首次公开发行
违规
私募股权
私募股权投资
业务
衡平法
私募
风险投资
议价能力
金融体系
货币经济学
股本
市场经济
财务
投资银行业务
私募股权基金
经济
微观经济学
政治学
法学
作者
Michael Ewens,Joan Farre-Mensa
摘要
Abstract The deregulation of securities laws—in particular the National Securities Markets Improvement Act (NSMIA) of 1996—has increased the supply of private capital to late-stage private startups, which are now able to grow to a size that few private firms used to reach. NSMIA is one of a number of factors that have changed the going-public versus staying-private trade-off, helping bring about a new equilibrium where fewer startups go public, and those that do are older. This new equilibrium does not reflect an initial public offering (IPO) market failure. Rather, founders are using their increased bargaining power vis-à-vis investors to stay private longer.
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