Venture Capital and a Slow IPO Market

Yesterday I shared an update on 2024 initial public offering (IPO) stats. A conversation with a friend at a family office sparked that post. When a company completes an IPO, it sells part of the company to public market investors via stock exchanges (usually NYSE or NASDAQ). When a company begins trading on a public stock exchange, shares in the company are more liquid. Selling all or part of an ownership stake just takes clicking a button; the cash shows up in your brokerage account instantly. Selling a stake in a private company requires more time and energy. You must find a willing buyer, agree on a price, and complete the transaction. It’s inefficient and some deals move slowly, if they get done at all.

IPOs are significant milestones for venture capital investors, one of the preferred ways to exit their portfolio companies and get publicity for themselves.

As I shared yesterday, the technology-heavy NASDAQ Composite Index is near its record-high closing price this week. The high, from July of this year, is 18,647. Earlier this week, it closed at 18,573. This year, the market has trended upward, making new all-time highs. I take that as a sign that public market investors are in a buying mood (they’re doing more buying than selling, which increases prices). Also, the prominent tech companies that IPO’d in the last year or so have seen their stock prices perform well. Klaviyo, Instacart, and Reddit are all trading near record highs, although the journey to their all-time-highs was bumpy for some of them.

So if public market investors are in a buying mood and they’re buying technology companies that recently IPO’d, why haven’t more entrepreneurs and venture capital investors taken technology companies public this year? How will venture capitalists exit their investments if they can’t or won’t take companies public? These are the questions I was talking to my friend about this week. I don’t have definitive answers, but seeing how this plays out over the rest of this year and in 2025 will be interesting.