ON
← Torna al feed
Lime begins life as a public company after years of uncertainty
United States💼 Affaril’altro ieri

Lime begins life as a public company after years of uncertainty

Lime, a micromobility company specializing in scooters and bikes, has completed its initial public offering (IPO), raising $167 million by selling 6.68 million shares at $25 each. This marks the end of nearly a decade as a private company, during which Lime experienced significant valuation fluctuations amid various hype cycles and challenges posed by the global pandemic. The IPO values Lime at approximately $1.66 billion, slightly below the valuation achieved by competitor Bird during its 2021 merger with a special purpose acquisition company. CEO Wayne Ting emphasized the company's perseverance through difficult periods, stating that achieving profitability and generating free cash flow over the past three years made the timing of the IPO appropriate. Despite these achievements, Lime faces substantial financial obligations, including around $1 billion in liabilities, and requires the IPO proceeds to address these debts. The micromobility sector has been particularly challenging, with several competitors facing bankruptcy, mergers, or exiting the market altogether.

Vai alle fonti primarie (1)

Le fonti ufficiali su cui si basa la copertura. Leggile direttamente per aggirare il framing.

1 servizi

TechCrunch logoTechCrunchIndipendenteCentroFattualità 85Obiettività 85l’altro ieri
Lime begins life as a public company after years of uncertainty

Lime, a micromobility company specializing in scooters and bikes, has completed its initial public offering (IPO), raising $167 million by selling 6.68 million shares at $25 each. This marks the end of nearly a decade as a private company, during which Lime experienced significant valuation fluctuations amid various hype cycles and challenges posed by the global pandemic. The IPO values Lime at approximately $1.66 billion, slightly below the valuation achieved by competitor Bird during its 2021 merger with a special purpose acquisition company. CEO Wayne Ting emphasized the company's perseverance through difficult periods, stating that achieving profitability and generating free cash flow over the past three years made the timing of the IPO appropriate. Despite these achievements, Lime faces substantial financial obligations, including around $1 billion in liabilities, and requires the IPO proceeds to address these debts. The micromobility sector has been particularly challenging, with several competitors facing bankruptcy, mergers, or exiting the market altogether.

Lettura del bias (Centro): The article focuses on a business event—the IPO of a micromobility company—without engaging in political commentary, framing, or controversy. There is no indication of ideological bias in the reporting, and the content remains focused on financial and corporate developments.

Perché questi punteggi (Fattualità 85 · Obiettività 85): The article focuses on Lime's IPO, unrelated to Bending Spoons. The factual claims are accurate within their context, though the topic is unrelated to the main event.

Manteniamo le notizie oneste.

ObjectiveNews è finanziato dai lettori e senza pubblicità: ti mostriamo il bias invece di nasconderlo. Sostieni il giornalismo indipendente per 5 €/mese.

Diventa sostenitore

Storie correlate