ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Entrepreneur Videos 67 videos
What is a High Alpha Investor? A high alpha investor invests in securities with alpha values of 1 or higher. This means that the mutual fund or sto...
What are Angel Investors and Seed Funds? Angel investors provide the funds for small start-ups. They are usually family and friends (not institutio...
How do you get a startup funded? Depends if we're talking about a tech startup, or a non-tech startup. If you've got a promising, budding tech comp...
Finance: What is an IPO? 25 Views
Share It!
Description:
What is an IPO? IPO stands for initial public offering. These are used when a company decides to go public; meaning people can buy shares of the company at the IPO price. Companies use IPOs to raise capital, but becoming a publicly traded company comes with a whole new set of rules in terms of financial reporting and the like.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
- Life Skills / Personal Finance
- Finance / Finance Definitions
- Life Skills / Finance Definitions
- Finance / Personal Finance
- Courses / Finance Concepts
- Subjects / Finance and Economics
- Finance and Economics / Terms and Concepts
- Terms and Concepts / Banking
- Terms and Concepts / Accounting
- Terms and Concepts / Charts
- Terms and Concepts / Company Management
- Terms and Concepts / Credit
- Terms and Concepts / Econ
- Terms and Concepts / Entrepreneur
- Terms and Concepts / Financial Theory
- Terms and Concepts / Incorporation
- Terms and Concepts / Investing
- Terms and Concepts / IPO
- Terms and Concepts / Managed Funds
- Terms and Concepts / Metrics
- Terms and Concepts / Regulations
- Terms and Concepts / Stocks
- Terms and Concepts / Tech
- Terms and Concepts / Trading
- Terms and Concepts / Wealth
- College and Career / Personal Finance
Transcript
- 00:00
And finance allah shmoop What is an i p o
- 00:07
Well this is a hippo and it has nothing to
- 00:09
do with an ipo Auras Normal humans pronounce it if
- 00:12
both well actually most people just spell it out I
- 00:15
po It stands for initial public offering In the three
Full Transcript
- 00:19
words tell the story and i pl refers to a
- 00:21
company who's raising money by selling shares of itself to
- 00:25
the public for the first time a maiden voyage in
- 00:28
public funding if you will Whatever dot com has forty
- 00:35
million shares outstanding after three private rounds with venture capitalists
- 00:38
and private investors it wants to raise money to go
- 00:41
big internationally And for the first time it will offer
- 00:44
shares to joe and jill public And that means that
- 00:48
all of it shares will be tradable publicly on the
- 00:51
open market like on nasdaq or the new york stock
- 00:54
exchange That is the insiders early investors founders et cetera
- 00:58
will be able to just call their broker at schwab
- 01:01
or fidelity or wherever and sell their shares get liquid
- 01:05
and buy themselves a maserati because it's not what everyone
- 01:08
does after a nice meal So whatever dot com sells
- 01:11
ten million shares a twelve bucks each to raise one
- 01:13
hundred twenty million dollars which they can spend to build
- 01:16
out offices all over the world So yeah that's an
- 01:18
ai po and that's Why a company generally wants to
- 01:21
make shares available to the public because once you've made
- 01:24
an initial public offering and you make money off the
- 01:27
sales of your stock you khun by as many hippos
- 01:30
as you like and just remember to feed them three
- 01:33
times a day they get Cranky if they go too 00:01:35.158 --> [endTime] long in between No
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...