Archive for IPO
How To Invest Into Initial Public Offering / IPO Investments
Posted by: | CommentsAre you wondering which portion of the current marketplace is the most profitable area of the market to place your funds? If you are searching for the areas of market that holds the most promise for investors, you should certainly be investigating the potential of initial public offering / IPO opportunities.
As you likely already know, IPO stocks present a very unique opportunity for anyone who is investing into the open market. If you have the opportunity to invest in one of these stocks, you will be able to purchase the investment before the rest of the market has found the opportunity to do so. For this reason, you can be sure you are entering the stock at a very good time, for the company is about to experience a fairly large surge in the amount of a recognition it receives from the overall marketplace.
Even though the IPO stocks are generally a fairly decent investment when it comes to the timing of your purchase and understanding the IPO Process, you should still investigate a few factors to ensure you are entering a valuable investment. The basic premise of your research will be based on uncovering whether or not the stock is being sold for two high of a price and whether or not the stock will increase in value over time.
As you may already know, IPO investments are often the most difficult investments to assess. On many occasions there is a limited amount of information relative to the company’s operations, as well as a lack of data about how the public is going to respond to the company’s stock offerings.
This is why you should certainly access as much background research on the company as you possibly can. As you find out more information about the background of the company, you increase your ability to assess the overall value of the opportunity.
A good idea to base your research on is the fact that the company is releasing an IPO in order to raise more capital. Most of the time, companies utilize new sources of capital for expansion activities. There are some circumstances where a company will simply utilize the newly available funds for decreasing interest rate costs they must pay on the capital they borrow, but for the most part though, companies utilize the newly found capital they raise through IPOs for expansion activities. If you can predict that the company will be implementing substantial expansion activities after releasing their IPO, you will be able to easily assess whether or not the company is increasing its overall value as a result.
The fact that the company is attempting to raise capital for expansion is certainly a good sign for investors, but it should definitely not be your only source of information for the decision on whether or not you should buy the stock. You should keep in mind that the fact the company is raising capital to invest into its operations is only in a planned stage at the moment an initial public offering / IPO is released to the public.
The best way to estimate the overall results you will see with your investment is by making an attempt to predict where the capital the company is raising will be invested. If you can assess that the company will be investing large amounts of capital into extremely profitable portions of their operations, you can predict, with a fairly reasonable amount of accuracy, that the value of the company will increase over time.
If you are unclear on some different forms of investing you can look up IPO Process on our site, which goes into more detail.
Are You Trying To Take Your Company Public? How To Go Public Easily 100% of the Time!
Posted by: | CommentsThere are many ways to use capital without using bank loans, lines of credit and other shady methods like shelf corps and bogus platform scams. If you are truly trying to raise capital for your company here are some simple breakdowns of your options with a quick definition for each one:
PIPE: Private Investment In Public Equity this is used primarily by mutual funds and private investment firms where they buy discount stock in order to raise capital, there are two types of PIPE\’s traditional where common and preferred stock is issued at a set cap to raise money for the issuer and a structured pipe issues convertible debt.
DPO: Direct Public Offering is when you sell equity shares directly to customers, suppliers and employees.
PPM: Private Placement Memorandum is also known as an offering memorandum takes advantage of Regulation D rule exemptions 504, 505 and 506. This process came into existence with the\’33 securities act and popularized in the late\’80s, companies can raise money from the public via private placement; there is virtually zero interaction with the SEC after you file form d as long as you stay legal. (most popular form of fund raising).
IPO: Initial Public Offering: extremely expensive, need SOX 404 audits, must have board of directors, quarterly financial reports to shareholders, report heavily to the SEC and 1 out of every 1000 companies that want an IPO actually qualify. I love participating in these but most companies just can\’t qualify for one reason or the other.
OTCBB: Over the Counter Bulletin Board is an electronic quote system that is the next best thing if you can\’t go public via IPO, there is minimal red tape to start-ups and small businesses and is legitimized by the stringent ongoing reports to the SEC which keeps investor confidence high (these are extremely solid and I suggest this structure to companies when I am hired by their company or legal team as a consultant as a fast, easy way to raise big capital from the public otc)
Pink Sheet: you can look at pink sheets as the Burger King, while the OTCBB is McDonald\’s, they are competing OTC mechanisms. Pinks sheets are commonly referred to as penny stock and notorious for \’pump em\’ and dump em\’ controversies and a lot of crooked people are involved with this platform. This is not a long term process that will allow one\’s company to grow, pink sheets companies are typically short lived but it is cheap to set up but not a professional structure that could be upgraded in time to an IPO.
Reverse Merger: a group funds the filing and creation of a public shell, they then sell that shell to a company that wants to go public, the established company merges it\’s entity into the public shell. The sellers retain around 30% equity after they charge an upfront fee of 300k to 1m. 99% of reverse mergers are successful with the merger, but unsuccessful to bring them to trade and the entity basically just fizzles out.
Taking your company public is actually quite simple and inexpensive when you have the right consultant putting the structure together for you. There are countless ways to raise capital quickly and easily. It\’s important that you understand your options before you waste time entering into the red tape infested banking system for a loan.
Go Public With Your Company, call Princeton Corporate Solutions at 267-233-0183Take Your Company Public the easy way!