Dropbox prices above its original range at $21 as it heads toward an IPO

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Dropbox today said it is pricing above the range it originally set ahead of its public listing tomorrow, handing the company a valuation inching ever-closer to its original $ 10 billion valuation.

Dropbox earlier this week said it would price its initial public offering in a range between $ 18 and $ 20 per share, settling on a valuation near $ 8 billion at the high end of the range (or closer to $ 8.75 billion, based on its fully-diluted share count). With the new pricing, Dropbox will be valuing itself at around $ 8.4 billion — or a hair above $ 9 billion based on its fully-diluted share count. That $ 18 to $ 20 range, too, was a step up from its original proposed range, which fell between $ 16 and $ 18. Dropbox will be raising more than $ 700 million in the IPO, in addition to existing shareholders selling more than 9 million shares as part of the process.

What all this means is that Dropbox initially tested the waters to gauge interest, and clearly there was a lot. Companies sometimes set conservative price ranges (though this isn’t always the case) and then revise upwards as they see how much interest there is in potential investors buying shares at that price. Dropbox will make its public debut tomorrow, and the usual process here aims to get as much value for the company as possible while still ensuring the so-called IPO “pop” — usually a jump of around 20%. We’ll probably get the formal price in the form of an SEC filing this evening as it gets ready to list tomorrow.

Should that be successful, Dropbox would fall above the valuation of its last financing round, which gave the company a $ 10 billion valuation amid a hype wave of consumer startups. Dropbox, one of the original pioneers of online storage, in recent years has found itself looking to slowly scoop up more and more enterprise customers as it tries to create a second lucrative line of business. The company deploys a classic playbook of attracting initial customers within teams and then growing up to the point it reaches the C-Suite of companies, though the reverse is certainly possible as Dropbox matures over time.

CNBC first reported the news.


Fundings & Exits – TechCrunch

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