ServiceTitan is now a public company

After more than a decade as a private company, ServiceTitan brought the trades to Wall Street — and made its public debut

ServiceTitan

Image: CNBC

The trades have landed — on Wall Street. ServiceTitan made its public debut, ending the day as a $9 billion company. 

Why it matters: “It’s an important day for our company, but more importantly, it’s a historic day for the industries that we serve,” said Ara Mahdessian, CEO, in a TV interview. 

What’s happening: After more than a decade as a private company, ServiceTitan last month filed for an IPO, initially pricing shares between $52 and $57. Full breakdown

  • Yesterday, it revised that price to $71. 
  • And then around lunchtime today, it began trading at $101 — a 42 percent jump, validating the public’s optimism about both the company and the industries it serves. 

The big picture: HVAC and plumbing have seen the limelight this year. 

  • Since April, the Wall Street Journal has published three stories about the trades that have gone viral: One exploring Gen Z’s interest, another highlighting the industries’ popularity on TikTok, and the third covering the influx of private equity dollars.
  • ServiceTitan’s debut caps the year, further cementing the trades into mainstream (and the investor community’s) consciousness. 

What’s next: The company raised about $625 million in the offering, and its first earnings call is expected sometime in January or February. 

Keep reading

U.S. to double steel, aluminum tariffs to 50%

U.S. to double steel, aluminum tariffs to 50%

The president said Friday that the U.S. will double the tariff rate on steel and aluminum imports to 50 percent, effective June 4

“Setting expectations means nothing if you don’t hold people accountable,” says The H.R. Guy

“Setting expectations means nothing if you don’t hold people accountable,” says The H.R. Guy

Early this year, Ian Schotanus gave a talk on accountability and ran real-world scenarios with contractors

EPA proposes eliminating HVAC install deadline

EPA proposes eliminating HVAC install deadline

The EPA on Tuesday proposed eliminating the Jan. 1, 2026, installation deadline for certain residential and light commercial AC and heat pump systems