Instacart, the grocery-delivery company that saw its business boom during the pandemic, priced its long-awaited IPO at $30 a share on Monday, and will become the first notable venture-backed tech company to hit the U.S. public market since December 2021.
There were 22 million shares sold in the initial public offering, with 14.1 million coming from the company and 7.9 million from existing shareholders.
Instacart co-founder Apoorva Mehta owns shares worth over $800 million, and is selling a small portion of them in the IPO.
The company said co-founders Brandon Leonardo and Maxwell Mullen are each selling 1.5 million, while Mehta is selling 700,000.
Former employees, including those who were in executive roles as well as in product and engineering, are selling a combined 3.2 million shares.
Persons:
Instacart, Andreessen Horowitz, Rowe Price, Apoorva Mehta, Mehta, Fidji Simo, Simo, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Brandon Leonardo, Maxwell Mullen
Organizations:
Nasdaq, Kroger, Costco, Sequoia, Fidelity, Target, Walmart, Facebook, JPMorgan
Locations:
Amazon