Sonos IPO: “Smart” speaker maker set for public debut

Sonos is set Thursday to start life as a public company on Nasdaq. The maker of smart speakers for homes priced its initial public offering at $15 a share, beneath the anticipated $17-to-$19 range, suggesting weaker-than-expected investor demand for the stock. The offer price values Sonos at just under $1.5 billion. 

Possibly weighing against Sonos were disappointing earnings this week from technology giants including Facebook that pushed the tech sector lower in the past week. 

Sonos marked its market debut by reworking the sound of the opening and closing bell on the stock exchange, where it was scheduled to start trading under the ticker symbol “SONO.” 

The new Nasdaq bell is busier and more dramatic than its predecessor

Sonos redesigns the Nasdaq Bell by Sonos on YouTube

“Sonos Sound Experience Lead Giles Martin and Academy Award-winning sound engineer Chris Jenkins worked with Nasdaq on the project,” the company wrote in a blog post Thursday. “Experimenting with different instruments and techniques, our sound engineers artfully created a bell that honors Nasdaq’s roots.”

The wireless speaker maker lost about $14 million for the year that ended Sept. 30 on revenue of $992.5 million, according to a regulatory filing. It lost $38.2 million on $901.3 million in revenue the prior year.

The company’s high-end, web-connected speakers include the voice-activated Sonos One introduced in late 2017. Sonos’ rivals include Samsung and Bose.

The IPO comes after a trio of high-profile market debuts so far this year, including software company DocuSign, streaming music provider Spotify and cloud storage provider Dropbox.

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