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Raspberry Pi CEO Confirms Preparation of IPO Listing

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Bloomberg broke the news about Raspberry Pi leadership's lofty ambitions earlier this week—the news outlet reported on the UK-based "personal computer maker" appointing "bankers at Peel Hunt and Jefferies to prepare a London initial public offering (IPO)." In their opinion: "a listing that would be a win for the UK capital after an exodus of companies to the US." The Raspberry Pi 5 single-board computer launched last autumn, and proved to be a hit with hardware enthusiasts thanks to improved silicon delivering significant CPU and GPU uplifts (over Pi 4), and an in-house controller chip granting a fancier interface feature set. The Raspberry Pi Limited company is enjoying its many success stories, including an estimated valuation of ~$560 million and strategic investments courtesy of long-term partner, ARM Ltd.

Eben Upton, CEO of Raspberry Pi (Trading) Ltd., responded to a Tom's Hardware query regarding the Bloomberg news piece. He confirmed that banking firm "Peel Hunt and Jefferies" is involved in the preparation of an upcoming IPO, but nothing has been set in concrete. They expect to proceed: "when the market is ready. Right now there is no target valuation or a firm date." Upton discussed his firm's recent motivations: "We believe that London is the natural listing location for a company like Raspberry Pi, and that it wouldn't be an impediment to attracting US (or other international) investment, provided we're prepared to do the work to educate foreign investors." The listing is not expected to affect normal day-to-day operations, although he does not rule out the potential for growth: "If we do IPO at some point, I don't anticipate any changes to what Raspberry Pi Ltd does. Regardless, we're going to keep doing good engineering, designing the sorts of products we'd like to buy ourselves, and selling them to people (and companies) like us. Of course the Foundation would be able to use any money raised to do what it does at an even larger scale, which would be a great outcome."



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If we do IPO at some point, I don't anticipate any changes to what Raspberry Pi Ltd does.
Nonsense. Going public ALWAYS changes a company. Sometimes it's good, sometimes it's bad. I predict it will not be good in this case..

Goodbye RPi, been nice knowing you..
 
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Nonsense. Going public ALWAYS changes a company. Sometimes it's good, sometimes it's bad. I predict it will not be good in this case..

Goodbye RPi, been nice knowing you..
Most of the time its bad, now they have shareholders to deal with and increase accounting expenses. They might have chosen London over the US because of increases of US regulations.
 
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Cute, typical "we're going from a non-profit to shareholder driven "we'll torture and murder your family if it gives us 1% more yoy growth" corporate bullshit. Can you fault them, though? Greed is universally the most powerful motivator for humans, often overpowering the basic self preservation instinct. Raspberry Pi was steadily moving from being useful to trying to replace x86 mini-PCs for some unknown reason, for a few years now.
At least they helped to start this whole world of cool new things, so I can tinker with my new 100 euro, dual 2.5Gb/s SFP, 802.11ax, m.2 PCI-E equipped router (when it gets here, likely in a few weeks).
So I say: Great job, good riddance and die in a fire you corporate scum.
 
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