Bending Spoons priced its Nasdaq IPO at $29 per share on the evening of June 30, 2026 — above its marketed $26-$28 range — selling shares to raise $1.68 billion at an $18.4 billion valuation. Shares opened the next morning at $31, traded as high as $42.50, and closed the first day near $40.50, up roughly 40% and valuing the Milan-based company at close to $25.7 billion under the ticker BSP.
Bending Spoons' business model is unusual for a company commanding this kind of market cap: rather than building new products, it acquires 'aging' or distressed consumer tech brands and revitalizes them through aggressive cost-cutting, renewed feature development and pricing changes. Its portfolio includes AOL, Eventbrite, Evernote, Meetup, Vimeo and FiLMiC Pro — a collection of once-prominent internet brands the company has explicitly said it has no plans to sell off, positioning itself as a permanent operator rather than a private-equity-style flipper.
The financial turnaround underpinning the IPO is real: Q1 2026 revenue hit $601 million, with subscriptions making up 84% of that total, and the company posted $27.4 million in net income — a swing from a $112 million net loss on $259 million of revenue in the same quarter a year earlier. That combination of more-than-doubled revenue and a return to profitability in twelve months is a rare pairing among this year's highest-profile tech listings, most of which are still burning cash to fund growth.
The IPO's reception is being read as a direct rebuttal to this year's broader 'SaaS slump' narrative, in which software valuations have compressed relative to the AI infrastructure and frontier-lab names dominating investor attention. Pricing above range and popping 40% suggests institutional demand remains real for profitable, cash-generative software businesses — even ones built on a roll-up strategy rather than a single flagship product.
Co-founder and Chief Product Officer Matteo Danieli, in a companion interview, credited the company's growth to deliberately minimizing the role of luck in its strategy: "Luck plays a big role in finding product-market fit," he said, "but luck is irrelevant when pursuing operational excellence." He added that Bending Spoons has built an explicit obsession with reducing luck's influence on outcomes, framing the company's edge as operational rigor applied to brands other owners had let stagnate.
The numbers in context: an $18.4 billion IPO valuation against an $11 billion private mark from 2025 means public investors priced Bending Spoons at nearly 2x its last private round, and the day-one close pushed that multiple past 2.3x — a rare instance this cycle of a company's public debut significantly exceeding rather than merely validating its private valuation.
For founders evaluating roll-up or brand-acquisition strategies, Bending Spoons' listing is proof that disciplined operational turnarounds of legacy consumer software can command premium public-market multiples even in an otherwise AI-obsessed IPO environment. For LPs, the pop is a useful reminder that not every 2026 listing needs an AI narrative to succeed — durable revenue growth and a credible path to profitability still command real premiums.
What to watch: whether Bending Spoons' stock holds its first-week gains once the initial pop settles, whether the company pursues further brand acquisitions with its new public currency, and whether other profitable, non-AI software roll-ups follow with their own listings given this reception.