
Liftoff's IPO Success Tells Us More About Market Timing Than Mobile Advertising
A Blackstone-backed company raises $437 million on its second try, and everyone's celebrating. But the real story is what this says about the IPO window, not the business.
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Most of the coverage you'll read about Liftoff Mobile's IPO will focus on the 21% first-day pop, the $437 million raised, the fact that it priced above range. All true! All missing the point.
I've seen this movie before. Company tries to go public, market conditions aren't right, company pulls back, waits for a better window, tries again, succeeds. The press treats it like validation of the business model when really it's just validation that the IPO window opened back up. These are different things, and conflating them is how retail investors end up holding bags.
Liftoff, for those who haven't been following, is a mobile advertising platform backed by Blackstone. They help app developers acquire users through programmatic advertising, which is a fancy way of saying they help apps buy ads that get people to download other apps. It's a real business with real revenue, I'm not disputing that. But the breathless coverage of this IPO is treating a successful second attempt like some kind of vindication when it's really just a story about patience and market timing.
What actually happened here
Liftoff tried to go public earlier this year. It didn't work out. The company and its bankers looked at market conditions, looked at investor appetite, and decided to pull the plug. This is the responsible thing to do! If you can't get the valuation you want, you wait. Blackstone didn't get where they are by being impatient.
Then conditions improved. The IPO window cracked open again, as it does periodically, and Liftoff jumped through. They priced above their marketed range, which sounds impressive until you remember that the marketed range is set conservatively precisely so that companies can claim they priced above it. This is not a criticism of Liftoff specifically, it's how the game works. Everyone does it.
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