Amplitude valued at $5 billion after shares jump in Nasdaq debut

Reuters

Published Sep 28, 2021 06:15PM ET

Updated Sep 28, 2021 10:20PM ET

(Corrects to 'Benchmark-backed' from 'benchmark-backed' in first paragraph)

By Krystal Hu and Echo Wang

(Reuters) -Shares of Amplitude Inc opened nearly 43% above their reference price in their Nasdaq debut on Tuesday, notching up a valuation of about $5 billion for the Benchmark-backed analytics company.

San Francisco-based Amplitude, which confidentially filed for a direct listing in July, was valued at $4 billion after raising $150 million from Sequoia Capital and Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC in June.

Stock of the company opened at $50 per share, up from the reference price of $35 per share.

Amplitude provides data analytics tools that enable companies to optimize their products. Its customers include NBCUniversal, PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) Holdings Ltd, Peloton Interactive (NASDAQ:PTON) Inc and Instacart.

It has benefited from the accelerated digital transformation during the pandemic, as companies seek to optimize customer experience online by using analytical tools.

It reported $72 million in revenue for the first half of the year, a 56% jump year over year, compared with a loss of $16.5 million.

The seven-year-old company chose to go public through a direct listing, an alternative to an initial public offering that has gain traction among companies after Spotify Technology SA (NYSE:SPOT) pioneered it in 2018.

In a direct listing, companies are allowed to list on the stock market without selling shares. They set a reference price but no shares are sold in advance at that price, unlike in an IPO where shares are sold to institutional investors at a set price.

"Traditional IPOs severely under-price companies," said Spenser Skates, Amplitude Co-founder and CEO, who has been a proponent of direct listing. "There's a great window for companies to go out this year. This is about as fast as we could do it."

Investors see Amplitude's strong debut as a catalyst for other tech companies who are exploring ways to go public.