The chief executive officer of reAlpha Tech Corp., a small property technology startup, briefly gained billions of dollars in paper wealth during a hot direct-listing debut this week, only to see most of that erased as the stock plunged in the following days.
The Dublin, Ohio-based company's stock surged a whopping 1,667% in its first day of trading Monday, after it went public via a direct listing on the Nasdaq. Shares began trading at $23.01 — already above the $8 reference price — and closed at $406.67.
At the end of that first trading day, CEO Giri Devanur added $11.2 billion to his personal wealth from the large stake of reAlpha stock he holds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. But things quickly took a turn. The stock plunged 75% on Tuesday and continued to slide in a week that saw trading halted more than 40 times for volatility. On Friday, shares fell 50% to close at a level just shy of where they debuted after short seller Spruce Point said to avoid shares.
We are now on WhatsApp. Click to join.
That reversal of fortunes knocked the value of Devanur's majority stake down to about $655 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Before the direct listing, Devanur disclosed he holds 27.6 million shares, and in a filing this week the company said his holdings amounted to about 65% of outstanding common stock.
“The float is a problem, it's locked up,” said Kim Forrest, founder and chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners. Even if Devanur were to sell to add liquidity, it could look bad that he's offloading stock, she added.
“This company is kind of stuck between a rock and a hard place,” she said. “It's a numbers game and the numbers are not working for this small company at this time.”
reAlp
Read more on tech.hindustantimes.com