SolarWinds shares rise 3.2 percent in downsized market debut

Reuters

Published Oct 19, 2018 11:35AM ET

Updated Oct 19, 2018 12:00PM ET

SolarWinds shares rise 3.2 percent in downsized market debut

(Reuters) - SolarWinds Corp's shares (N:SWI) rose as much as 3.2 percent in their downsized U.S. market debut on Friday, giving the enterprise software maker a market value of about $4.80 billion.

The company's shares opened at $15.41, about 2.7 percent above its initial public offering price of $15.

The Austin, Texas-based company had initially filed to sell 42 million shares and expected the offering to be priced between $17 and $19 apiece.

The company cut the IPO size after stockholders, who were initially selling 25 million shares, chose not to sell any shares. SolarWinds increased its offering size by 8 million shares and cut the target price range to between $15 and $16 per share.

It finally sold 25 million shares at $15 apiece on Thursday, at the low end of its target price range, raising $375 million in total proceeds, which it expects to use to pay down debt. (https://

SolarWinds, whose clients include Accenture (N:ACN), oil giant Chevron (N:CVX), defense contractor Lockheed Martin (N:LMT), provides management software and operates in an industry expected to grow annually at 6.6 percent to around $53.6 billion by 2021, according to International Data Corporation.

The company was taken private in a $4.5 billion deal in 2015 by investment firms Thoma Bravo LLC and Silver Lake Partners, which also holds stakes in Tesla (O:TSLA), Alibaba Group (N:BABA), Ant Financial, Dell Technologies and Didi Chuxing. (https://reut.rs/2yqaKja)

Silver Lake is the company's biggest shareholder with a 44.3 percent stake after the offering. Thoma Bravo - an investor in cyber firm McAfee - holds 36.1 percent.

SolarWinds reported revenue of $398.6 million for the first six months of 2018, up 17 percent from a year earlier. Net loss, however, widened to $86.9 million in the same period, from $45.7 million a year ago.

Its main competitors include International Business Machines Corp (N:IBM), KKR-owned BMC Software, and NetScout Systems, the company said in a filing.