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Apollo Green (108) Boat Unlisted (1150) ICEX (3.95) OYO (28) Goodluck Defence (375) NSE (1925) Orbis Financial (465)
Apollo Green (108) Boat Unlisted (1150) ICEX (3.95) OYO (28) Goodluck Defence (375) NSE (1925) Orbis Financial (465)
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Pre-IPO

Pre-ipo investments allow investors to buy shares of a company before it gets listed on a public stock exchange.

Pre-IPO stocks are stocks of companies that are yet to go public. You will be one of the company’s important shareholders and a part of its growth as a pre-IPO investor. It is also possible to earn a huge profit when the company goes public.

In the Indian market, pre-ipo shares are usually available through private placements and unlisted share platforms.

To conclude, pre-ipo investing can offer high growth opportunities, but investors must understand the risks before investing.

Pre-IPO

Short version: “Pre-IPO” refers to shares of a company sold before that company
goes public (before its initial public offering). These can be primary shares (newly
issued by the company) or secondary shares (existing shareholders selling). Pre-ipo investing gives access to private-company growth (and risk) with the goal of profiting when the company lists on a public exchange.

Below I’ll explain how the Pre-ipo process works from both the company side
and the investor side, plus key terms, timelines, benefits, and risks.

pre ipo Key terms you should know

Primary vs Secondary

Primary = company issues new shares;

Secondary

existing holder sells their shares.

Lock-up

Agreement preventing sale for a set period after IPO.

Accredited/Qualified investor

Regulatory status required to buy private offerings.

Cap table

Who owns what % of company; crucial for dilution and proceeds.

Liquidation preference

Rights that affect who gets paid first on exits

Convertible note / SAFE

Alternative instruments that convert to equity later

Bookbuilding

Process underwriters use to discover IPO demand and set price.

  • Potential for high returns if company does well at IPO.
  • Earlier valuations are often lower than IPO price.
  • Possibility of preferential terms (board seats, protective provisions).

Risks and downsides

High risk / illiquidity — shares are often hard to sell until IPO or a
secondary event.
Valuation uncertainty — private valuations can be inflated; IPO may
price lower.
Regulatory & market risk — IPO market conditions may change (deal
can be delayed/cancelled).
Information asymmetry — private companies disclose less than
public ones

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