Shares of Jamf soar 51% in first day of trading
Shares of Apple mobile device management company Jamf soared 51% Wednesday after the company priced its initial public offering above expectations.
Credit: Jamf
Jamf, which creates MDM software for Apple devices, filed for a $100 million IPO at the end of June. The company's stocks made their debut on the NASDAQ today.
The company's share price climbed as high as $51 in intra-day trading Wednesday -- a 92% increase -- before closing at $39.20, CNBC reported. The day before, Jamf priced its 18 million shares at $26 each.
The $39.20 closing price gives the MDM firm a market capitalization of $4.6 billion. CNBC notes that the firm's IPO gives investors "another way to bet on Apple."
In a prospectus document, Jamf says it currently has 40,000 customers deploying their technology on more than 17 million Apple devices. Its first quarter 2020 revenue climbed 37% year-over-year and its gross margin rose to 75%.
Jamf is principally controlled by Vista Equity Partners, which acquired a majority stake in the company in 2017. Based on the price at end of trading Wednesday, Vista Equity Partners' stake is worth more than $3.6 billion.
Although Apple has historically relied on third-party companies to provide MDM solutions to users, the Cupertino tech giant recently acquired Jamf competitor and MDM software maker Fleetsmith. That suggests that it could be looking into providing first-party MDM solutions for its customers.
Credit: Jamf
Jamf, which creates MDM software for Apple devices, filed for a $100 million IPO at the end of June. The company's stocks made their debut on the NASDAQ today.
The company's share price climbed as high as $51 in intra-day trading Wednesday -- a 92% increase -- before closing at $39.20, CNBC reported. The day before, Jamf priced its 18 million shares at $26 each.
The $39.20 closing price gives the MDM firm a market capitalization of $4.6 billion. CNBC notes that the firm's IPO gives investors "another way to bet on Apple."
In a prospectus document, Jamf says it currently has 40,000 customers deploying their technology on more than 17 million Apple devices. Its first quarter 2020 revenue climbed 37% year-over-year and its gross margin rose to 75%.
Jamf is principally controlled by Vista Equity Partners, which acquired a majority stake in the company in 2017. Based on the price at end of trading Wednesday, Vista Equity Partners' stake is worth more than $3.6 billion.
Although Apple has historically relied on third-party companies to provide MDM solutions to users, the Cupertino tech giant recently acquired Jamf competitor and MDM software maker Fleetsmith. That suggests that it could be looking into providing first-party MDM solutions for its customers.
Comments
I'm seeing the same, open at 46.00, closed at 39.20 which means a 14.7% decline. A very different story, this article should be updated.
When calculating what a stock did on a given day, you use the previous day's close as the base not the given day's open. If the share price closed at $25 yesterday, opened at $40 today, and closed at $35 today, then it's up $10 today not down $5.
With an IPO there is no previous day's close. In that case you use the IPO offering price, which was $26. JAMF was up $13.20 from that IPO offering price.
Also, I'd note that JAMF wasn't supposed to open at $26. It wasn't supposed to open at any given price, that was going to depend on the bids an asks that came in before it opened from trading. The $26 was the IPO offering price. Quite often IPOs open well above the IPO offering price on the first day of trading.