The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

High school makes $24M from Snap IPO

- By Kristin J. Bender

SAN FRANCISCO » A private Catholic high school in California’s Silicon Valley that made $24 million from an initial public offering of shares in Snap Inc. will use the windfall for financial aid, profession­al developmen­t, teacher training and funding of school programs, the school’s president said Friday.

The board of the high school in Mountain View agreed to invest $15,000 in seed money in Snap in 2012 based on a recommenda­tion of Barry Eggers, a venture capitalist who was also a parent of a student at the school at the time.

That’s when the company was just getting started. Snap is the company behind the Snapchat photo and video messaging applicatio­n.

Eggers, of the capital venture firm Lightspeed Venture Partners, is also the head of the school’s investment fund and had learned about the popular app from his Snapchat-using teen daughter.

The school held onto the investment until this week, when Snap shares sold for $17 each in an IPO. St. Francis sold 1.4 million shares at that price generating a gain of about $24 million.

The stock has since soared to about $29 as of Friday morning, making the remaining 600,000 shares that the school owns worth roughly $17 million.

“I think everyone understand­s it’s a pretty transforma­tional event for our school,” school president Simon Chiu said in an interview Friday.

Eggers’ connection was the only reason the school reaped the windfall, and it’s very un-

likely such a feat could be repeated outside Silicon Valley, said Stephen Andriole, a professor of business, accountanc­y and informatio­n systems at the Villanova School of Business in Pennsylvan­ia

“The only way to do this is through a personal relationsh­ip,” he said. “The probabilit­y of success is quite low.”

None of the school’s nearly 1,800 students were involved in the investment venture, he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Students interact at St. Francis High School Friday, March 3, 2017, in Mountain View, Calif. The red-hot IPO debut of vanishing-photo superstar Snap this week not only placed the Southern California startup at a $35 billion value.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Students interact at St. Francis High School Friday, March 3, 2017, in Mountain View, Calif. The red-hot IPO debut of vanishing-photo superstar Snap this week not only placed the Southern California startup at a $35 billion value.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States