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You Can Now Own A Piece Of Hot Computer Security Company FireEye

You Can Now Own A Piece Of Hot Computer Security Company FireEye
Enterprise1 min read

FireEye IPO

NASDAQ

FireEye IPO

Hot computer security startup FireEye entered the public market on Friday with an IPO that raised over $300 million.

At the last minute, it raised its opening price more than $3, from a range of $15-$17 to $20. This let it raise far more than the $175 million it had hoped for in its original prospectus. Its open-day valuation is a healthy $2.3 billion, reports the New York Times Michael De La Merced.

The company became a startup to watch after it nabbed a bigwig as its CEO, Dave DeWalt, former CEO of antivirus software maker McAfee. It raised $85.5 million in investment from Sequoia Capital, Norwest Venture Partners, Juniper Networks, Silicon Valley Bank, the CIA's venture-capital arm, In-Q-Tel, and others.

FireEye's tech solves a really hard security problem. It can detect two types of hacker attacks that are very difficult to stop: "zero day" attacks and "advanced persistent threats."Zero-day attacks" are where hackers use bugs the software vendor hasn't yet fixed. The vendor has had "zero days" to come up with a fix. APTs are when hackers use all means possible to break into a particular network.

FireEye's security "appliance"- a combination of hardware and software - finds these attacks by running the suspicious code or opening suspicious emails in a protected area to see what they do. The process takes a fraction of a second.

The company has more than doubled revenue in the first half of 2013 to $61.6 million, from $29.7 million in the first half of 2012. It posted a net loss of $67.2 million for the first half, compared to a loss of $14.3 million in the same period of 2012.

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