Slack shares surge 60% over reference price

FAN Editor

(L-R) Allen Shim, chief financial officer of Slack; and Stewart Butterfield, co-founder and chief executive officer of Slack, celebrate after ringing the opening bell the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), June 20, 2019 in New York City.

Drew Angerer | Getty Images

Slack began its first day of trading on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday after pursuing a direct listing rather than an initial public offering. The stock, under the symbol “WORK,” surged more than 60% at the start of trading after opening at $38.50. The NYSE set a reference price of $26 the night before.

The pop puts Slack’s market cap at $21 billion. As of April, Slack was valued at nearly $17 billion on the secondary market according to Forge Global, which matches private companies and their employees with investors. In its last financing round in 2018, Slack said it raised $427 million, which brought its valuation to $7.1 billion.

Slack is part of a slew of tech companies to go public this year including Uber, Lyft, Zoom, Pinterest, PagerDuty and CrowdStrike. But it is just the second large tech firm to pursue the unusual direct listing route in the past year and a half. Spotify surprised Wall Street with its decision to list directly onto the New York Stock Exchange last year.

In a direct listing, unlike an IPO, banks do not underwrite the offering, and no new shares are sold, so the company does not receive any additional money for operations. It’s simply a way for existing shareholders to get liquidity by registering their shares for sale on the public market. Plus, Slack doesn’t need to raise more money since it already has more than $800 million in cash on hand. Slack said it engaged Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Allen & Company as financial advisors and several more firms as associate financial advisors to assist it in the process.

While banks typically help determine pricing in an IPO, the NYSE set a reference price for Slack of $26 Wednesday night. The opening price for Slack’s Class A common stock “will be determined by buy and sell orders collected by the NYSE from various broker-dealers and will be set based on the DMM’s determination of where buy orders can be matched with sell orders at a single price,” according to Slack’s prospectus.

Like many tech companies, Slack debuts with a dual-class structure, with Class B shares holding 10 votes per share to consolidate voting power among its top shareholders. According to Slack’s prospectus, Accel is the company’s largest shareholder at 24%, followed by Andreessen Horowitz with a 13.3% stake and Social Capital with a 10.2% stake. Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield owns an 8.6% stake and SoftBank holds 7.3%.

Slack reported a net loss of $138.9 million on revenue of $400.55 million for the year ended Jan. 31. As of Jan. 31, Slack said it had over 10 million daily active users and saw its number of paid customers increase 49% year over year compared to its fiscal year 2018. Its paid customers paying over $100,000 based on annual recurring revenue was up 93% year over year compared with fiscal 2018, according to the prospectus.

Disclosure: Comcast Ventures, the venture arm of Comcast, is an investor in Slack. Comcast owns CNBC parent company NBCUniversal.

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