The $21 price gives the cloud storage company a valuation of $9.2 billion. It raised $563 million in the offering, while insiders got another $193 million.
- Dropbox has set its public offering share price at $21, according to The Wall Street Journal.
- The price, which was above the company's previously forecast range, gives the company a valuation of $9.2 billion.
- Even with strong investor demand, the price wasn't enough to allow the company's valuation to match the $10 billion it was valued at in its last private funding round.
- The company raised an estimated $563 million and insiders another $193 million in the offering.
Dropbox priced its initial public offering on Thursday at $21 a share, which was above its previously expected range. That price price yields a valuation of $9.2 billion — better than expected, but still below what it was worth in its last funding round, according to The Wall Street Journal.
The cloud-storage company raised $563 million in the offering, assuming it stuck with its previously announced plan to sell about 26.8 million shares. Early investors and insiders, including CEO Drew Houston, hauled in another $193 million, based on their previous plan to sell 9.2 million shares. Salesforce plans to buy a $100 million stake in the company subsequent to the offering, but at the same price.
The $21 price was above the $18 to $20 range Dropbox forecast in a regulatory document on Wednesday. That range was above the initial $16 to $18 range the company proposed earlier in the month, indicating strong investor interest in the offering.
That price gives the company a market capitalization of $9.2 billion, factoring in all of its outstanding shares, including unvested restricted stock units and shares that underly certain stock options. That's a bit shy of the $10 billion valuation the company had at the time of its last funding round in 2014.
Dropbox is expected to begin trading Friday under the ticker symbol DBX. The company will have a dual-class stock structure that gives outsized power to certain insiders. Houston, for example, will hold about 24% of the company's voting power after the offering.