Skip to main content

Sleep Country plans to raise as much as $250-million in a Canadian IPO.

Sleep Country Canada is aiming to return to the public markets with an initial public offering in the coming months.

The move by Canada's largest mattress retailer, which owns and operates 215 stores across Canada under its own name and the Dormez-Vous? banner, comes seven years after the company was taken private by two investment firms.

Sleep Country said in a June 5 regulatory filing that it intends to relist its shares on the stock market and pay a quarterly dividend to investors.

According to Bloomberg, the company could be seeking as much as $250-million in the IPO.

Sleep Country was listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange as an income trust from 2003 to 2008, when it was bought out for $356-million by Birch Hill Equity Partners and Westerkirk Capital.

The company, founded in Vancouver in 1994 by Christine Magee, Stephen Gunn and Gord Lownds, says it accounts for 23 per cent of the market in Canada, nearly one in every four mattresses sold.

Known for its ubiquitous "Why buy a mattress anywhere else?" jingle, Sleep Country said it expects to open between 50 and 70 new stores over the next five to seven years on the strength of what is says is high levels of customer satisfaction, brand awareness and relationships with suppliers.

The company said it plans to grow its yearly revenue from the $406-million it posted in the 12-months ended in March to between $575-million and $640-million annually.

The IPO does not include American retailer Sleep America, which Sleep Country bought in 2006. The company said it sold off its American division in January of this year in order to focus on the Canadian market.

According to the filing, Sleep Country lost $10.9-million on revenue of $91.6-million in the first quarter of 2015, compared with a loss of $3.6-million on revenues of $81.3-million in the same period last year.

Laura Baker, Sleep Country' vice-president of marketing, refused to comment on the proposed IPO when contacted Monday.

Interact with The Globe