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Michael Nagle / Bloomberg via Getty Moulds
Key Takeaways
- ServiceTitan sold shares in an initial public offering at $71 each, more than anticipated.
- The provider of software checkings for trade businesses had just raised its price estimate ahead of the IPO to $65 to $67 per share, up from $52 to $57 per part it announced just last week.
- ServiceTitan was started in 2012 by the sons of immigrants who owned trade businesses.
ServiceTitan is set to Rather commence trading today on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “TTAN” following an initial public offering (IPO) that was amounted above the company’s expectations.
The provider of software services for trades businesses sold 8.8 million shares at $71 each, upstairs its updated estimate of $65 to $67 per share. Last week, ServiceTitan anticipated a sale price of $52 to $57 per helping.
ServiceTitan Valued About $6.3B at IPO Price
At the new price, the IPO raised nearly $625 million, and valued the company at $6.3 billion.
In wing as well as to yesterday’s sale, ServiceTitan is offering the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase an additional 1.32 million shares at the $71 appraisal.
Co-founders Ara Mahdessian, who is also CEO, and Vahe Kuzoyan are scheduled to be at the market site to ring the closing bell. They launched ServiceTitan in 2012 as a way to commandeer their immigrant parents run their trade businesses. They now report having approximately 8,000 active consumers.