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IPO Process Explained

An IPO (Initial Public Offering) is the process by which a private company sells shares to the public for the first time. It transforms a privately held company into a publicly traded one, raising capital and giving early investors and employees a chance to cash out. For public investors, IPOs offer the opportunity — and risk — of buying into a company at the start of its public life.

Why Companies Go Public

ReasonDetails
Raise capitalFund expansion, R&D, acquisitions, or debt repayment
Liquidity for insidersFounders, employees, and VCs can sell shares
Currency for M&APublic shares can be used to acquire other companies
Brand visibilityPublic listing increases credibility and media attention
Employee compensationStock options become liquid and more attractive
Valuation benchmarkPublic market provides continuous price discovery

The IPO Process Step by Step

StepWhat HappensTimeline
1. Select underwritersCompany hires investment banks to manage the offering6-12 months before
2. Due diligenceAudits, legal review, financial preparation3-6 months
3. File S-1 with SECSubmit registration statement with full financial disclosure1-3 months before
4. SEC reviewSEC reviews and may request amendmentsWeeks to months
5. RoadshowManagement presents to institutional investors to generate interest1-2 weeks
6. Book buildingUnderwriters collect orders and gauge demand at various pricesDuring roadshow
7. PricingFinal IPO price is set the night before trading begins1 day before
8. First tradeShares begin trading on the exchangeIPO day
9. Lock-up expirationInsiders can sell after lock-up period (typically 90-180 days)3-6 months after

Key Players in an IPO

RoleWhoWhat They Do
IssuerThe company going publicProvides financials, tells the growth story
Lead underwriterInvestment bankPrices the deal, allocates shares, stabilizes trading
SyndicateGroup of banksHelp distribute shares to their client base
SECSecurities and Exchange CommissionReviews disclosures, protects investors
Institutional investorsMutual funds, hedge funds, pensionsGet first access to IPO shares (allocation)
Retail investorsIndividual investorsTypically buy on the open market after trading starts

IPO Pricing and the First-Day Pop

Underwriters set the IPO price based on book building demand. They intentionally price below expected market value to ensure a successful first day — the “IPO pop.” This helps institutional investors who received allocations, but it means the company leaves money on the table.

The average first-day IPO return has historically been around 10-15%. However, this is not free money for retail investors, who typically cannot buy at the IPO price and must buy on the open market, often at already-inflated prices.

IPO vs Direct Listing vs SPAC

FeatureTraditional IPODirect Listing
New shares issued?Yes — company raises capitalNo — only existing shares sold
Underwriter rolePrices and allocates sharesAdvisory only — no allocation
Lock-up periodYes (90-180 days)Typically no
First-day pricingSet by underwriters night beforeSet by market supply/demand at open
Capital raisedCompany receives new capitalCompany receives nothing (existing shareholders sell)
Best forCompanies needing capitalWell-known companies with existing brand recognition

For more on alternatives to traditional IPOs, see Direct Listing vs IPO and SPAC Investing Guide.

Risks of Buying IPOs

RiskWhy It Matters
Limited historyShort public track record makes analysis harder
Hype-driven pricingFirst-day demand can push prices well above fair value
Lock-up expirationInsiders selling after lock-up can flood the market and tank the price
Information asymmetryInsiders know the business far better than public investors
UnderperformanceResearch shows IPOs underperform the market on average over 3-5 years
VolatilityNew public stocks are significantly more volatile than established ones
Analyst Tip

Unless you receive an IPO allocation from your broker, you are buying on the open market after the “pop” — which means you are buying at a price institutional investors already consider a win. The best approach for most investors: wait 3-6 months after the IPO (past the lock-up expiration) for the price to stabilize before evaluating the stock on fundamentals.

Common Mistake

Buying an IPO purely because of brand recognition or media hype. Popular consumer brands often IPO at rich valuations because retail demand is high. The stock you love as a customer may be a terrible investment if the P/E ratio is 100× and growth is already priced in.

Key Takeaways

  • An IPO transforms a private company into a public one, raising capital and providing liquidity for insiders.
  • Underwriters intentionally underprice IPOs — the “pop” benefits institutional investors, not retail buyers.
  • IPOs have historically underperformed the market over 3-5 years on average.
  • Watch for lock-up expiration (90-180 days post-IPO) — insider selling often causes price drops.
  • Wait for fundamentals to stabilize before buying; do not chase hype on day one.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can retail investors buy IPO shares?

Most IPO shares are allocated to institutional investors. Some brokers offer IPO access to retail clients, but usually with minimum account balance requirements. The alternative is to buy shares on the open market once trading begins — but the price will typically be higher than the IPO price.

What is a lock-up period?

A lock-up period (typically 90-180 days) prevents company insiders — founders, executives, employees, and pre-IPO investors — from selling their shares immediately after the IPO. When the lock-up expires, a wave of insider selling can push the stock price down significantly.

Are IPOs good investments?

On average, IPOs underperform the broader market over 3-5 years. While some IPOs produce spectacular returns, many fade after the initial excitement. The key is to evaluate each IPO on its fundamentals — revenue growth, profitability, competitive position — rather than buying based on hype.

What is the difference between an IPO and a direct listing?

In an IPO, the company issues new shares and raises capital with the help of underwriters. In a direct listing, no new shares are created — existing shareholders simply sell their shares directly on the exchange. Direct listings skip the underwriting fees and lock-up period but do not raise new capital for the company.

Why do IPO prices often drop after a few months?

Initial hype and limited supply create artificial demand on day one. As the lock-up expires and insiders sell, supply increases. Meanwhile, the company must deliver on the growth expectations baked into its IPO valuation. If results disappoint even slightly, the stock can drop sharply as the reality gap closes.