Bending Spoons completed a public listing this month, surfacing a $4 billion portfolio of consumer internet assets that includes AOL, Vimeo, and forty other applications serving more than one billion users. The Milan-based company executed the transaction without fanfare, maintaining the operational opacity that allowed it to acquire distressed brand-name properties while competitors chased enterprise SaaS multiples.
The company's model is surgical. It acquires neglected consumer apps with existing user bases, strips cost structure, applies a centralized product playbook, and monetizes through subscription conversions and user lifetime value extension. Bending Spoons bought Evernote in 2023, Meetup in 2022, and Vimeo for $350 million in cash earlier this year. It purchased AOL's brand and user base from Yahoo in a transaction that valued the 1990s internet icon at a fraction of its 2000 peak. Each acquisition followed the same pattern: a household name trading below replacement cost, operational bloat exceeding revenue growth, and a seller eager to exit a non-core asset.
The public listing matters because it confirms a structural arbitrage in consumer internet that institutional allocators largely missed. While venture capital poured $238 billion into early-stage companies in 2021 and 2022, Bending Spoons built a portfolio by buying mature, cash-generating properties at distressed valuations. The company's EBITDA margins reportedly exceed 40 percent post-acquisition, a function of centralizing engineering, customer support, and infrastructure across forty apps. That margin profile would place it in the top decile of public SaaS companies, except Bending Spoons generates cash from consumer subscriptions, not enterprise contracts. The unit economics are different. Consumer LTV is lower, but so is CAC when you acquire 50 million existing users in a single transaction.
The public filing also reveals a capital structure built for patient compounding. Bending Spoons raised $155 million in primary capital in 2023 at a reported $2.55 billion valuation, then added acquisitions that expanded the portfolio without proportional equity dilution. The company's founder, Luca Ferrari, retains majority voting control, which means the entity can continue buying distressed assets without quarterly earnings pressure or activist interference. That structure is rare among public consumer internet companies and positions Bending Spoons to accelerate consolidation as more 2010-era unicorns face refinancing stress in 2025 and 2026.
Operators should monitor Bending Spoons' next three acquisitions, which will clarify whether the model scales beyond the $500 million deal threshold. The company is reportedly in conversations to acquire additional Web 2.0 properties with eight-figure user bases, targeting assets where the seller's cost of capital exceeds the asset's cash yield. Family offices with exposure to late-stage consumer internet should also track Bending Spoons' retention metrics on Vimeo and AOL over the next twelve months, as those will signal whether the centralized playbook works on legacy brands or only on mobile-native apps. If retention holds, expect the company to bid on additional distressed household names in 2025.
The public listing validates a thesis that consumer internet consolidation follows a different clock than enterprise software. The assets trade at cash flow multiples, not ARR multiples, and the buyers are disciplined operators, not growth funds. Bending Spoons now has permanent capital and a public currency to accelerate that consolidation.
The takeaway
Bending Spoons went public with a billion-user portfolio built from distressed consumer brands, proving consolidation works where venture math failed.
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