Contact: Brenon Daly
After an on-again, off-again march to the public market over the past decade, Sophos finally looks set to sell shares to the public for the first time. The 30-year-old, UK-based security vendor put in its paperwork last week for a $100m IPO on the London Stock Exchange (LSE). It was actually the second time the decidedly middle-aged Sophos filed to go public, and comes five years after it flirted with an IPO before selling a majority stake to Apax Partners instead.
During the half-decade in the private equity firm’s portfolio, Sophos has been a steady acquirer, picking up a company about every year. Its most recent deal, announced earlier this week, is the first time Sophos has acquired a cloud-based vendor. Sophos paid an undisclosed amount for email security and archiving startup Reflexion. The technology is expected to be integrated into Sophos Cloud later this year.
When Sophos does hit the LSE next month, we expect it to create a few billion dollars of market value. In its most recent fiscal year, which finished last March, Sophos increased revenue 18% to $447m. For comparison, Barracuda Networks – a diversified security provider that, like Sophos, serves the SMB market – posted an identical growth rate in its most recent fiscal year. (Although Sophos is growing off a revenue base that is more than half again as large as the $277m that Barracuda put up last year.) Since it went public in November 2013, Barracuda has doubled its market value to about $2bn.
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