Shares of Astera Labs rose 55% in early trading on Nasdaq Wednesday, after the company raised $713 million in an initial public offering that priced well above the projected range.
Santa Clara, California-based Astera, a developer of data center connectivity technology with use cases in generative AI, priced shares at $36 each late Tuesday, above the already upwardly revised range of $32 to $34.
The offering represents one of the largest technology debuts in months.
Astera itself sold 16.8 million shares in the offering, while existing shareholders sold 3 million.
The company is trading under the symbol ALAB.
The well-received offering comes amid a period of great investor interest in artificial intelligence technology. Although Astera isn’t a generative AI company, it pitched itself as a provider of key enabling technology. In its IPO prospectus mission statement, it calls itself a provider of “semiconductor-based connectivity solutions that are purpose-built to unleash the full potential of cloud and AI infrastructure.”
The IPO also follows a period of sharp revenue growth. For 2023, Astera reported revenue of $116 million, up 45% from the prior year.
However, the company is not yet profitable. For 2023, Astera posted a net loss of $26 million, down from $58 million a year earlier.
Founded in 2017, Astera raised $206 million in known venture funding, including a $150 million Series D in late 2022. Its largest shareholders are Sutter Hill Ventures and Fidelity, with 13.7% and 7% stakes, respectively.
Related reading
- Astera Labs Seeks Up To $534M In IPO As AI Craze Continues
- Chipmaker Astera Labs Nabs $150M, Hits $3.1B Valuation
- Eye On AI: So Much For That Funding Slowdown
- Eye On AI: Despite Need, US-Based AI Chipmakers Not Seeing Investor Love
Illustration: Dom Guzman