Restaurants payments firm Toast seeks up to US$717m in IPO
[NEW YORK] Toast Inc, which helps restaurants handle payments, is seeking as much as US$717 million in a US initial public offering. The Boston-based company plans to sell 21.7 million Class A shares at US$30 to US$33 apiece, it said in a regulatory filing Monday.
The deal could value the company at as much as US$16.5 billion based on the number of outstanding shares listed in the prospectus.
Toast's share sale will add to the US$104 billion already raised by tech company IPOs this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The offering comes as the restaurant industry rebounds from a pandemic that was disastrous for in-person dining, but was a boon for takeout and delivery services.
The company said its software is easy for restaurant workers to use and lets diners order online, in-person or over their phones. Restaurants can also use the guest data it captures to craft loyalty and marketing programmes.
Toast's revenue rose 105 per cent year on year during the six months ending June 30, to US$704 million. Its net loss widened to US$235 million, from US$125 million a year earlier.
Incorporated in 2011, the company's platform was used by about 48,000 restaurants as of June 30 and had processed more than US$38 billion in gross payments over the previous 12 months. In June, it averaged over 5.5 million guest orders per day.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The company raised money last year at a valuation of US$4.9 billion from investors including Bessemer Venture Partners, TPG, Tiger Global Management and Greenoaks Capital. Toast plans to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol TOST. Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co are leading the offering.
BLOOMBERG
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Technology
'Harvesting data': Latin American AI startups transform farming
After long peace, Big Tech faces US antitrust reckoning
Tech’s cash crunch sees creditors turn ‘violent’ with one another
Tech millionaires chase billionaire tax shields with ‘swap fund’
Elon Musk’s Starlink profits are more elusive than investors think
Hollywood animation, VFX unions fight AI job cut threat