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The Not-So-Hot Ticket |
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After years of false-starts, the initial public offering market is back in a big way. Big names like CoreWeave, Figma, Circle, and Chime have all tested the waters, and hype about crypto and artificial intelligence have added to excitement. |
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“Investors that want to own a piece of this future will find it in the IPO market,” writes Bill Smith, founder of Renaissance Capital. “Because now, in 2025, we’re staring down the barrel of the largest sector-specific IPO wave in market history.” |
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Emphasis on sector specific. |
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As Barron’s Andrew Bary warned on Friday, StubHub learned that not every IPO can be hot. Trading under the ticker symbol STUB, the company’s stock fell more than 6% in its debut on the New York Stock Exchange today. |
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My Barron’s colleague Paul R. La Monica writes that the online ticket marketplace priced its IPO at the middle of the expected range and sold 34 million shares at a price of $23.50. After a brief pop, it closed at $22. Paul writes: |
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At the $23.50 offering price, StubHub raised $800 million. The company is worth $8.1 billion based on where it closed Wednesday. Despite the stock slide, that valuation isn’t too shabby considering that the company, which was founded in 2000, was bought by eBay in 2007 for $310 million and then sold to European ticket reseller Viagogo in 2020 for more than $4 billion. |
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Paul spoke with StubHub co-founder and CEO Eric Baker, who said Taylor Swift’s popular Era’s tour that ran from March 2023 to December 2024 had a big impact on growth figures in the first half of this year. Subtracting Swift, gross merchandise sales—the dollar value of tickets—rose 20% from a year ago, he told Paul. |
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“The vision is for StubHub to be the destination for all live events,” Baker said, adding that the IPO is a key milestone for the company because StubHub will be able to use proceeds to pay down debt, clean up its balance sheet, and focus on growth. |
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Still, investors also have to accept the fact that Baker has overwhelming control of the company with a nearly 88% stake in the voting shares. Baker left the business after a falling out with his fellow co-founder before the eBay deal. He went on to found Viagogo, now StubHub’s owner. |
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You can read more of Paul’s StubHub IPO coverage here. |
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The Calendar |
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Darden Restaurants, FactSet Research Systems, FedEx, and Lennar report quarterly results tomorrow. |
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What We’re Reading Today |
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Barron’s Live returns on Monday. Barron’s Live returns on Monday. Barron’s Live features timely and actionable insights for investors. We give you behind-the-scenes conversations with the newsroom, connecting you with our editors and reporters covering the markets, the economy, and more. |
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