With a well-known aerospace company recently making its public market debut, IPOs have been getting a lot of attention lately. It felt like a good moment to share some perspective on how the IPO process actually works, because there is often more to it than the headlines suggest.
An IPO, or "Initial Public Offering," is the moment a privately held company sells shares to the public for the first time. The process runs through investment banks that manage pricing and allocation. The night before a stock begins trading, those banks set a final offering price based on demand from large institutional investors.
The Part Most People Do Not Realize
There are two very different ways to participate in an IPO, and they are not equal.
The first is buying shares at the IPO price, before the stock ever trades publicly. That access is almost exclusively reserved for large institutional investors. Most individual investors will not receive an allocation at all.
The second is buying shares once the stock opens on an exchange. At that point, anyone can buy. But the price is no longer fixed. If a company generates strong excitement, its stock may open above the IPO price. The reverse is also true. Either way, you may be stepping into real volatility from the very first trade, with none of the pricing advantages implied by the headlines.
Why the Excitement Often Outpaces the Reality
High-profile IPOs tend to attract a great deal of attention precisely because the companies behind them have compelling stories. But it is worth separating the story from the investment mechanics.
When a company goes public, the proceeds often go toward satisfying early investors, paying down existing obligations, or funding day-to-day operations rather than the bold mission that made the company famous. The narrative and the financials can be two very different things.
Newly public companies also can be more volatile than established businesses, particularly in the early weeks of trading. It’s difficult to anticipate how a newly listed stock will perform, regardless of how much anticipation surrounds its debut.
The Bigger Picture
Your portfolio is built around a long-term strategy designed for your specific goals, risk tolerance, and time horizon. A disciplined, diversified approach is focused on your financial situation and is not reactive to whatever story is dominating the headlines in any given week.
There is also something most investors do not realize: if you hold a diversified portfolio, there is a reasonable chance you will gain exposure to these companies at some point. In fact, certain investments are required to purchase newly listed companies because their investment objective is to mirror the stock market or a particular index. A diversified portfolio often takes care of this for you.
If you have questions about anything you are seeing in the news or simply want to talk through how your current strategy is positioned, please do not hesitate to reach out. That is exactly what we are here for.
Disclosures
The S&P 500 Composite Index is an unmanaged index that is considered representative of the overall U.S. stock market. Index performance is not indicative of the past performance of a particular investment. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Individuals cannot invest directly in an index. The return and principal value of stock prices will fluctuate as market conditions change. And shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost.
Any companies mentioned are for illustrative purposes only. It should not be considered a solicitation for the purchase or sale of the securities. Any investment should be consistent with your objectives, timeframe, and risk tolerance.
Diversification is an approach to help manage, but not eliminate, investment risk in the event that security prices decline.