
customers and suppliers.
Public Stock Sales (“Going Public”) LO 3
One method of raising large capital is to sell shares of stock, known as “going public.” An
initial public offering (IPO) is a method of raising equity capital in which a company sells
shares of its stock to the general public the first time. Refer to Figure 15.6: Initial Public
Investment bankers who underwrite public stock offerings typically look for established
companies with these characteristics:
Consistently high growth rates
Scalability
A strong record of earnings
professionals, including company executives, an accountant, a securities attorney, a
financial printer, and at least one underwriter. The registration process alone is a required,
time-demanding – and potentially expensive – task that involves these steps:
Choose the underwriter. A managing underwriter (investment banker) is a
financial company that serves two important roles: helping to prepare the
registration statement for an issue and promoting the company’s stock to potential
investors.
Negotiate a letter of intent. A letter of intent is an agreement between the
underwriter and the company about to go public that outlines the details of the
deal.
Prepare the registration statement. The registration statement is the document a
company must file with the SEC that describes both the company and its stock
offering and discloses information about the risk of investing.
File with the SEC. The Division of Corporate Finance can take 30-45 days to
review the application, and can require the company to make revisions.