2019 was another stellar year for the overall
stock market (DJII ending at 28,462 up 22% from 23,328), even better for
technology stocks (NASDAQ ending 8,946 up 35% from 6,635), and best for
emerging cloud software and services companies (BVP/Nasdaq emerging cloud
EMCLOUD ending at 1205.4 up 47% from 823.4).
So there are ample reasons for cloud software
companies to be happy. But was the wealth evenly spread?
The first half of 2019 saw more than half a
dozen IPOs in B2B SaaS: Medallia,
Cloudflare, Dynatrace, Slack, Fastly, Zoom and Pagerduty all performed well
immediately after their IPO. However, the stock price of most of these
companies stock prices performed far worse than any index by year end. The
unweighted average share prices declined 15% between IPO and the end of 2019,
and five out of seven were trading below IPO.
Company
|
Share price EoY
compared to IPO
Percent |
Market cap $ million, EoY
|
Cloudflare
|
-5%
|
$5.2
|
Dynatrace
|
6%
|
$7.4
|
Medallia
|
-16%
|
$3.8
|
Slack
|
-42%
|
$12.4
|
Fastly
|
-16%
|
$2.0
|
Zoom
|
10%
|
$18.6
|
Pagerduty
|
-39%
|
$1.9
|
WeWork’s implosion in October effectively closed
the IPO window for everyone else for the remainder of the year. Bill.com was
the only company to squeeze their IPO in before the very end of 2019.
While the IPO market took a break large
enterprise SaaS companies continued to consolidate via acquisitions. The
software analytics space in particular went through a generational wave of
acquisitions reminiscent of the first round of M&A in 2005/2006. This time
the buyers were Salesforce (Tableau), Workday (Adaptive Insight) and Google
Cloud (Looker) instead of SAP, IBM and Oracle.
Hyperscalers Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google
Cloud and AliCloud have still largely been absent from making huge
acquisitions. The growth
and size of the hyperscalers far exceeds that of
most other software companies, and their firepower will eventually be deployed
towards more acquisitions higher up the software stack. Google Cloud’s
acquisition of Looker may be the first indicator.
Clearly, there is enough money in the venture
capital ecosystem to fund every startup that is worthy.The abundance of capital
has trickled down from the large growth fund such as Softbank Vision to seed
funds where seed
round sizes have tripled since 2012. But
the Softbank/WeWork writeoff has demonstrated that large funds are struggling
to achieve their target returns. The Softbank Vision Fund has reportedly dialed
back on its investment strategy of supersized rounds, and several of their
portfolio companies have gone into restructuring mode.
Are all of these events indicators of more down
rounds to come?
Image credit: renemagritte.org
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