• 0
  • Home
  • About Us
  • What We Do

Shopping Cart

GPAM
  • Home
  • About Us
  • What We Do

Inside Airbnb’s IPO pitch

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky (Getty)
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky (Getty)

Airbnb is pitching investors with a story of resilience, despite steep losses and an uncertain path to profitability.

The S-1 prospectus of the home-share startup was made public Monday, 12 years after the company debuted and quickly turned the hospitality industry on its head. In it, the company said it will trade under the ticker symbol “ABNB.”

The public offering represents a remarkable turnaround for Airbnb, which lost $1 billion in bookings overnight in March and secured a $2 billion lifeline last spring. In August it filed confidentially to go public.

The 349-page document gives prospective investors their first peek under the hood of Airbnb, revealing details of its finances, ownership structure and more.

Here are some of the highlights:

Revenue was soaring … until Covid. Airbnb’s gross bookings totaled $38 billion in 2019, up 29 percent year-over-year from $29.3 billion in 2018. Its revenue last year was $4.8 billion, compared to $3.7 billion in 2018 and $2.6 billion in 2017.

As of Sept. 30, bookings totaled $18 billion, a 39 percent year-over-year drop. Revenue for that period dropped 32 percent, to $2.5 billion.

Airbnb’s still chasing profits. The company had lost a total of $2.1 billion as of Sept. 30, including $674.3 million in 2019, $16.9 million in 2018 and $70 million in 2017. It lost $696.6 million during the first nine months of this year, more than twice the $322.8 million it lost during the same period in 2019.

In the S-1, Airbnb acknowledged it may not be able to achieve profitability, a detail that could spook investors.

“The rules have changed in the IPO market,” Santosh Rao, the head of research at Manhattan Venture Partners, told The Real Deal in September. “Investors want private companies to be profitable or have a clear path to profitability.”

Read more

  • Airbnb tore through $1.2B in year before IPO
  • Why Airbnb is going public in a pandemic
  • Airbnb’s IPO roadshow, now in the Zoom waiting room

March was madness. Pre-pandemic, Airbnb had gross bookings of $3 billion in February 2020. But refunds to customers pushed that number down to negative $900 million in March, the S-1 shows. Monthly bookings were back up to $1.1 billion in May and $2.5 billion in September.

The third quarter was profitable. For the third quarter, Airbnb reported $219 million in profit, after a $575.6 million loss the prior quarter. But revenue was $1.3 billion — an 18.4 percent drop from $1.6 billion a year prior. Airbnb cut costs in that quarter by laying off staff and reducing marketing.

There’s good in bad news. In line with Airbnb’s media messaging of late, its prospectus goes heavy on a story of resilience in crisis, detailing how the company’s business started to rebound after the worst of the pandemic. The other challenges it lists include violent party houses and a raft of “complex, evolving, and sometimes inconsistent and ambiguous laws and regulations.”

Its growth plan is vague. The word “growth” appears 135 times in the filing, but the company’s plan is quite general. Airbnb wants to build its host and guest community, invest in its brand and design new products. Many Airbnb hosts soured on the company after it changed its cancellation policy early in the pandemic, and the S-1 notes that if it can’t retain hosts or attract more, its “business, results of operations, and financial condition” would take a hit.

Investing early paid off. Airbnb backer Sequoia Capital led a $600,000 funding round in 2009. It’s the company’s largest shareholder, with 81.3 million shares and a 16.6 percent stake, the S-1 shows. If the company’s valuation were $30 billion, as reports have estimated, Sequoia’s stake would be worth $5 billion. Airbnb execs control 43.8 percent: Chesky owns 76.9 million shares for a 15.4 percent stake. Co-founders Nathan Blecharczyk and Joe Gebbia each have a 14.2 percent stake.

The CEO comes cheap. Sort of. Last year, Chesky’s base salary was $110,000. He gave that up after the onset of Covid, and starting this month will have a base salary of $1. But per the S-1, over a decade the CEO could get a stock award totaling $120 million. (The shares vest only if Airbnb stock hits certain milestones, and could reach $12 million a year for 10 years.) Chesky, however, “intends to donate the net proceeds from this award to community, philanthropic and charitable causes.”

Fun fact: Chesky has a security detail. This includes a car and driver, and cost the company $307,797 last year, according to the S-1.

[contact-form-7 404 "Not Found"]

[contact-form-7 404 "Not Found"]

The post Inside Airbnb’s IPO pitch appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Powered by WPeMatico

  • 16 November 2020
  • The Real Deal
  • Uncategorized
  •  Like
U.S. retail spending slows but still higher than last year →← NexPoint Advisors buys self-storage company for $900M
  • Recent Posts

    • CIM trades The Lot at Formosa to sidecar fund for $230M June 25, 2025
    • $10M home trade marks Silver Lake’s priciest deal ever June 25, 2025
    • If Rick Caruso were California’s next governor, it’d be all about “attacking regulation” June 25, 2025
    • LA hotel owners stop renovations, look to sell amid minimum wage hike June 25, 2025
    • Post Investment Group grabs Northridge apartments for $51M June 25, 2025
  • Recent Comments

    • Archives

      • June 2025
      • May 2025
      • April 2025
      • March 2025
      • February 2025
      • January 2025
      • December 2024
      • November 2024
      • October 2024
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      • July 2024
      • June 2024
      • May 2024
      • April 2024
      • March 2024
      • February 2024
      • January 2024
      • December 2023
      • February 2023
      • January 2023
      • December 2022
      • November 2022
      • October 2022
      • September 2022
      • August 2022
      • July 2022
      • June 2022
      • May 2022
      • April 2022
      • March 2022
      • February 2022
      • January 2022
      • December 2021
      • November 2021
      • October 2021
      • September 2021
      • August 2021
      • July 2021
      • June 2021
      • May 2021
      • April 2021
      • March 2021
      • February 2021
      • January 2021
      • December 2020
      • November 2020
      • October 2020
      • September 2020
      • August 2020
      • July 2020
      • June 2020
      • May 2020
      • April 2020
      • March 2020
      • February 2020
      • January 2020
      • December 2019
      • November 2019
      • October 2019
      • September 2019
      • August 2019
      • July 2019
      • June 2019
      • May 2019
      • April 2019
      • March 2019
      • February 2019
      • January 2019
      • December 2018
      • November 2018
      • October 2018
      • September 2018
      • August 2018
      • July 2018
      • June 2018
      • May 2018
      • April 2018
      • March 2018
      • February 2018
      • January 2018
      • December 2017
    • Global Property and Asset Mangement, Inc.
      137 North Larchmont
      Los Angeles, California 90010
      +1 213-427-1127

    © 2025 GPAM