Vonetize CEO blames underwriters for failed IPO

Josephides, Vonetize presentation
Josephides, Vonetize presentation

The VoD company's IPO failed even after it cut its pre-money valuation from NIS 200 million to NIS 120 million.

The IPO of technology company Vonetize on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange failed. The Netanya-based company, which was supposed to make its big break in 2016, failed on Thursday to raise NIS 30 million from local financial institutions even after cutting its pre-money valuation from NIS 200 million to NIS 120 million.

Some market sources claim that the IPO failed because one of the financial institutions, allegedly Altshuler Shaham, which was to participate in the IPO and order shares to the tune of several million shekels, changed its mind in the last moment.

Altshuler Shaham responded by stating, "We examined an investment in Vonetize, as from time to time we examine investments in dozens of firms, and eventually decided not to invest. Altshuler Shaham made no commitment to participate in the offering."

Vonetize CEO Noam Josephides said that the IPO failed because "the underwrites failed to deliver, even though the company's owners contributed their own money - half of the orders were ours." The underwriters in this offering were Discount Capital Markets and Rosario Capital.

Vonetize's business is the distribution of video on demand (VoD) content to smartphones and televisions. The company's offering was to be the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange's first IPO for 2016, breaking the local market's long period of inactivity in technology company offerings. Vonetize's failure magnifies that of the local stock exchange management, which has focused on technology company offerings as a cure for the drought in the primary market.

Vonetize was founded in 2011, and raised about $6 million in several private rounds in 2014 and 2015. The last placement, in 2015, was based on a post-money company valuation of $30 million, so that the current placement was to be at the price of the private placement in 2015.

Until recently, Vonetize, like many other Israeli startups, experienced difficulties in raising the funds and building the robust marketing required to develop from a startup to a company with an international presence. The last company statements showed significant losses, with a 'going concern' qualification added by the auditors.

Operational losses increase

The financial statements indicate that Vonetize's revenue in 2015 totaled $2 million, a rise of 19% from 2014, with a gross loss of $60,000, mainly due to increasing expenses following the many distribution agreements it has signed lately. This compares with a gross profit of $400,000 in 2014.

Operational losses rose to $3 million, compared with $1.8 million in 2014 and the net loss was $3.2 million, compared with $2 million last year. The first quarter of 2016 saw the loss rise to $1.1 million and revenue decreasing to only $249,000.

"The fall in the values of many high-tech companies in the past few months, among them Israeli companies traded on US exchanges, means that you can invest in established technology companies at fairly low prices. Financial institutions will almost always prefer investments like those, in companies such as Mellanox or Mobileye or Check Point, for example, to investment in startups," a source in Israel's new issues market said, adding, "Good technology companies will want an offering on Nasdaq, so that the companies that try to make IPOs in Tel Aviv are the less good ones, to say the least, and the institutions therefore avoid investing in them."

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news - www.globes-online.com - on July 11 2016

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2016

Josephides, Vonetize presentation
Josephides, Vonetize presentation
Intel Haifa  credit: Shutterstock Intel layoffs in Israel will benefit rivals

Industry experts agree that Intel staff dismissed in Israel will have no trouble finding work at rivals like Nvidia, as happened during last year's layoffs.

Ministry of Finance Jerusalem credit: Shutterstock Treasury sees Trump's tariffs cutting Israel's GDP growth

Amid the uncertainty that still surrounds the level of tariffs that would ultimately be imposed on Israeli goods, the annual damage to growth is estimated by the Finance Ministry at less than 0.5% of GDP.

French President Emmanuel Macron at the Paris Air Show in 2023 credit: Reuters Israel to scale down Paris Air Show presence

Due to President Emmanuel Macron's antagonism, Israel is reducing its presence at the exhibition, Ministry of Defense International Defense Cooperation Directorate (SIBAT) head Yair Kulas tells "Globes."

Jerusalem court cmplex credit: Zarhy Architects Tenders issued for two huge Jerusalem construction projects

The PFI tenders for the Gan Hotzvim tech campus and the courts complex include grants of NIS 1.7 billion for the winning bidders.

Israel Innovation Authority CEO Dror Bin Innovation Authority chief: Israel top for deep tech investment

Dror Bin told the Globes TECH IL conference that deep tech is the next wave for global tech and the rate of investment in Israel is the world's highest.

Gil Shwed and Nadav Zafrir credit: Menash Cohen With new CEO Check Point beats analysts in Q1

Revenue rose 6.5% and GAAP net profit rose 5% in Nadav Zafrir's first full quarter at the helm.

Nadav Zafrir credit: Niv Kantor Check Point CEO: We'll reinvent cybersecurity for the AI age

In his first interview since succeeding Gil Shwed, Nadav Zafrir was speaking at the Globes TECH IL Conference.

Tel Aviv light rail credit: Yossi Cohen Rishon Lezion to finance Red Line light rail extension

The Rishon Lezion Municipality will pay for part of the extension by marketing land above the planned underground depot.

Intel Haifa development center credit: Shutterstock Intel to cut 20% of workforce - report

"Bloomberg" reports that new CEO Lip-Bu Tan will announce the layoffs this week.

Healthee team credit: Healthee PR AI healthcare costs management co Healthee raises $50m

Healthee’s benefits and care navigation platform empowers employees and employers to make the most of their health benefits.

Former Shufersal CEO Itzik Abercohen credit: Eyal Izhar Competition Authority summons former Shufersal CEO to hearing

According to the indictment, Shufersal and Itzik Abercohen allegedly made public statements through which he attempted to reach arrangements to raise prices.

Reco founders Ofer Klein, Gal Nakash, and Tal Shapira credit: Elegant Photographics Israeli SaaS security co Reco raises $25m

The Tel Aviv-based company has developed a comprehensive application discovery engine capable of identifying and classifying over 50,000 applications, and providing visibility into an organization’s SaaS ecosystem.

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange credit: Tali Bogdanovsky TASE outperforms global markets in 2025

Boosted by the strong results of Israel's banks, the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange has demonstrated impressive resilience to domestic and foreign upheavals.

Metro credit: Bar Lavi Can Hyundai fill Metro vacuum created by China's exclusion?

The South Korean giant is reportedly eager to enter Israel's infrastructure sector but may not have the resources to dig the Metro tunnels.

Hero 120SF loitering munition  credit: Uvision Israeli firms to arm Germany with suicide drones

UVision's partnership with Rheinmetall and IAI's partnership with MBDA will help equip the German Army with an arsenal of loitering munitions.

Cipia Vision Credit: Company website Cipia Vision lays off 50% of workforce

The financially troubled Israeli auto-tech company raised NIS 68 million on the TASE in 2021 at a company valuation of NIS 354 million.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018