Thursday, September 18
Netskope CEO Sanjay Beri on IPO debut, company growth outlook

Netskope shares opened at $23 in their Nasdaq debut after the cybersecurity software provider sold shares at the top end of its range.

Shares were last up more than 25%.

The company, which trades under the ticker symbol “NTSK,” priced shares at $19 on Wednesday evening, raising over $908 million and valuing the company at $7.3 billion. Earlier this week, the company upped its expected range from between $15 and $17 a share to $17 to $19.

CEO and co-founder Sanjay Beri said in an interview with CNBC ahead of the first trade that the offering was more than 20 times oversubscribed. Netskope aims to help companies protect their data while harnessing artificial intelligence tools.

“The world is moving to AI and cloud,” he said. “That requires a redefinition of the biggest market in security, data network security. That’s what we are.”

Netskope is the latest debut in the IPO market’s reopening stretch, after high inflation and rising interest rates stifled investor interest in early 2022.

Hope resurfaced at the start of 2025, but aggressive tariff plans from President Donald Trump sparked global trade war fears and forced companies such as Swedish buy now, pay later company Klarna and ticket reseller StubHub to hit the brakes.

Now, appetite is bouncing back.

Both companies debuted this month, with Klarna jumping 15% on opening day. Design software firm Figma and Circle have more than doubled since their debuts, and data center renter CoreWeave has more than tripled despite a lackluster start.

The new year also ushered in a lively period for cybersecurity dealmaking and activity. Google’s acquisition of Wiz and Palo Alto Networks‘ plan to buy CyberArk for $25 billion have gone down as the most significant tech deals to date. Big cybersecurity players such as CrowdStrike and Zscaler have been acquiring.

Beri told CNBC that the company doesn’t typically go for larger acquisitions based on annual recurring revenue. Bigger deals aren’t off the table, Netskope typically targets “specific” technology and teams, he said.

The company operates in a competitive landscape, listing Palo Alto Networks, Broadcom, and Cisco among its fiercest contenders. But Beri said his goal isn’t to become a one-stop cybersecurity shop.

“I’m not a believer that in security and networking, people want one platform,” he said. “People need to play well with each other in the industry and integrate for the best of the customer.”

Netskope, which filed for its initial public offering last month, hasn’t reached profitability yet. Revenues totaled $328 million for the six months ended in July, and the company reported a net loss of $170 million.

Beri told CNBC that the company plans to turn free cash flow positive this year. Annual recurring revenues surpassed $700 million at the end of July.

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/18/netskope-ipo-stock-nasdaq-ntsk.html

Share.

Leave A Reply

17 + eighteen =

Exit mobile version