The investment banks helping these companies sell their IPO's can receive a certain portion of them before they hit the market. They also get them at a "discount". Meaning they get some of the shares at a cheaper price than those who will buy them after they hit the market.
@sanjusolja Because the original owner of the company doesn't have enough capital to expand. If people have enough money lying around then they would never allow investors to come in and take away potential profits in the future. If you want more money, you either have to pay interest, or lose some of your potential earnings in the future.
What's in for the investment bank?
mjolnir1981 1 week ago
@mjolnir1981
The investment banks helping these companies sell their IPO's can receive a certain portion of them before they hit the market. They also get them at a "discount". Meaning they get some of the shares at a cheaper price than those who will buy them after they hit the market.
drbayoms 3 days ago
very straight to the point, no bullshit..:)
experiencerocks 1 month ago
@sanjusolja Because the original owner of the company doesn't have enough capital to expand. If people have enough money lying around then they would never allow investors to come in and take away potential profits in the future. If you want more money, you either have to pay interest, or lose some of your potential earnings in the future.
ndrwzheng 1 month ago in playlist Intermediate Investing
Good one! Thank you very much.
HackerPhil0 3 months ago
very creative, thanks for your effort!
yildiful 4 months ago