Dropbox Is Getting Ready for the Biggest Tech IPO Since Snapchat
Data-sharing
business Dropbox Inc is seeking to hire underwriters for an initial
public offering that could come later this year, which would make it the
biggest U.S. technology company to go public since Snap Inc, people
familiar with the matter said on Friday.
The
IPO will be a key test of Dropbox 's worth after it was valued at
almost $10 billion in a private fundraising round in 2014.
Dropbox
will begin interviewing investment banks in the coming weeks, the
sources said, asking not to be named because the deliberations are
private.
Dropbox declined to comment.
Several
big U.S. technology companies such as Uber Technologies Inc and Airbnb
Inc have resisted going public in recent months, concerned that stock
market investors, who focus more on profitability than do private
investors, would assign lower valuations to them.
Snap,
owner of the popular messaging app Snapchat, was forced to lower its
IPO valuation expectations earlier this year amid investor concern over
its unproven business model. Its shares have since lingered just above
the IPO price, with investors troubled by widening losses and missed
analyst estimates. It has a market capitalization of $21 billion.
Still, for many private companies, there is increasing pressure to go pubic as investors look to cash out.
Proceeds
from technology IPOs slumped to $6.7 billion in 2015 from $34 billion
in 2014, and shrunk further to $2.9 billion in 2016, according to
Thomson Reuters data.
Dropbox
's main competitor, Box Inc, was valued at roughly $1.67 billion in its
IPO in 2015, less than the $2.4 billion it had been valued at in
previous private fundraising rounds.
San
Francisco-based Dropbox , which was founded in 2007 by Massachusetts
Institute of Technology graduates Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi,
counts Sequoia Capital, T. Rowe Price and Greylock Partners as
investors.
Dropbox
started as a free service for consumers to share and store photos,
music and other large files. That business became commoditized though,
as
Alphabet Inc's Google,
Microsoft Corp and
Amazon.com Inc started offering storage for free.
Dropbox
has since pivoted to focus on winning business clients, and Houston,
the company's CEO, has said that Dropbox is on track to generate more
than $1 billion in revenue this year.
The
company has expanded its Dropbox Business that requires companies to
pay a fee based on the number of employees who use it. The service in
January began offering Smart Sync, which allows users to see and access
all of their files, whether stored in the cloud or on a local hard
drive, from their desktop.
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