IPO market stays dormant as Justworks and Fresh Market withdraw their filings

Technology

In this article

A person checks her phone at Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on May 27, 2022.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

The IPO market has been frozen for most of 2022, and it shows no signs of reopening.

On Wednesday, software vendor Justworks and food retailer Fresh Market withdrew their IPO filings. Both companies initially disclosed plans to go public last year. In short filings with the SEC, they said they no longer plan to pursue share sales, without providing a reason.

They don’t have much explaining to do. After banner years in 2020 and 2021, including a record-setting level of activity last year, investors have shown no appetite for new issues amid this year’s market plunge. The tech-heavy Nasdaq has dropped 28% so far in 2022, underperforming the S&P 500, which has fallen 20%.

The picture is much bleaker for companies to hit the market of late, particularly those in and around the tech sector. The Renaissance IPO ETF, which says it tracks the “largest, most liquid, newly-listed U.S. IPOs,” has plummeted 46%.

According to Ernst & Young, global IPO volume sank 54% in the second quarter from a year earlier, while proceeds in offerings plunged by 65%.

Tech stocks and new IPOs this year
CNBC

Justworks, based in New York, was looking to go public after revenue in the 12 months that ended May of last year climbed 32% to almost $983 million. The company even recorded a net profit, which is rare for pre-IPO software companies.

Seeing what’s happening to Justworks’ competitors, it’s clear why the company would steer clear of an IPO at this point. Paycom is down 26% this year, Paylocity is down 24% and Paychex has fallen 15%.

Fresh Market, which has 159 stores in 22 states and also sells a wide assortment of meal kits, generated $1.4 billion in revenue through the first three quarters of 2021, up 3.5% from the prior year. The company lists as competitors traditional supermarkets like Albertsons’ and Kroger, specialty grocers such as Sprouts Farmers Market and Trader Joe’s as well as big box stores like Walmart and Target.

In May, Fresh Market said it was selling 67% of the company to Cencosud, a South American retailer, for $676 million. The rest will be owned by existing shareholders, including Apollo Funds, which took the company private in 2016.

WATCH: Capital markets will be completely dead for a long time

Articles You May Like

Emotions hit Kershaw at parade ‘long time coming’
Budget will embrace ‘harsh light of fiscal reality’, but PM insists ‘better days are ahead’
The celebrities backing Trump or Harris
Lucid Gravity arrives, Xiaomi sets records, and a Supercharged Polestar
More than 1,000 Ford staff to strike from tomorrow