6) Which begs a question: why do IPOs exist, and why are they so cheap?
Well, partially they exist because of regulation, and partially because companies want some security going into listing.
And partially they're cheap because companies are paying to lock in a price.
Conversation
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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16) That's the power of orderbooks: they're the general purpose tool for people to each express their opinions on a value.
They're one of the world's best oracles, when used right.
And they say that maybe people will pay more for Coinbase than a single bank's bid.
