Dropbox Shares Leap in I.P.O., and Silicon Valley Smiles
Dropbox, the file-sharing company and Silicon Valley darling, had a strong market debut Friday, a reassuring sign for the technology industry and for the investors who have billions locked up in other highly valued but privately held start-ups.
Shares of San Francisco-based Dropbox soared above $30 shortly after trading in the stock opened Friday morning. That was 45 percent higher than the $21-per-share price at which the company sold 36 million shares on Thursday night. The initial public offering valued Dropbox at $9.2 billion.
[...] Founded in 2007 by two Massachusetts Institute of Technology computer science students, Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi, Dropbox has never turned an annual profit, despite strong sales growth.
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(Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 26 2018, @05:30PM
Even if it always rose, eventually there would be sellers who want to turn the stock into cash to buy something.
Even if it always sunk, as long as it doesn't sink as fast as other investments, there would be buyers who want a slower rate of decay.