Dropbox has no IPO plans - yet

Dropbox CEO and co-founder Drew Houston delivers a keynote speech during the New Economy Summit 2015 in Tokyo, Japan, on April 7, 2015. File picture: Toshifumi Kitamura

Dropbox CEO and co-founder Drew Houston delivers a keynote speech during the New Economy Summit 2015 in Tokyo, Japan, on April 7, 2015. File picture: Toshifumi Kitamura

Published Sep 22, 2015

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San Francisco - Cloud storage firm Dropbox, one of the best-known Silicon Valley startups, has no imminent plans for a public share offering, chief executive Drew Houston said on Monday.

“We don't have any plans right now,” Houston said during a question-and-answer session at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco.

“We raised some money at the end of last year. We're really enjoying having that flexibility.”

Dropbox, a popular application which allows individuals and businesses to access documents, photos and data from multiple devices, has a valuation estimated at some $10 billion, according to the research firm CB Insights.

Speculation has been swirling around an initial public offering (IPO) by Dropbox for months, fuelled in part by the hiring of chief financial officer Vanessa Wittman, who was a key executive at Motorola Mobility.

But enthusiasm over Dropbox may be cooled by the experience of rival storage firm Box, which went public in January.

After an initial jump, Box's share price has fallen below its IPO price of $14 a share, amid intensive competition in cloud computing from Google, Amazon, Microsoft and others.

Dropbox, launched in 2007, has 400 million users worldwide including 130 000 companies which pay for enterprise services.

AFP

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