Pre-IPO

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Pre-IPO, pre-initial public offering is a late-stage for a private company to raise funds in advance of its listing on a public exchange.

Growing popularity[]

Before the dot-com bubble private firms enjoyed the largest capital flows with initial public offering. But in recent years, more and more startups succeed in getting sufficient funding, and as a result, their valuation grows before IPO.[1]

This is confirmed by a significant jump in the number of “unicorns,” privately held startup companies valued at over $1 billion.[2]

At the same time, companies take a longer time to stay private: in the United States, the number of publicly listed companies dropped by 52% in 2016 as compared to 1996.[3]

Advantages over IPO[]

By raising more funds, a private company get an opportunity to mature and better prepare for an IPO.[4]

At the pre-IPO stage investors invest in private firms several months or years prior to their listing: they "freeze" their investments for a longer period of time in the hope of receiving quality assets. An investor exits a pre-IPO deal after the company becomes public or is sold to a strategic investor.

Higher risks that come with such deals mean that pre-IPO shares are cheaper than IPO shares.[5] At the same time, it is difficult to objectively estimate the value of shares at the pre-IPO stage because a privately held company, unlike a public one, doesn't disclose financial statements.

Another advantage is to offset the risk of loss as compared to the more recent funding stages. However, there is a risk that the company will postpone IPO for a longer period or cancel it altogether.

Disadvantages over IPO[]

There are major risks and disadvantages to Pre IPO investing that needs to be understood. Most importantly, companies have no obligation to provide investors with any financial or fitness information about the company. In many cases, in a secondary transaction investors will get no information meaning no financials, no pitch deck, no business plan. Public markets are the opposite, companies must procure quarterly financial reports which are audited. Since public companies have public information, in depth third party analysis is common. This transparency and open dialogue doesn't exist in private markets.

Also, there is not an exchange for private shares, so if you want to sell your investment there is no guarantee you can find a buyer at any price.

Pre-IPO market emergence[]

For a long time pre-IPO was accessible only to major investors, venture funds and other specialized financial organizations. In recent years, the stock market of private companies at pre-IPO has become much more liquid. Brokers of private shares quickly emerged in the U.S.: The Nasdaq Private Market, SharesPost Inc., Forge Global and others. In autumn 2020, JPMorgan announced that the investment bank was launching a new team focused on trading pre-IPO stocks exclusively[6] Manhattan Venture Partners has built their firm by focusing on a handful of high conviction “firm mandated transactions” instead of crossing orders across a large number of companies.[7] Specialist broker-dealers have entered the market with a focus on the Pre IPO market.[8]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "5 Things to Know About Pre-IPO Stocks". The Wall Street Journal. 2019-11-29.
  2. ^ "The Crunchbase Unicorn Leaderboard is back, now with a record herd of 452 unicorns". Techcrunch. 2019-05-29.
  3. ^ "Why More Businesses Are Choosing To Stay Private". Forbes. 2020-02-26.
  4. ^ "Private, Pre-IPO Investments Continue To Gain Influence for Companies Looking To Go Public". Skadden. 2020-01-21.
  5. ^ "Pre-IPO Placement". Investopedia. 2020-05-15.
  6. ^ "JPMorgan creates new team to trade shares of pre-IPO giants including SpaceX, Robinhood and Airbnb". CNBC. 2020-09-11.
  7. ^ Frank, David (November 23, 2020). "The Wild West: Pre-IPO Secondary Trading". Forbes. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  8. ^ Crockett, Richard. "Chief Compliance Officer". LevelX. LevelX.com. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
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