Nov 13 (Reuters) -
Payments firm Klarna began the process of going public for a
second time in three years despite a sharp drop in its
valuation, making it the largest Swedish company to float its
shares in the U.S. since Spotify's ( SPOT ) listing in 2018.
The buy now, pay later (BNPL) company said on Tuesday it had
confidentially filed paperwork with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission for an initial public offering but the
number of shares to be offered and the price range had yet to be
determined.
Klarna's IPO will be one of the largest next year for a
European company, with only the likes of Revolut, which is
valued at $45 billion and widely expected to go public next
year, expected to top that listing.
Klarna came into the investor spotlight after its
valuation jumped from $5.5 billion to $46.5 billion in about two
years following three funding rounds between mid-2020 and 2021.
CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski co-founded the company in
2005, a year before the founding of Sweden-based Spotify ( SPOT ), which
was listed in the U.S. in 2018 with a valuation of about $28
billion.
Klarna and Northvolt, another Swedish company, were
expected to follow suit. But Northvolt has put its IPO plans in
cold storage as it has been scrambling to secure the funding it
needs to stay afloat.
US FOCUS
Siemiatkowski had in August hinted at a potential IPO
next year, saying it "sounds reasonable," but cautioned that no
definite commitment was made.
He had said Klarna might lean towards a U.S. listing but had
also seriously evaluated some European options.
"For Klarna, the choice falls in line with the company's
focus on U.S. expansion," said Navina Rajan, PitchBook's senior
EMEA Private Capital analyst.
"The less scrutiny on profitability for tech companies
seen in the U.S. may also help alleviate cost pressures caused
by expansion," Rajan said.
When Klarna was planning to go public in 2021,
Siemiatkowski had shown interest in a direct listing - where a
company does not sell new shares and circumvents the costly
process of a traditional IPO.
But it shelved those plans and raised funds at a $6.7
billion valuation - a massive cut from its peak.
Bloomberg News reported earlier this year that the company
had considered seeking a valuation of around $20 billion for its
IPO.
At that level, some shareholders may lose money as the
company raised capital in two funding rounds at a much higher
valuation in 2021 from investors such as rapper Snoop Dog,
SoftBank's Vision Fund and Mubadala.
Klarna reported a first-half adjusted profit of 673 million
Swedish crowns ($61.74 million) in August, driven by job cuts
and the implementation of artificial intelligence for customer
services.
The company also reported a 27% rise in first-half revenue
to 13.3 billion crowns, boosted by revenue growth of 38% in the
U.S. Its adjusted profit compares with a loss of 456 mln crowns
a year earlier.
Klarna has been expanding heavily in the U.S., while cutting
costs through layoffs and the use of AI as it seeks to boost
profits ahead of the IPO.
According to its website, the company offers direct
payments, pay-after-delivery options and installment plans to
about 85 million active consumers across more than 575,000
merchants in 26 countries.
($1 = 10.9010 Swedish crowns)