Contact: Brenon Daly
It seems the record-setting Alibaba offering didn’t suck up all the IPO money on Wall Street after all. Although investors handed out a staggering $25bn to the Chinese e-commerce vendor last week, they stepped right back into the market to buy newly minted shares of Cyber-Ark on Thursday. And boy, did they buy.
Cyber-Ark, an Israel-based identity and access management (IAM) provider, sold 5.4 million shares at an above-range price of $16 each. Once free to trade, shares doubled. (In early afternoon trading under the ticker ‘CYBR’ the stock was changing hands at $32.20, having never dipped below $30 on its debut.) Cyber-Ark’s IPO stands as the first tech offering (aside from Alibaba) in some three months.
The strong demand for Cyber-Ark pushed it to a rather princely valuation. With roughly 30 million shares outstanding, the company’s market cap is nosing toward the magical $1bn mark. That stands out because Cyber-Ark, while profitable, will put up less than $100m in sales in 2014. Further, those sales are coming from old-fashioned license and support, rather than the more highly valued subscription delivery model. The company has been increasing revenue in the 30-40% range in recent quarters. (See our full report on Cyber-Ark’s filing.)
Cyber-Ark is particularly richly valued when compared with other IAM providers, in both the IPO and M&A markets. It trades at more than twice the current multiple of Imprivata, which went public three months ago and is currently under water. (Imprivata focuses entirely on the healthcare market, while Cyber-Ark counts more than 1,500 customers across a range of industries.) Meanwhile, earlier this month, direct rival BeyondTrust got flipped to another PE portfolio in a deal that we estimate went off at about 3x trailing sales.
For more real-time information on tech M&A, follow us on Twitter @451TechMnA.