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(Reuters) – Grocery delivery service Instacart is targeting a valuation between $8.6 billion and $9.3 billion in its initial public offering, according to a person familiar with the matter.
The valuation range will be disclosed in an updated IPO regulatory filing on Monday, the source said on Sunday
Instacart declined to comment.
The Wall Street Journal was the first to report on Sunday on Instacart’s IPO valuation target.
The targeted valuation is a steep drop from the firm’s $39 billion valuation in 2021, when the coronavirus pandemic was raging and doorstep delivery boomed.
Like SoftBank (TYO:)’s chip designer Arm Holdings Ltd and marketing automation firm Klaviyo, Instacart is expected to list its shares in September – part of a wave of high-profile names testing investor appetite for new listings.
Arm kicked off the road show for its IPO last week with the aim of raising roughly $4.9 billion in an offering that would value the company at as much as $52 billion, in what is expected to be this year’s biggest share sale.
Instacart had considered a direct listing, sources told Reuters earlier. Unlike an IPO, no shares are sold in advance in a direct listing and investors can sell their shares directly to the public.
For the six months ended June 30, Instacart last month reported revenue of $1.48 billion, up 31% from the same period last year. Advertising and other revenue surged 24% to $406 million. It reported net income of $242 million during the six-month period, compared with a $74 million loss a year earlier.
Instacart’s high-profile investors include Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, Fidelity Management & Research Co and T Rowe Price (NASDAQ:).
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