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3) The SEC just announced that they'll allow companies to raise money through a "direct listing" on a stock exchange.
wsj.com/articles/sec-a
Which might seen like... obvious? But as it turns out, it wasn't true before.
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8) So banks live off the confusion and make money buying into an IPO and selling on listing.
The 'oracle price' they're using is essentially an auction with only a few possible sellers; not a very efficient reference!
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9) It's not the only way companies raise money.
(i) Sometimes they use a SPAC -- which gives more flexibility and more potential ultimate buyers than an IPO, though still not a ton.
(ii) Or, better yet, they can go to every venture fund in the world and negotiate a sale price!
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12) So how does this help Coinbase?
Well, remember AirBNB, which IPOd around $50?
The day before it listed on NASDAQ, it listed on FTX. And ftx.com/trade/ABNB/USD traded up to $95 prior to launch.
Now there wasn't enough liquidity on FTX for AirBNB to sell $3b, which it did.
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14) Coinbase last raised at $8b, and rumor is that it might IPO around $20b.
This seems pretty defensible -- up 3x! $20b valuation! Or so their bank is telling them.
But a single negotiation is a shitty oracle. An orderbook is better.
ftx.com/trade/CBSE/USD is at $57b.
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15) So if you're Coinbase now, and your bank tries to bid $20b -- maybe you show them ftx.com/trade/CBSE/USD.
And say -- "hey look that's cool but we already see $57b bids elsewhere; guess you're gonna have to improve".
And if they can't improve, maybe they just list directly.
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