The silent death of the Initial Public Offer (IPO)

1000227663.jpg

For decades, the dream of many young companies was going public, this was the ultimate prize because it seals a company’s coronation into the big leagues.

An IPO wasn’t just about raising capital it was like a badge of honor, and proof that your startup had “made it.” But today, companies are not interested in being listed. Why? Because the spotlight has become a noose.

David Solomon of Goldman Sachs, a man whose business thrives on IPOs, openly admits it’s “not fun” being public anymore.

That’s not a casual complaint it's openly admitting a system is broken.

Companies that once rushed to ring the bell at the New York Stock Exchange now hesitate, hiding in the shadows of private markets where investors are lining up with cash anyway.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: the IPO dream hasn’t died because of financial burdens it’s dying because public markets have turned into a den of exploitation.

The truth no one wants to admit is that the private market is slowly replacing the stock market.

Investors, hungry for returns, are bending over backward to access pre-IPO shares through backdoors, secondary markets, and even legal gray zones. They know the real growth now happens in secrecy, before the company ever sees a ticker symbol.

If this trend continues, public stock exchanges symbols of capitalism’s transparency will risk becoming graveyards of legacy firms. The future titans of tech, healthcare, and AI may never go public at all. They’ll grow, profit, and dominate behind closed doors, leaving ordinary investors locked out of wealth creation while insiders feast.

The world should ask itself when the biggest innovators stop stepping onto the public stage, what does that say about the stage itself?



0
0
0.000
0 comments