Cape Times

Will it be Rovio’s bonanza?

- Ruth David

THE ANGRY birds at Rovio Entertainm­ent are set to lay a golden egg for the company’s founders.

The firm is planning an initial public offering (IPO) as early as next month that could value the maker of the Angry Birds mobile games and movie at about $2 billion (R26.85bn), said people familiar with the matter.

The company could raise about $400 million from a local market listing, the people said, asking not to be identified as the details aren’t public. No final decisions have been made and the company could also choose to stay private for longer, they said.

A listing would test investors’ appetite for entertainm­ent software, a group whose shares have declined an average of 18 percent from their offer prices following IPOs this year, according to data.

That’s because mobile game makers often struggle to replicate the success of initial blockbuste­rs. King Digital Entertainm­ent, the creator of Candy Crush, was acquired for a 20 percent discount to its IPO price in 2015 amid revenue declines. And Netmarble Games, the maker of the Lineage and Stone Age mobile games – and South Korea’s biggest listing in seven years – has declined 17 percent since its shares started trading in May.

Carnegie Bank, Danske Bank and Deutsche Bank are among banks advising on a potential listing, the people said. Representa­tives for Rovio, Carnegie, Danske and Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

Rovio, based in Espoo, Finland, reported revenue growth of 34 percent for 2016 to €190.3 million (R3.02 billion) and earnings before interest and taxes of about €17.5m compared with a loss in the previous year. The company, like many game makers, has been searching for new growth after its initial success with the Angry Birds mobile game.

Proceeds from an IPO could help the company fund the Angry Birds Movie 2, planned for 2019.

The company’s first film in the francwhise, released last year, made about $350m in worldwide box-office sales.

Rovio is also focusing on fuelling demand for game titles such as Battle Bay and newer versions of Angry Birds.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Graphics for the Angry Bird computer game are displayed on an Apple iPad at the headquarte­rs of the game’s developer Rovio Mobile in Espoo, Finland. Rovio is a star Finnish start-up in a country struggling to fill the gap left by the declining value of...
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Graphics for the Angry Bird computer game are displayed on an Apple iPad at the headquarte­rs of the game’s developer Rovio Mobile in Espoo, Finland. Rovio is a star Finnish start-up in a country struggling to fill the gap left by the declining value of...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa