Figma CEO Dylan Field with CFO Praveer Melwani during the company's IPO on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on July 31, 2025.Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesFigma, the design software company led by CEO and cofounder Dylan Field, saw its stock price more than triple in
a stunning debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday.
Shares of Figma were trading as high as $107 within minutes after it began trading under the ticker FIG. The company and its early shareholders raised $1.2 billion in its IPO on Wednesday, with shares priced at $33.
The stock began trading Thursday at $85 a share, and took off like a rocket from there.
The surge gave Figma a market cap of roughly $46 billion, eclipsing the $20 billion price that Adobe had planned to acquire the company for before the merger was abandoned in 2023 due to regulatory pushback.
Adobe, with a market cap of around $152 billion, will now be Figma’s key public markets competitor as the upstart chases market share.
Praveer Melwani, Figma’s CFO, told
Fortune on Thursday morning that it will be business as usual for Figma moving forward, with possible acquisitions in the pipeline.
Figma’s securities filing for its public debut showed a growing, profitable business, with revenue up in Q1 2025, 46% year-over-year to $228.2 million, and a net income for the quarter at $44.8 million.
Figma’s opening pop reflects not only optimism about Figma, but optimism about the venture-backed IPO landscape overall.
Muted in recent years, tech IPOs have been in the midst of a slow but decisive recovery. Recently, VC-backed darlings like Circle, Chime, Hinge Health, and CoreWeave have all gone public, with varying degrees of success.
—Allie Garfinkle