CrowdStrike hires Goldman Sachs to lead IPO

It is the latest in a wave of Silicon Valley startups

George Kurtz, CEO and co-founder of CrowdStrike, speaks at the Wall Street Journal Digital conference in Laguna Beach, California, US, October 17, 2017. PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO:
Cybersecurity software maker CrowdStrike has hired investment bank Goldman Sachs Group to prepare for an initial public offering that could come in the first half of next year, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.

CrowdStrike is the latest in a wave of Silicon Valley startups, including ride-hailing firms Uber and Lyft, that are eyeing a 2019 stock market listing after repeatedly turning to private investors for funding. A booming stock market has boosted corporate valuations, making the IPO option more attractive.

CrowdStrike is aiming to be valued more than the $3 billion funding round assigned to it earlier this year, the sources added.

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CrowdStrike’s IPO plans could still change, the sources cautioned, asking not to be identified because the matter is confidential.

CrowdStrike and Goldman Sachs declined to comment.


Sunnyvale, California-based CrowdStrike raised $200 million in June led by investors General Atlantic, Accel and IVP. Other major backers include CapitalG, an investment arm of Google’s parent company Alphabet and Warburg Pincus LLC.

CrowdStrike uses artificial intelligence for its Falcon platform to prevent attacks on computers on or off the network.

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CrowdStrike is trying to stand out from the hundreds of security startups that have sprouted in recent years, promising next-generation technologies to fight cybercriminals, government spies and hacker activists, who have plagued some of the world’s biggest corporations.

The recent crop of publicly listed cybersecurity companies have had a mixed stock performance. Zscaler went public in the spring and is trading 125 per cent above its IPO price, but Tenable and Carbon Black have been trading below their IPO prices.

CrowdStrike was founded in 2012 by two executives who left security software maker McAfee, including George Kurtz, the startup’s chief executive.
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