Imperva to raise $70-80m on NYSE

Shlomo Kramer's Imperva plans to hold its IPO at a company value of $309-354 million in the second week of November.

Data protection developer Imperva Inc., founded by president and CEO Shlomo Kramer, plans to raise a gross $67-76 million dollars at a company value of $309-354 million, after money, in an IPO on the New York Stock Exchange in an offering of 4.75 million shares at $14-16 per share.

The company filed an updated draft prospectus with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday. The IPO will reportedly be held in the second week of November, possible on November 8. Imperva will be listed under the ticker "IMPV".

The underwriters, led by JPMorgan Chase Inc. and Deutsche Bank Securities LLC, along with RBC Capital Markets, Lazard Capital Markets, and Pacific Crest Partners, have an overallotment option to buy up to an additional 750,000 shares for $10.5-12 million. Two parties at interest, co-founders CTO Amichai Shulman and Mickey Boodaei also plan to sell 125,000 shares each in an offer to sell, for a total of $1.8-2 million.

Kramer is considering buying Imperva shares in the IPO. He and five other shareholders, mostly venture capital funds, have expressed an interest in buying up to $15 million worth of shares. Imperva's venture capital shareholders are Accel Partners, which owns 22% of the company, Greylock Partners (8%), US Venture Partners (11.4%), Venrock Associates (11.4%), and Meritech Capital Partners (under 5%).

Kramer currently owns 20.3% of Imperva, and his stake will be diluted to 15.9%, assuming he does not buy shares in the IPO. The post-IPO stake will be worth $49.1-56.3 million.

According to the updated prospectus, Imperva posted $19.7 million revenue in the third quarter, 45% more than for the corresponding quarter of 2010,and 4.8% more than for the preceding quarter. The company's operating loss narrowed to $2.6 million for the third quarter from $3.4 million for the corresponding quarter and $2.8 million for the preceding quarter, while the net loss was unchanged at $2.7 million.

Imperva's heaviest expense is for sales and marketing, which totaled $10.4 million (53% of revenue) for the third quarter, the same as for the corresponding quarter. The company currently has $13 million in cash, hence the urgency of the IPO.

Imperva has 375 employees, including 183 in Israel.

Imperva could be the last Israeli company to go public on Wall Street this year. Nine companies preceded it, including a secondary offering by Medgenics Ltd. (AIM:MEDG; AMEX: MDGN), which was already traded on London’s Alternative Investment Market. With the exception of the secondary offerings by Mellanox Technologies Ltd. (Nasdaq:MLNX; TASE:MLNX) and Protalix Biotherapeutics Inc. (AMEX:PLX; TASE: PLX), the return on all the shares has been negative since their offerings. The nine offering raised $700 million altogether.

Sodastream International Ltd. (Nasdaq: SODA) was the last Israeli company to go public on Wall Street.

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news - www.globes-online.com - on October 30, 2011

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2011

Wiz and Google  credit: Tali Bogdanovsky Could Wiz acquisition lead to a VAT cut?

The state's tax revenue from the deal is expected to be equivalent to about 2% in VAT.

Ryanair credit: Piote Mitelski, Ryanair Ryanair offering ultra-low fares for Israel restart

Tickets to some destinations start at $33 - but taking luggage can more than double that.

Wed: Electreon plunges

The main indices fell today, with Electreon continuing to slide, apparently because of the announcement by BYD of a breakthrough new battery.

Israeli tech stars in Nvidia product launch

Two Israeli acquisitions, Mellanox and Deci, are behind key products presented by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at the company's annual event in San Jose.

Check Point offices credit: Shutterstock Check Point, Israel Canada buying NIS 800m Tel Aviv site

The two companies are expected to win a tender by the Tel Aviv Municipality for land zoned for residential and office construction in the Bitsaron neighborhood.

Itamar Ben-Gvir  credit: Noam Moskowitz, Knesset Spokesperson's Office Otzma Yehudit rejoins government

Itamar Ben-Gvir's party left the government in January in protest against the ceasefire in Gaza. The resumption of fighting has paved its way back.

Wiz founders Yinon Costica, Assaf Rappaport, Ami Luttwak, Roy Reznik credit: Avishag Shaar Yishuv Israel's biggest ever exit: Google buying Wiz for $32b

Google has confirmed that an agreement has been signed for an all-cash deal. Wiz will remain an independent company under Google.

Bezhalel Machlis  credit: Assaf Shilo/Israel Sun Elbit Systems CEO: Our potential in Europe is huge

Bezhalel Machlis was speaking at an investor conference after the company released 2024 results showing revenue up 14.3%.

Gaza Strip, March 17 2025  credit: Reuters/Anadolu IDF resumes assault on Hamas

Extensive aerial attacks were carried out against targets in the Gaza Strip overnight.

Wiz founders Yinon Costica, Assaf Rappaport, Ami Luttwak, Roy Reznik credit: Avishag Shaar Yishuv Google renews attempt to buy Wiz - report

According to "The Wall Street Journal", Google parent company Alphabet is negotiating to buy the Israeli cloud computing security company for $30 billion.

Orit Strook  credit: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post Finance C'ttee approves NIS 300m coalition funds distribution

The money will mainly go to Religious Zionist party minister Orit Strook's Ministry of Settlements and National Missions.

Dangoor Academy  credit: British Embassy in Tel Aviv British Embassy showcases Israeli healthcare startups

The nine startups participated in the Dangoor HealthTech Academy, a program that connects Israeli startups with the UK healthcare system.

NextVision Stabilized Systems  credit: Shlomi Yosef/Tali Bogdanovsky Next Vision shareholders make NIS 230m exit

A British hedge fund has bought a 2.5% stake in the stabilized cameras company.

Energean CEO Mathios Rigas at the Israel Business Conference   credit: Shlomi Yosef Energean's $1b gas fields sale at risk

The sale of the energy company's asset portfolio in Egypt, Italy and Croatia may fall through because of the buyer's difficulties with the Italian regulator.

Kela Technologies founders Jason Manne, Hamutal Meridor, Alon Dror and Omer Bar Ilan  credit:  Yosef Haim Alterman Defense tech co Kela raises $39m

In response to the events of October 7, Kela has developed a platform for rapid integration of commercial technologies into military systems.

Benjamin Netanyahu  credit: ‎Alex Kolomoisky, Yediot Aharonot Firing the Shin Bet chief: The hurdles

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he has "lost trust" in Shin Bet head Ronen Bar. Will this be enough to overcome legal challenges to his dismissal?

Emiliano Calemzuk  credit: PR CEO and "investor group" buying out Reshet 13

CEO Emiliano Calemzuk and the other investors will hold 74% of the television channel, while Len Blavatnik’s Access Industries and WBD will remain with 26%.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018