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The Verge
28 minutes ago
- The Verge
Figma is going public
Figma, the platform that specializes in collaborative interface design, has filed for an initial public offering (IPO). The company will trade under the ticker symbol 'FIG' as it prepares to 'double down' on its investments in AI. Figma was nearly acquired by Adobe for $20 billion in 2022, but the two companies scrapped the deal in 2023 after facing pressure from regulators in the UK and the European Union. Last year, Figma CEO Dylan Field hinted at going public last year during an interview included in The Verge's Command Line newsletter, saying, 'There are two paths that venture-funded startups go down. You either get acquired or you go public. And we explored thoroughly the acquisition route.' Figma confidentially filed for an IPO in April. Its new filing reveals Figma's revenue spiked to $228.2 million from $156.2 million when compared to the same time last year. This year, Figma expanded its library of tools to include features for website building, AI coding, branded marketing, and digital illustration. It has also started letting AI models gain access to its design servers to make coding more efficient. 'We're already investing heavily in AI and we plan to double down even more in this area,' Field says in the filing. 'AI spend will potentially be a drag on our efficiency for several years, but AI is also core to how design workflows will evolve going forward.'


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Figma Files for US IPO
00:00 It could be. I mean, there's a lot of interest right now in software companies that are managing to continue growing at this kind of ridiculously rapid pace. This north of 40% that Figma is doing. So there's a lot of enthusiasm for Figma. The big question for them is they have a core product of designing applications for computers, for phones, designing them. Can they expand into workplace apps? Can they expand into other creative tools? That's what's going to determine whether they're a a zoom. They make one thing well or whether they're a true platform company. That's a good question. Of course, Adobe, its former suitor, has moved on to really play in the AI you know, playground here to stigma have that same opportunity. All these software companies want to tell an AI story for Figma. It's that we're going to make designers more capable with A.I.. They also disclose a risk in their filings that if I get so good, there might be less designers in the economy because you don't need to hire as many of them. And we're selling software per user and that could be bad for us. So that's the kind of eternal question for these vendors right now. I am curious about the health of the company's finances. We just laid out the revenue and of course the loss per share last year that we point out for the most recent quarter. The first quarter they did actually have net income. And when you look at the income statement and the balance sheet that they disclosed in the S-1, what is it telling you? It's telling us that, yeah, they're still a high growth software company. There's been this trend of software companies kind of staying private as long as they can, almost until they're turning a profit and Databricks comes to mind. They are IPO going a little sooner and they call out in their report that A.I. is going to weigh on their efficiency, on their profit for a little while. Is that an excuse? Is that the button you press when your profits are low? It could be, but they got a lot of cash on the balance sheet. They got $1,000,000,000 and, you know, 60 million of that is in Bitcoin. And so they have they have a lot of Bitcoin on the balance sheet. CEO Dylan Field, well known as a Bitcoin guy. So you know, they are putting their money where their mouth is wonderful or they see how it pays off for a company like strategy. So when would bitcoin on and your financial statements. Right right. Ready for it. Thank you so Bloomberg's for Brody Ford.


Fast Company
an hour ago
- Fast Company
Figma files to go public on the NYSE as ‘FIG'
The collaborative design tool Figma continues its march toward going public in one of the most highly anticipated IPOs in the history of design software. Wasting no time licking its wounds after European regulators blocked its $20 million acquisition by Adobe in late 2023, Figma quietly filed its S-1 paperwork to the SEC in April. Now, it's announced that the S-1 has been made available to the public. That S-1, which you can read here, is full of interesting tidbits, as private companies disclose financial information for the first time. The biggest news? Figma disclosed making $749 million in revenue in 2024—with a (non GAAP) profit margin of around 17% (a figure that looks at profits pre-taxes and some other expenditures). Its revenue was up 48% from 2023, signaling that Figma's growth is quite strong. With revenue in hand, we can see that Figma is about 1/28th the size of Adobe, or about 1/3 of the size of Canva (on a balance sheet, at least). Meanwhile, Figma's install numbers are confident. The company claims 13 million people use Figma monthly. Ninty-five percent of Fortune 500 companies use the software. And a surprising two thirds of its users aren't designers. Figma's public debut date and share pricing has yet to be determined, but it will go by the very cute NYSE symbol 'FIG.'