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Not too long ago, most big startups looking to debut on Wall Street chose to sell new shares through an initial public offering. But IPOs are no longer the only viable way for a privately held companies to start trading their stock.
Many high-profile businesses are increasingly using so-called blank check mergers with special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, to go public.
So if you are interested in buying new stocks, what are some of the major differences between an IPO, SPAC and direct listing?
IPOs aren’t going away
An initial public offering is still the preferred choice for many private companies. That’s how Airbnb, DoorDash and dating app Bumble have all made their way to Wall Street in recent months.
Brokerage giant Robinhood recently filed to go public through an IPO – even though some investors are wary of it in the wake of how it handled the mania of meme stock GameStop
(GME).
Going public through an IPO has several advantages. Companies work with top Wall Street firms to price the stock appropriately and find the right buyers.
DoorDash now trades on Wall Street after selling shares through a traditional IPO.
Shutterstock
IPOs also typically wind up receiving favorable coverage for their stock from the investment banks that helped bring them public.
And, given that companies have to file numerous financial documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission before the stock can begin trading, IPOs give prospective investors lots of time to pore over all the intimate details about a company before deciding if they want to buy the stock.
Although new stocks often enjoy big gains on their first day, that hasn’t scared away investors either. Many IPOs continue to do well after splashy debuts.
The Renaissance IPO
(IPO) exchange-traded fund, whose top holdings Uber
(UBER), Zoom
(ZM), Pinterest
(PINS), CrowdStrike
(CRWD) and Peloton
(PTON) have all gone public in the past few years, has more than doubled in the past 12 months.
SPACs’ growing popularity
The knock on SPAC companies used to be that they were only good for companies that couldn’t get the more traditional blessing from Wall Street through a lucrative IPO.
But following successful debuts from companies like Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic
(SPCE) and gambling giant DraftKings, that’s no longer the case.
The Grab and WeWork SPACs are another clear sign that larger mature startups have other options to go public. Many companies using SPACs also wind up raising money from large institutional investors like Fidelity through private investments in public equity, or PIPE, deals.
WeWork is one of many private companies going public through a blank check merger, or SPAC deal.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
But many smaller private companies that are less seasoned – particularly in younger emerging industries like electric vehicles and crytpocurrencies – may still need to go public via SPACs instead of an IPO. That’s because SPACs tend to have fewer regulatory hurdles to jump through.
“There are many advantages to the ability to go public more quickly through a SPAC. That was a factor to consider,” said Tyler Page, CEO of Cipher Mining, a US-based firm that plans to merge with a SPAC named Good Works Acquisition.
Page said the company doesn’t anticipate that it will start generating significant revenue until later this year and hopes to be profitable in 2022.
Direct listings for mature companies
Some companies, albeit a rare few, are able to bypass the IPO and SPAC markets and just list shares directly to an exchange like the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq.
The allure of listing directly is fewer fees paid to bankers and more control over setting the stock price. But direct listings are mainly good for companies that already have a strong following and may not need Wall Street to drum up support.
Roblox is one of a handful of companies that chose to list shares directly on an exchange instead of doing an IPO or SPAC.
Shutterstock
Spotify
(SPOT) and Slack
(WORK) (which is getting purchased by Salesforce
(CRM)) are examples of companies that did direct listings before Palantir, Roblox and Coinbase.
More big unicorns may choose direct listings as a way to capitalize on the growing level of cynicism that many smaller investors have for big Wall Street firms.
“The trust between pure retail investors and banks that have underwritten IPOs has broken down,” said Hugh Tallents, partner with consulting firm cg42. “Because of that, a direct listing makes a ton of sense for Coinbase and some other companies.”