Founded in 2005 and backed by investors such as Sequoia Capital,
Atomico, Visa and Permira, Klarna has fueled expectations in
financial markets that it could go public since it doubled down
on growth last year after securing a Swedish banking license and
announcing plans to expand into new countries in 2019.
"We have not taken a formal decision of listing, but Klarna is
approaching a situation where I think we are more ready to list
the company," CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski told Reuters in a
recent interview.
"If, I, a couple of years ago thought that it was too early and
had fewer advantages than disadvantages, my picture now is that
the company is in another maturity phase and I see that there
may be advantages for us to be able to pursue the strategy we
want."
Payments firms have been involved in some of the biggest global
deals recently, including Fidelity National Information
Services's $35 billion purchase of Worldpay, while Italy's Nexi
is due to list in what will be Europe's biggest IPO so far this
year.
Klarna, valued at more than $2 billion when fashion chain H&M
bought a stake last year, grew revenues by 31 percent to 5.45
billion crowns ($588 million) in 2018, while operating profit
fell to 161 million crowns from 524 million.
Siemiatkowski declined to speculate on the timing of a possible
float, but said there were no immediate plans and that 2019 was
probably too soon.
Shares in Dutch payments processor Adyen have almost tripled
from their IPO price of 240 euros ($270) last year.
Siemiatkowski said that as well as growing market interest in
payments companies, there were practical reasons for a listing.
"There are increasing administrative costs for not being listed
and still having so many owners and being such a big company as
we are," he said. A listing would also provide marketing
benefits, he added.
Klarna has 2,500 employees and is one of Europe's so-called tech
unicorns - a start-up with a valuation of more than $1 billion.
Last month it said it planned a larger external fundraising
round later this year.
Having just closed its latest funding round of 1 billion crowns
to support expansion, the company plans to expand from 14
markets currently - Germany and Sweden are its biggest - though
not to China.
"People refer to the U.S market as extremely competitive but in
my world it cannot compare to the Chinese one. There is much
more to do in markets that are not as competitive,"
Siemiatkowski said.
($1 = 9.2663 Swedish crowns)
(Reporting by Helena Soderpalm; editing by Niklas Pollard and
Susan Fenton)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|