UPDATED 21:22 EST / SEPTEMBER 19 2019

APPS

It’s official: Airbnb to go public in 2020

Airbnb Inc. is finally going public. The online accommodation marketplace said today it expects to become a publicly traded company during 2020.

The press release was made pursuant to securities law and gave no details about the exact timing of the IPO or its size. But it came a day after the company published an update on its prospects.

“As our community has grown, our business has thrived,” the update read. “In the second quarter of 2019, Airbnb recognized substantially more than $1 billion in revenue. The second quarter of 2019 marked the second quarter in our history in which Airbnb revenue exceeded $1 billion.”

The update also provided some other business figures. Through Sept. 15, hosts who have listed their homes and rooms on Airbnb have now received more than $80 billion in direct payments. In a clear bid to curry favor amid criticism that the service reduces long-term rental stock, it also said teachers specifically have made $160 million from the service.

Airbnb added that there are now more than 7 million Airbnb listings in more than 100,000 cities in the world, more listings than the eight largest hotel groups have in rooms combined. Six guests are said to check into an Airbnb listing every second and more than 300 cities globally have had in excess of 100,000 guest arrivals at Airbnb listings this year.

Speculation around Airbnb going public goes back several years. During a $1 billion venture capital raise in March 2017, it was suggested that the money was to allow the company to avoid having to seek funding in public markets. A C-suite change in February 2018 following the departure of Chief Financial Officer Laurence Tosi prompted Airbnb to rule out going public that year.

Airbnb has not raised any venture capital since 2017, last raising money on secondary markets in September 2018 and giving it a clear 12-month run-up to today’s announcement.

The exact size of Airbnb’s IPO is unknown, given that it has raised at least $4.4 billion coming into it and was last valued at $31 billion in 2017, a figure likely far higher today. But it’s a reasonable guess that the public offering will be a big one. It won’t be as big as that of Uber Technologies Inc., which floated on a valuation of $82.4 billion earlier this year, but it will certainly be up there.

Whatever the number, the winners will be Airbnb’s investors, which include Andreessen Horowitz, Manhattan Venture Partners, Sequoia Capital, TCV, Firstmark and Altimeter Capital.

Photo: opengridscheduler/Flickr

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