附近上门

Public Markets

How Huya, A China-Based Esports Platform, Went Public

Morning Report:Huya went public! What is Huya?

Good morning and happy Friday. Today we’re going to rewind and go over something I should have had us watching all along. Namely, the IPO.

Huya is a video game video platform that claims, , to be the “No. 1 and most active game live streaming platform in China.” It’s akin, in some ways, to Twitch here in the United States. Huya is a company wagered on the continued rise of esports and the more general phenomenon of watching video games as a regular pastime.1

The company during its life, according to 附近上门.

Huya priced its shares a $12, the top of its range. Per Investor’s Business Daily, the company听 through a sale of 15 million shares. In its first day of trading, Huya is up 33 percent, trading for $15.95 per share.

Thus Huya marks another Chinese company listing on American shores this year and another technology IPO enthusiastically welcomed by investors. ( and , two Chinese tech shops, listed in America earlier in 2018.)

What do we think of the company? That it looks kinda ok, really. Revenue grew 174.2 percent in 2017 to $335.8 million. The firm managed to wring $39.2 million in gross profit from its top line over the same period. Sadly, $55.3 million in operating expenses before other incomes left the firm with a deficit of $12.5 million for the year.

The company’s loss fell by 84 percent during the same year that its revenue nearly tripled. That’s a ramp to profits, I’d say.

Oh, and the firm had nicely positive operating cash flow during 2017. Not bad.

  1. If you don’t know the difference between Overwatch, League of Legends, Starcraft 2, and DOTA 2, you are pretty damn far behind.

From The听:

Technology private equity investor Silver Lake is offering $3 billion to buy听, the UK鈥檚 largest property portal. The offer represents a 30 percent premium over Zoopla鈥檚 pre-announcement public market valuation.

Dropbox earnings top forecasts

听unveiled its first set of earnings as a public company, posting revenues that exceeded Wall Street forecasts.

Startups may not like Google鈥檚 newfound voice

Google Assistant, powered by Google Duplex, is so well spoken that it can pass for a human while booking appointments over the phone. But that level of AI implementation may not be welcome news for a number of startups offering personal assistants, voice scheduling and other services.

Fixer tackles home maintenance

Chicago-based听, an online platform for scheduling home maintenance tasks launched by GrubHub co-founder Mike Evans, has raised $4 million in a Series A round led by Founder Collective. Part of the money will go toward launching an in-house trade school.

Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the 附近上门 Daily.

67.1K Followers

CTA

Discover and act on private market opportunities with predictive company intelligence.

Copy link