Big Oil has big trouble; Big Data has big opportunity

Contact: Brenon Daly

If data is the new oil, as some futurists would have it, then the accompanying transfer of value came through loud and clear in Friday trading. As oil prices slumped to their lowest levels since the recession, a pair of data-centric startups skyrocketed onto the market. The IPOs of New Relic and Hortonworks, collectively, created $2.5bn of market value.

Both offerings priced above the expected range and then surged another 40% on a day that saw US stock markets tick lower, in part, because of the pronounced slump in oil prices. The debut left both companies trading at platinum double-digit valuations. (New Relic, which will put up about $115m in sales in the current fiscal year, is being valued on Wall Street at about $1.5bn, while Hortonworks, which will do roughly $50m in sales this year, garnered a $1bn valuation.)

New Relic, which collects billions of data points around the performance of applications and the IT systems that run them, priced its shares at $23 each and saw them soar to about $33 in mid-Friday trading. ( See our full report on the New Relic offering.)

Similarly, Hortonworks – a ‘big data’ vendor that sells a Hadoop distribution – priced its shares at an above-range $16 and then saw its stock change hands at roughly $23. (See our full report on the Hortonworks offering.)

Just to put a point of contrast between old oil patch and new digital economy, consider this: the cost of buying one share each of New Relic and Hortonworks is roughly the same as the cost of buying a barrel of benchmark crude oil. Wall Street was very clear on which investment option looks more rewarding right now.

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