: Amazon-backed Deliveroo targets $12 billion valuation in blockbuster London IPO

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Amazon-backed Deliveroo is expected to be valued at up to £8.8 billion when the food delivery app starts selling its shares on the London Stock Exchange
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in what will be one of the city’s biggest initial public offerings in years.

Deliveroo, which is 16% owned by online retailer Amazon
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set a price range for its listing of between £3.90 and £4.60 a share, valuing the business at between £7.6 billion and £8.8 billion ($12.2 billion), the company said in a statement on Monday.

The sale consists of as many as 384.6 million shares, excluding any shares offered as part of an overallotment issue. Of that, around £1 billion of new shares have been set aside for the company itself, with the rest going to existing investors who are selling shares.

Read: Amazon-backed Deliveroo gets ready to test a red-hot global IPO market

Deliveroo plans to invest the proceeds of the IPO to further its growth, which has soared during the COVID-19 pandemic as government-enforced lockdowns have closed restaurants. That helped propel San-Francisco-based DoorDash
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to a more than $60 billion valuation in its IPO in New York in December.

In a short trading update, Deliveroo said gross transaction value (GTV) — which measures the total value of orders it receives — rose 121% in January and February compared with the same period last year.

“We have seen a strong start to 2021 and we are only at the start of an exciting journey in a large, fast-growing online food delivery market, with a huge opportunity ahead,” said Will Shu, the co-founder and chief executive of Deliveroo.

Read: DoorDash shares sink as revenue more than triples but loss more than doubles

However, some analysts are starting to question whether food delivery services companies will be able to sustain their rapid levels growth as COVID-19 vaccinations gather pace and customers return to eating out. DoorDash recently forecast that demand for home-delivered food would moderate in 2021, with order growth expected to be in double, rather than triple, digits.

“Although this insatiable demand for takeout food isn’t likely to fully unravel there is inevitably going to be a drop in demand as diners seize the opportunity to book tables at their favorite eateries when restrictions do ease,” said Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Competition in the sector is also fierce, and Deliveroo competes with Uber Eats, Just Eat
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and a host of others,” Streeter said, adding that Just Eat Takeaway has already announced its intention to ramp up operations in the U.K.

Read: London set to overhaul listing rules to attract tech IPOs and cash in on blank-check boom

Deliveroo is the latest company to take advantage of a red hot IPO market, which is on track for a record first quarter in terms of proceeds raised from new listings, after a series of companies, including cult boot maker Dr. Martens
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and online greeting-cards retailer Moonpig
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made their market debut on the LSE in recent weeks.

Deliveroo plans to issue dual-class shares that would keep Shu in control for three years. 

The structure, which is more common in the U.S. — where it is used by companies including technology giants Google parent Alphabet
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 and Facebook
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— comes amid a U.K. government-backed report published in February that recommended London make it easier for founders to keep control after listing and reduce the amount of equity a company must sell to outsiders, to encourage tech companies to choose the city for their IPOs.