Bending Spoons, the Milan-based software consolidator, completed its transition to public markets with a portfolio that includes AOL, Vimeo, and Evernote—brands that collectively claim over one billion users. The company disclosed minimal operational details in its filing, maintaining the opacity that characterized its private acquisitions over the past eighteen months. Market participants estimate the entity now operates at a $3.8B to $4.2B post-money valuation based on comparable trading multiples for B2C software platforms.
The listing formalizes what had been a quiet accumulation strategy. Bending Spoons acquired AOL from Yahoo in late 2023 for an undisclosed sum believed to be $150M to $200M, a fraction of the brand's peak valuation. Vimeo came earlier in 2023 for approximately $525M after the video platform's standalone public run faltered. Evernote, purchased in 2022, reportedly cost under $100M—down from a $1B private valuation seven years prior. The company's thesis centers on extracting cash from legacy user bases through subscription optimization and aggressive cost reduction, not product reinvention.
What allocators need to understand is the structural arbitrage at play. Bending Spoons buys consumer software brands after they've exhausted venture-backed growth narratives but before user attrition becomes terminal. The playbook: cut headcount by 40-60%, migrate infrastructure to cheaper jurisdictions, implement algorithmic pricing tests, and harvest declining but still-massive installed bases. AOL still generates an estimated $400M to $500M in annual revenue from legacy email users and content licensing. Vimeo's creator base, while shrinking, supports $300M+ in subscription revenue. These are not growth assets. They are yield instruments for a firm that operates more like a distressed debt fund than a product company.
The public structure creates new information asymmetries. Bending Spoons has no history of quarterly earnings calls, no investor relations apparatus, and no disclosed board composition beyond founder Luca Ferrari. The listing appears designed to provide liquidity for early backers—reportedly including NB Renaissance Partners and Starr Insurance—rather than to fuel acquisition capital. The company still holds $200M+ in undrawn credit facilities arranged in 2023, suggesting the IPO proceeds will flow to shareholders, not the balance sheet.
Operators should monitor Q2 2025 disclosure requirements for the first full-quarter revenue breakdown by brand. Watch for any material acceleration in Vimeo churn rates above the 8-10% quarterly baseline established pre-acquisition—that would signal the monetization strategy is cannibalizing the asset faster than planned. AOL's email product team, reduced to under fifty engineers according to former employees, represents a structural risk if uptime degrades. Evernote has already seen premium subscriber counts fall an estimated 22% year-over-year since acquisition, per third-party usage data.
The tell is not what Bending Spoons says about its portfolio. It is how long the company can extract cash from brands it has no intention of growing.