Valuing Snap After the IPO Quiet Period (A)
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Publication Date:
June 05, 2018
Industry:
Technology
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Arts & Culture
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Advertising, Marketing & Public Relations
Industry:
Media
Source:
Harvard Business School
Snap, the disappearing message app, went public at $17 per share on March 2, 2017, making its two 20-something founders the youngest self-made billionaires in the country. Over the next three weeks, 14 analysts made investment recommendations on Snap: two with buy recommendations, six with holds, and six with sells. When the “IPO quiet period” expired three weeks later, 16 more analysts-who worked at firms that were underwriters for the IPO-issued recommendations: 10 with buy and six with hold, with price targets ranging from $21 to $31 compared to a market price of $23. Elizabeth Kemp, the portfolio manager of a long-only technology fund at Sand Hill Road Capital, had bought 500,000 shares at the IPO price and had to decide whether to harvest her gain or to double down and buy more shares.
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Valuing Snap After the IPO Quiet Period (A)
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