Explore the dynamic world of startup secondary stock sales. From basics to case studies, practical advice, and future trends, navigate this significant startup finance aspect with ease.
All in Tech Investing
Explore the dynamic world of startup secondary stock sales. From basics to case studies, practical advice, and future trends, navigate this significant startup finance aspect with ease.
There's an insane discrepancy in financial markets right now. Contrary to the traditional business approach, many companies choose to go public amid a global pandemic and a potential world economic crisis. Here's my short post on why this is happening and how that is related to SaaS stocks' prices?
When going public, each company tries to address a different aspect that is important to it. Some will go public to raise funds, allow exit opportunities for early investors, some to repay debt, and some for the prestige in going to the public companies club. For most startups, IPO or direct listing is the right choice.
In the current state of the market, we witness a unique phenomenon where investors consider SaaS stocks as safe-haven assets to the COVID-19 turmoil. But could this last if this evolves into a deep global economic crisis?
Food delivery is a great business idea that allows all parties to benefit, but its simplicity is also the biggest threat on the market stability. The current market situation, where food delivery companies generate single-digit profit margins, is not sustainable.
Something has cracked in the intersection between Silicon Valley and Wall Street. After the failed WeWork IPO and the disappointing Uber IPO, Stripe signals a new direction for Silicon Valley.
Airbnb is expected to go public in 2020. Airbnb is not the typical high-profile, over-promising unicorn as we witnessed in recent tech unicorn IPOs - what makes Airbnb different?
It happens every quarter. A promising, high-profile tech company reports better than expected results that beat analysts’ consensus on the top and bottom lines, but the stock price plunges as if the company has disappointed greatly.