
Types of Registered Offerings

What are the differences in an IPO, a SPAC, and a direct listing?
Many mature companies who have raised capital using exempt offerings in the private markets elect to “go public,” such as through a registered offering, either to raise additional capital, in response to investor calls for liquidity, or both. Companies have multiple pathways to becoming a public company under current securities laws, three of which are outlined below. While alternative pathways to IPOs, including SPACs and direct listings, have become popular in recent years, many factors play into which pathway a company chooses.
Traditional Initial Public Offering (IPO)
What is it? | Why choose this path? | What to consider? |
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A private company raises capital by selling newly-issued shares to investment banks (underwriters), which the banks then sell primarily to institutional investors. | An IPO is the traditional way for companies to go public. Companies may choose this path to have more control over their initial investor base and obtain an underwriter’s assistance in marketing and managing initial trading volume. | The transaction costs, including underwriter fees, are high, and the process typically takes a long time. |
Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC)
What is it? | Why choose this path? | What to consider? |
---|---|---|
A SPAC goes public as a shell company using an IPO for the purpose of merging with or acquiring a yet-to-be-identified private operating company. Generally within two years, the SPAC combines with the private company via a de-SPAC merger, with the resulting company becoming public and receiving a combination of the SPAC’s IPO proceeds and additional capital from a private financing. | By going public via a SPAC, companies can have more certainty as to the amount raised, potentially a shorter timeframe than the traditional IPO process, access to liquidity that might not otherwise be available to them, and a strategic partnership with an experienced management team that the SPAC’s sponsors put together. | The overall transaction costs for target companies can be high, and they must also consider equity dilution from sponsors and other private financing investors, which is why SPACs tend to draw bigger companies looking to go public. |
Direct Listing
What is it? | Why choose this path? | What to consider? |
---|---|---|
A private company becomes public, typically without raising new funds in the process, by allowing existing shareholders to sell shares directly to the public. | Historically, a few very large, consumer-facing companies have chosen this path due to potentially lower transaction costs and other business-specific reasons. | With no underwriters involved, companies will have no control over their initial investor base and may face trading volume challenges, which is why companies that choose this path are often ones that have strong brand recognition that can generate sufficient market interest. |
This resource represents the views of the staff of the Office of the Advocate for Small Business Capital Formation. It is not a rule, regulation, or statement of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”). The Commission has neither approved nor disapproved its content. This resource, like all staff statements, has no legal force or effect: it does not alter or amend applicable law, and it creates no new or additional obligations for any person. This resource does not provide legal advice. This resource was produced and disseminated at U.S. taxpayer expense.
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Last Reviewed or Updated: Dec. 17, 2024