CNBC Stock Blog
- Mulling Buffett's Stock Advice? Get in With REITs: Fund Managers
- So Now You Can’t Give Microsoft Away?
- Groupon Needs More Disclosure: Analyst
- China’s Steelmakers Set for Turnaround: Analyst
- Bulls Bet Silicon Motion Will Bounce
- Tobacco Stocks a Hot Dividend Play: Analyst
- Forget the Earnings, Disney’s Issue Is the Multiple: Analyst
- Drug Stocks Do Well in ‘Gloom and Doom’ Market: Analyst
ABOUT THE CNBC STOCK BLOG
RSS FEED
CNBC EXPLAINS
March of the Profitless IPOs
CNBC Senior Stocks Commentator
There was a time when big profitless IPOs were at the end of an IPO cycle, signalling some kind of market top.
![]() |
Kim Heacox | Getty Images |
Intralinks Holdings. This company lets businesses securely exchange data in the cloud. This is its third swipe at going public since 1999.
It's coming out just three years after private equity got involved and three areas concern:
It's making no money. It has a bunch of debt. A ton of competition.
And in my humble opinion, it's trying to capitalize on anything remotely cloud-related before that window closes.

Herb Greenberg
Senior Stocks
Commentator
The second is NXP Semiconductor, which makes chips used for all sorts of products. It's backed by KKR [KKR
Loading...
()
], Bain and Silverlake, among others.
Like IntraLinks, it has a history of losses. And tons of competition, including Freescale, which is rumored to be looking to IPO soon.
And, like many private equity deals, it has billions in debt—five billion, to be precise. It's so much debt, in fact, that any use of the $600 million or so in proceeds will be a drop in the bucket to help repay the debt.
My take: Expect to see more of these highly leveraged, profitless deals as private equity looks to exit into a market that appears interested mostly in the trade, not the company.
- Quiz: IPOs Worth Noting
- Slideshow: Largest IPOs in History
- IPO Calendar is Crucial Market Test _____________________________
CNBC Data Pages:
- Dow 30 Stocks—In Real Time
- Oil, Gold, Natural Gas Prices Now
- Where's the US Dollar Today?
- Track Treasury Prices Here












