4 Hot IPOs That, Once Public, Have Disappointed Investors

 | Jan 30, 2019 06:58AM ET

The environment for Initial public offerings (IPOs) was robust last year. According to a recent report from Renaissance Capital , 190 companies—almost 20% more than 2017 and the most since 2014—went public in 2018.

Some 81% of those companies priced in or above their indicated range—the most in over a decade. But as the broader market slipped as the year wound down, the luster of these new stocks dimmed. In the aggregate, the 2018 class of initial public offerings returned -2.3%, versus the five-year average return of 20%.

Indeed, younger companies have been hit the hardest as investors question how well they'll be able to hold up if the economy slows and some businesses are forced to deal with a downturn for the first time in their history.

Below, in no particular order, are four of the most recent high-profile IPOs. Each has failed to live up to expectations since going public.

h2 1. Blue Apron/h2

Meal-kit service Blue Apron Holdings (NYSE:APRN) has had a rough time since it went public during June 2017. The stock has dropped by a whopping 84%, as the company struggled to keep its subscriber numbers up in a crowded field of meal kit options that includes offerings from Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Chef'd, which is owned by privately held True Food Innovations.

The company's stock, which closed yesterday at $1.50, currently has a market cap of $290 million and had recently been trading below $1. At one point in late December, shares fell to as low as 65 cents.

Since that nadir the stock has more than doubled, thanks to a 45% surge on January 15 after the company affirmed guidance for its most recent fiscal quarter. It also said that it plans to reaffirm its confidence regarding being profitable during both the first quarter of 2019 and the full fiscal year.