize they have a marketing challenge 
ahead as they seek to capture investor interest before their market debuts. With 
names that trip up a spell checker and arcane business-model descriptions, they 
need to educate investors on their niche strategies and to start those efforts 
long before the typical two-week investor road shows that precede IPOs.
 
 Apttus, for example, helps salespeople give a price quote quickly when trying to 
close a complicated deal that includes different products.
 
 The company has already briefed many potential IPO investors in earlier funding 
rounds, said chief executive officer Kirk Krappe.
 
 "Those investor meetings, and our relationship with Morgan Stanley <MS.N>, have 
helped put us on the map," Krappe said.
 
 (Reporting by Liana B. Baker and Heather Somerville in San Francisco and Lauren 
Hirsch in New York; additional reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; 
editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Brian Thevenot)
 
				 
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