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iSelect float sinks but cofounder Damien Waller still $48 million richer

iSelect floated on the ASX yesterday to dashed expectations, sinking 15.7% below its opening price by the end of its debut trading session. The stockโ€™s fall, from $1.85 to close at $1.56, took place against a wider sharemarket fall of 1.47%. The Melbourne-based company, which primarily operates a website allowing consumers to compare the price […]
Myriam Robin
Myriam Robin

iSelect floated on the ASX yesterday to dashed expectations, sinking 15.7% below its opening price by the end of its debut trading session.

The stockโ€™s fall, from $1.85 to close at $1.56, took place against a wider sharemarket fall of 1.47%.

The Melbourne-based company, which primarily operates a website allowing consumers to compare the price of different insurance products, has faced ongoing questions about the longevity of its business model.

Evan Lucas, a market strategist at IG Markets, told SmartCompany the problem for iSelect is that the industry has relatively few barriers to entry, making it a far more competitive space than investors would like.

โ€œiSelect has structural problem, which is that itโ€™s not a hard model to replicate. You already see competitors like comparethemarket.com.au.โ€

Recent years have seen a slew of online-only companies like SEEK and carsales.com.au become sharemarket darlings. But Lucas isnโ€™t sure iSelect has the same characteristics.

โ€œThere are plenty of examples in the market of these types of companies which survive and those which donโ€™t. The ones who do are very specific, and offer a niche product.

โ€œiSelectโ€™s ability for them to be the place to go and compare health insurance plans wonโ€™t be a long-term thing unless they come up with a product offering that keeps them ahead of the curve. Without that, itโ€™s not going to be easy for them to hold onto their share price.

โ€œIt really comes down to whether you see iSelect as a good long-term play, or just a short-term speculative thing to invest in. At the moment, there are more sellers than buyers.โ€

Danny Goldberg, a director of Select Equities, is more sanguine, telling SmartCompany iSelect remains โ€œa great businessโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s just a little overvalued,โ€ he says.

Goldberg also points to poor market conditions as having helped sink iSelectโ€™s float, an assessment Lucas also makes.

โ€œThe broader sharemarket fall probably contributed about 20% to the fall,โ€ Lucas says. โ€œYesterday was not a brilliant day to be listing.โ€

Even so, the float shouldnโ€™t be seen as a disaster. iSelectโ€™s early investors are a great deal richer, though not as rich as earlier reports suggested they were about to become.

Cofounder Damien Waller took 31 million shares into the IPO. Those shares would now be worth $48.3 million at yesterdayโ€™s closing price. Towards the start of this month, brokerage firm Credit Suisse had valued iSelect at between $414 million to $515 million, which at the upper bound valued Wallerโ€™s then 15% stake at close to $77 million. But still – $48.3 million isnโ€™t bad to go on. Waller still holds a 9% stake in the company.

The other founder, David Urpani, sold out his 2% stake way back in 2008, meaning the next biggest individual beneficiary is lawyer Leslie Webb, who went into the IPO with 2 million shares, worth $3.1 million at yesterdayโ€™s closing price.

Mi9, a joint venture between Microsoft and Nine Entertainment, sold its 30.24% stake yesterday for $114.7 million.

Waller told Fairfax the float was a โ€œmajor milestoneโ€ for the company, and was the โ€œnext step in a much longer journey for iSelectโ€.

โ€œWe see a great deal of opportunity and growth ahead of us,” he said. SmartCompany tried to get in touch, but received no response by deadline.

The float is the second high-profile float this month. Two weeks ago, IVF company Virtus Health listed to more success. Its shares are still trading at around 5% above its opening price.

Even though the float didnโ€™t go as well as some would have hoped, Lucas says the IPO drought that saw hardly any companies list in 2012 is drawing to an end.

โ€œThereโ€™s excitement about the IPO market right now,โ€ Lucas says. โ€œBut what yesterdayโ€™s float shows is that investors are being very deliberate and careful about what they back and what they donโ€™t.โ€