LONDON: British meal delivery app Deliveroo is aiming for a higher-than-expected valuation of up to £8.8 billion (RM50.17 billion) when it launches shortly on the London stock market, the company said on Monday following a pandemic-fuelled boom in demand.
The Amazon-backed company, in line with other home-delivery firms, says it has seen demand soar in the past year as locked-down households called in food.
The big listing, expected in April, is seen as a major boost to London’s financial sector which has been hit by Brexit turmoil. London’s financial sector, known as the City, recently lost its European share trading crown to Amsterdam following Britain’s exit from the European Union.
It is set to be London’s biggest IPO since Glencore in May 2011, according to data provided by the London Stock Exchange. A London stock market listing by Allied Irish Banks in 2017 is excluded from the data as it had a small listing in Ireland at the time.
Deliveroo will also be the biggest tech IPO on the LSE, dwarfing The Hut Group from last year — which had a £5.4 billion market capitalisation at time of listing â and the since-delisted Worldpay Group from 2015.
Eight-year-old Deliveroo’s market capitalisation on listing is set to be between £7.6 billion and £8.8 billion, it said in a statement on Monday.
âWe are proud to be listing in London, the city where Deliveroo started,â company founder and CEO Will Shu said.
âBecoming a public company will enable us to continue to invest in innovation, developing new tech tools to support restaurants and grocers, providing riders with more work and extending choice for consumers,â he added.
The offer price range has been set at between £3.90 and £4.60 per share, Deliveroo said. It will sell around £1.0 billion worth of new shares, while current investors in the company plan to sell part of their holdings.
The share price range âis higher than previously expected and makes it the biggest IPO in London for some time,â said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com.
A recent fundraising round had valued the company at more than US$7 billion (RM28.78 billion).
The listing update was published alongside news that Deliveroo’s app transactions ballooned by 121% in the first two months of 2021.
âWe have seen a strong start to 2021 and we are only at the start of an exciting journey in a large, fast-growing online food delivery market, with a huge opportunity ahead,â Shu said.
Deliveroo earlier this month announced that it made an underlying loss of £223.7 million in 2020. That was despite the value of transactions rocketing 64% to £4.1 billion.
Since its London launch in 2013, Deliveroo has expanded into mainland Europe, Asia, Australia and the Middle East. Last year, more than six million people ordered food and drink every month via its app from 115,000 cafes, restaurants and stores.
However, its business model has come under scrutiny, including in Britain, France and Spain, as its freelance delivery riders complain about working conditions, reflecting wider concerns over their rights in the gig economy.
Britain’s antitrust regulator last year approved Amazon’s 16% investment in Deliveroo after an in-depth probe concluded it would not harm competition.
Deliveroo has said that some £50 million of it shares will be made available to customers, with delivery riders and restaurant partners also able to participate.
JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs are global coordinators and bookrunners along with Bank of America, Citi, Jefferies and Numis. â AFP, Reuters








