What does Red Hat’s sale to IBM tell us about Couchbase’s valuation?
The IPO rush of 2021 continued this week with a fresh filing from NoSQL provider Couchbase. The company raised hundreds of millions while private, making its impending debut an important moment for a number of private investors, including venture capitalists.
According to PitchBook data, Couchbase was last valued at a post-money valuation of $580 million when it raised $105 million in May 2020. The company - despite its expansive fundraising history - is not a unicorn heading into its debut to the best of our knowledge.
We'd like to uncover whether it will be one when it prices and starts to trade, so we dug into Couchbase's business model and its financial performance, hoping to better understand the company and its market comps.
The Couchbase S-1The Couchbase S-1 filing details a company that sells database tech. More specifically, Couchbase offers customers database technology that includes what NoSQL can offer (schema flexibility," in the company's phrasing), as well as the ability to ask questions of their data with SQL queries.
Couchbase's software can be deployed on clouds, including public clouds, in hybrid environments, and even on-prem setups. The company sells to large companies, attracting 541 customers by the end of its fiscal 2021 that generated $107.8 million in annual recurring revenue, or ARR, by the close of last year.
Couchbase breaks its revenue into two main buckets. The first, subscription, includes software license income and what the company calls support and other" revenues, which it defines as post-contract support," or PCS, which is a package of offerings, including support, bug fixes and the right to receive unspecified software updates and upgrades" for the length of the contract.
The company's second revenue bucket is services, which is self-explanatory and lower-margin than its subscription products.