Bending Spoons completed its public listing this week, ending a decade of acquisitions conducted with almost no press commentary. The Milan-based operator now holds AOL, Vimeo, Evernote, and Meetup under a portfolio architecture serving more than 1 billion registered users. No roadshow. No SPAC. The filing appeared without warning.
The company paid an estimated $105 million for Evernote in 2023, roughly $500 million for Vimeo's assets in late 2023, and an undisclosed sum for AOL's remaining properties in early 2024. Each transaction occurred during valuation compression in legacy internet infrastructure. Bending Spoons specializes in buying mature platforms trading below replacement cost, then running them on shared operational rails. Employee count at acquired properties typically falls 40-60% within eighteen months. Revenue per employee rises accordingly. The model is extraction, not growth theater.
What separates this operator from typical roll-up vehicles is unit economics discipline and the absence of debt leverage. Bending Spoons runs on internal cash flow and has taken minimal outside capital since its 2013 founding. The portfolio generates an estimated $800 million in annual recurring revenue, primarily from legacy subscription bases that churn slowly. Vimeo alone retains roughly 287 million registered accounts, most dormant but a meaningful fraction still paying $7-20 monthly. AOL's email infrastructure still processes traffic for approximately 25 million active addresses. These are not growth assets. They are annuities with operational torque.
The public listing matters because it reveals non-consensus value in abandoned infrastructure. Venture-backed competitors spent the last five years chasing new categories while Bending Spoons bought the bones of 2010-era platforms at 15-25 cents on the original dollar. The strategy works when customer acquisition cost is zero—every user was acquired years ago by the previous owner—and when you can run multiple properties on a single engineering and support stack. Bending Spoons operates fewer than 700 employees against a user base exceeding 1 billion. The ratio is uncommon.
Allocators should watch secondary market pricing in the first 90 days post-listing, which will indicate whether public investors assign value to profitable obscurity or demand growth narratives. The company has signaled continued acquisition interest in consumer subscription platforms trading below 3x revenue. Likely targets include productivity tools, content libraries, and communication infrastructure with install bases above 50 million users and negative press sentiment. Bending Spoons does not buy momentum. It buys capitulation.
The firm's largest institutional backer is Starr Insurance, which held a minority stake prior to the listing. No major venture names appear in the cap table. The public float is expected to remain under 25% for the first year, with founders and early employees retaining operational control. The listing provides liquidity without governance dilution, a structure that works only when the business generates cash and management has no interest in quarterly guidance theater. Bending Spoons has published financials twice in ten years, both times under regulatory obligation.