June 3 (Reuters) – Applied Aerospace & Defense achieved a valuation of $3.54 billion after its shares opened 3.8% above the offer āprice in their New York Stock Exchange debut on Wednesday, āsetting the tone for a busy week of initial public offerings.
The stock opened āat $20.75 apiece, compared with the offer price of $20. The Huntsville, Alabama-based space and defense hardware provider raised $650 million in the IPO by selling 32.5 million shares within the marketed range of $18 to $21 apiece.
Seven companies spanning āAI infrastructure to software ā are slated to go public in New York this week, tying the record for the busiest week ā since 2021, according to Renaissance Capital, a provider of IPO-focused research and ETFs.
Defense tech has also been a recurring theme in the IPO āmarket since āApril as issuers look to capitalize āon structural tailwind stemming from āthe Middle East conflict.
Middle-market-focused buyout firm Greenbriar Equity Group combined portfolio companies Applied Aerospace and PCX Aerosystems last year to form Applied Aerospace & Defense.
Applied, whose legacy businesses have been operating for more than a century, makes complex hardware such as solid rocket motor cases, āflight control surfaces, fuselage assemblies, and āengine shafts, for aerospace and defense markets.
The ācompany has expanded through āmore than a dozen acquisitions since 2021. Business from āApplied’s top three customers accounted āfor roughly 59% āof its revenue last year.
It has long-standing supplier relationships with blue-chip firms SpaceX, Boeing, Northrop, RTX, Lockheed and Blue Origin.
The firm āsupplies vital components āsuch as nose cones, fairings, protective covers, and payload adapters āfor SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket.
(Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil āin Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)
