The AI firm’s journey so far shows nobody has a real idea of what cyber-fighting tech is worth

A loss-making business that uses artificial intelligence to spot cyber abnormalities was never likely to be easy to value but, even with that proviso, Darktrace’s first six months as a public company have been extraordinary.

The story so far is a listing at 250p in May to a rapturous reception. By September, the shares were touching £10, equating to a valuation of £7bn, enough for entry to the FTSE 100 index to replace private equity-bound Morrisons. The decline started almost simultaneously. The shares lost a fifth one day last week as a broker turned bearish, and have mostly kept falling. Wednesday’s 5% tumble took the price to 600p.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Floods, storms and searing heat: 2020 in extreme weather

While Covid has dominated the news, the world has also felt the…

Tata Steel’s Port Talbot blast furnaces expected to close, in ‘utterly devastating’ decision – business live

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, including the latest…

John Hinckley gains full freedom 41 years after Ronald Reagan assassination attempt

Hinckley, who shot and wounded the president in 1981 but was acquitted…