

ExpensifyĮxpense management software company Expensify debuted on the Nasdaq in November, with shares listing at $27, valuing the company at $2.2 billion. Shares did climb by as much as 24% on the first day of trading, however, valuing the company at $650 million. 11, where it raised a modest $100 million. BackblazeĬloud data and backup specialist Backblaze wasn’t the splashiest tech IPO of the year when it debuted on the Nasdaq on Nov. The New York-based company specializes in customer engagement data, helping brands such as HBO Max, Sephora, and Grubhub better understand their customers and boost their online marketing efforts. Having initially priced its IPO at $65, shares rose to $93, valuing the company at $8.4 billion. Marketing software company Braze saw its shares rise by as much as 44% during a brisk first day of trading on the Nasdaq in November. The company is based in San Francisco, but is "remote-first" for its 1,500 employees. It closed the day at $85, valuing the company at $14 billion.įounded in 2012 by college friends Mitchell Hashimoto and Armon Dadgar, HashiCorp is best known for its various open-source software products, such as the hugely popular infrastructure-as-code tool Terraform, password-management tool Vault and container-management tool Nomad. 9, where its stock debuted on the Nasdaq above expectations at $80 a share and rose by as much as 10% on the first day of trading.

Open-source software company HashiCorp enjoyed a solid public debut on Dec.
