TL;DR:
• StubHub filed updated S-1 with Q1 2025 results after April tariff pause
• Renaissance Capital estimates $1B raise, potential September debut
• 2024 revenue hit $1.79B with just $2.8M net loss
• CEO Eric Baker controls 90% voting power despite 5.2% stake
StubHub just signaled its billion-dollar IPO is back from the dead. The ticketing marketplace filed an updated S-1 Monday with fresh Q1 2025 financials, marking its return after pausing in April when Trump administration tariffs spooked Wall Street. With nearly $1.8 billion in 2024 revenue and razor-thin losses, the company could debut as early as next month.
StubHub is making its second run at going public, and this time the numbers look compelling enough to actually cross the finish line. The ticketing resale giant filed an updated S-1 registration statement Monday, including first-quarter 2025 results that weren't available during its initial March filing attempt.
The timing tells the story of a company that got caught in political crossfire. StubHub initially filed its public S-1 in late March, positioning for what industry experts expected to be a blockbuster debut. Then Trump administration tariff announcements in April sent public markets into a tailspin, forcing the company to pump the brakes along with dozens of other IPO hopefuls.
"This fresh S-1 could mean a debut next month," according to IPO tracking firm Renaissance Capital, which estimated in March that the offering could raise $1 billion. The firm's September timeline aligns with the traditional post-Labor Day IPO window when institutional investors return from summer breaks.
The updated financials paint a picture of a massive marketplace business that's finally hitting profitability stride. StubHub generated $1.79 billion in revenue during 2024 while recording just a $2.8 million net loss – essentially break-even territory for a company of its scale. That's a dramatic turnaround from years of steep losses as the platform invested heavily in technology and market expansion.
StubHub declined to comment on IPO timing, citing quiet period restrictions that kick in once companies file public registration statements. But the decision to update financial disclosures rather than withdraw the filing entirely signals management confidence in current market conditions.