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InfiniBand backer Voltaire files for IPO

Stephen Shankland CNET News

Published: 11 Jul 2007 08:56 BST

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InfiniBand is going public.

Voltaire, which sells networking equipment and software for the high-speed communication technology, filed plans on Tuesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to hold an initial public offering of its stock. The company, based in Herzeliya, Israel, and Billerica, Massachusetts, said it hopes to raise $67.5m (£33.2m).

Several major companies, including Intel and IBM, once envisioned InfiniBand as a general-purpose server communication technology, but instead it has found its main niche linking numerous servers together into high-performance technical computing clusters. But InfiniBand has stayed a step ahead of other technologies, such as the ubiquitous Ethernet and the storage-specific Fibre Channel, and backers still hope to see it used for general business computing.

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InfiniBand hasn't been a recipe for stand-alone success among start-ups. QLogic acquired one InfiniBand specialist, PathScale, and Cisco acquired another, Topspin Communications. Voltaire itself has diversified, too; its InfiniBand switches also have high-speed 10Gbps Ethernet abilities.

Voltaire had revenue of $30.4m in 2006 and $8.6m in the first quarter of 2007, the company said in the filing. For those periods, it reported a net loss to shareholders of $13m and $4.2m, respectively.

The company plans to sell 5,770,000 shares at a price between $12 and $14 per share. In addition, other Voltaire shareholders are selling 1,923,000 shares in the offering. As many as 865,462 shares from Voltaire and 288,488 shares from the other shareholders also can be sold to cover over-allotments, the company said. At $13 per share and accounting for expenses and discounts to the IPO underwriters, Voltiare expects to raise $67.5m, the company said.

The company plans to trade under the ticker "Volt" on the Nasdaq market.

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