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Finance: What Does It Mean to "Go Public"? 100 Views


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What does it mean to "go public?" An IPO raises cash in the form of equity, usually, for investors. When public, a company exists under SEC dominion, and must follow and file a forest-worth of paperwork: 10Qs, 10Ks, Annual reports, 8Ks, and myriad other really boring documents.

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Transcript

00:02

Finance a la shmoop what does it mean to go public and to be

00:09

clear this is not about going in public that sort of thing can give you 30 days [Man urinating in public and officer arrests him]

00:13

in the county jail this is about taking your company public and pretty much all

00:18

companies start out as private, well they have a small handful of little investors [seven dwarves bringing bags of money to poisonapple.com]

00:22

they don't need tons of capital to get going and they're not really subject to

00:26

deep complex federal laws and regulations but companies grow up and typically have

00:31

their sights set on larger markets more complex and expensive products and

00:36

broader distribution power and for most companies that requires raising outside [Man holding up a share from a cart]

00:40

capital big capital additionally most early investors want to be able to sell

00:45

at least some of their shares likely at a huge profit and have what's called

00:50

liquidity i.e turning their private difficult to sell shares into easy to

00:55

sell liquid shares in a public company meaning that if they want to sell some [Man on cellphone outside Morgan Stanley building]

01:00

shares all they have to do is call Schwab or Fdelity or Morgan Stanley or

01:03

whoever and yell sell Mortimer sell into the phone which is really weird anytime

01:08

[Man yelling sell Mortimer to another man on a cellphone] the guy's name isn't Mortimer but you get the idea so when a company goes

01:12

public it means that they have agreed to follow federal laws and regulations

01:16

things like adhering to standard accounting practices called GAAP they

01:21

agree to file financial reports in a standard format that conforms to the way

01:25

in which everyone else files they agree to have a board of directors and so on [woman using a sewing machine]

01:29

so yeah there's a downside too a private company sometimes dilutes itself by

01:33

printing more shares that they can sell to the public like suppose organic

01:38

muffin group Inc has a total of 80 million shares and it's totally private [Man eating muffins in Organic Muffin Group Inc]

01:42

well the company decides for whatever reason it wants to go public and it'll

01:47

sell twenty million shares to new investors you know Ma, Pa Kettle, Joe [Company selling shares to new investors]

01:51

Sixpack err Moisha Cardiologist yeah well once the company has buyers for those 20

01:57

million shares it begins to trade publicly now having sold 20 million

02:00

shares that err say 15 bucks a share so OMG oops didn't think that one

02:05

through now the company has a hundred million shares total outstanding and

02:10

just raised 300 million dollars in cash - well the total value of the company is [total value of company on chalkboard]

02:15

a hundred million shares times 15 bucks or 1.5 billion dollars but now it's

02:21

public so it shares our liquidly traded ie anyone can now buy shares of the [dog running from building with a bag of money]

02:25

thing the early investors and founders can sell their shares after what's

02:29

usually a six month the cooling period the moral of story going public can be a [Men sat waiting in a 6 month cooling period area]

02:33

good thing for everyone involved both the company its commission taking

02:37

bankers and all of that companies investors going in public however is [Company, Banker and Investor all smiling]

02:43

only good for the guy with a cell phone camera and a YouTube account

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