Houston Chronicle

Oregon’s Dutch Bros Coffee launches IPO

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SALEM, Ore. — After humble beginnings as a pushcart operation in an Oregon town and growing into a company with hundreds of drive-thru coffee shops, Dutch Bros Coffee launched an initial public offering Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

The offering drew an enthusiast­ic response from investors, who sent shares of the company up by more than 50 percent within hours.

Dutch Bros Coffee Executive Chairman Travis Boersma rang the ceremonial first trade bell on the floor of the NYSE on Wednesday.

The company had an initial public offering price of $23. By the close of the day’s trading, the share price had jumped to about $37.

The IPO was the biggest in state history and made the coffee company the state’s fifth-most-valuable company, with a stock market value approachin­g that of Portland-based Columbia Sportswear, according to The Oregonian/OregonLive.

The Pacific Northwest is known for its love of coffee. Starbucks started in 1971 in Seattle’s historic Pike Place Market. Unlike that chain, which is now ubiquitous in the United States and beyond, Dutch Bros is 100 percent drivethru.

The shops with windmill emblems have sprouted up across the West and are now located as far east as Texas and Oklahoma.

Wearing a baseball cap turned backward and a T-shirt saying Rage Against the Machine — the name of a hard rock band — Boersma exuberantl­y banged a gavel while presiding over the closing bell at the NYSE while flanked by executives and guests of Dutch Bros Coffee.

“Who would have thought that you could take a coffee cart in a small little town like Grants Pass — really do what you hear about as you grow up as a kid, you know, the American dream — and actually go out and pull it off?” he told KDRV, an Oregon TV station. “It’s surreal,” he added. Company President and CEO Joth Ricci told IPO Edge, a news outlet focusing on new company share offerings, that the company decision to go public doesn’t mean its growth will be overly aggressive.

“We are not accelerati­ng growth because of the IPO but staying discipline­d,” Ricci told IPO Edge.

Boersma and his brother Dane started off in business in 1992 selling espresso-based beverages from their pushcart near the railroad tracks in the southern Oregon town of Grants Pass, which now has a population of about 37,000.

Among the current offerings are many sugary and energy drinks. Among them is Shark Attack, composed of an in-house brand of energy drink plus blue raspberry, coconut, lime and pomegranat­e syrups. A medium-sized blended, icy version packs 500 calories.

Dane Boersma died of amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, called ALS and also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, in 2009 at age 55.

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