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Meet The Valley's Two Newest Multimillionaire Cofounders, Thanks To Gigamon's Hot IPO Today

Julie Bort   

Meet The Valley's Two Newest Multimillionaire Cofounders, Thanks To Gigamon's Hot IPO Today
Enterprise1 min read

Gigamon founders

Gigamon

Gigamon cofounders Patrick Leong (right), Thomas Cheung

The latest in a long string of hot enterprise initial public offerings happened Wednesday morning: Gigamon.

It offered 6.75 million shares, with an initial price of $19 but investors pushed that up to over $23 almost the second its stock started trading. Shares are up about 35% now, at just under $26.

Gigamon makes technology that scans corporate and service provider networks to spot trouble before the network crashes. Its claim to fame is a product called GigaVUE, which can watch super high-speed networks (100Gb) in realtime without interfering with network traffic.

Gigamon's IPO pop is a windfall for its cofounders: Patrick Leong and Thomas Cheung. Leong sold 260,000 shares for ~$6.2 million (assuming a mid-way price of $24/share). Cheung let go of 200,0o0, which gained him ~$4.8 million (at $24/share). And that's just a fraction of what each cofounder is worth as of today. They each still hold over 2 million shares a piece, keeping 8.1% and 6.9% stakes, respectively.

The biggest winner of the day is venture capitalist investor Corey Mulloy, a partner at Highland Capital. His firm owns a 25% stake in Gigamon after selling 495,000 shares for about $11.9 million (at an estimated $24/share)

The company was aiming to net itself $80 million on the 4.5 million shares it sold on its $19 opening price. All around a good day for Gigamon.

It joins other great enterprise IPOs in the last few weeks: Tableau Software and Marketo.

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