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The Intermediary Layer in the Capital Market: How to Shift Opportunities from Pre-IPO to Abundance
The capital market is very large. Most people see and engage with day trading, which is the secondary market where buy and sell orders are matched in real-time on the stock exchange order book: high liquidity, price transparency, mature rules.
In contrast, there is the primary market, with the most famous example being the initial public offering (IPO): where the company completes due diligence, compliance, and the offering process, becomes a public company, and is listed for trading.
Looking further ahead, in early-stage company funding, angel rounds, seed rounds, Series A, and Series B are considered private markets: their structure is more flexible, liquidity is lower, and transparency is limited.
Except for some angel investments that may be directed at individuals, most rounds are led by venture capital (VC) and institutional investors, with thresholds in terms of funding size, professional capacity, information channels, and regulatory requirements, often naturally excluding individual investors.
The truly critical stage lies between multiple funding rounds and the IPO. Here, there are significant growth profits (business model becomes clearer, scale expands faster, and company valuation rises sharply), and there is also a clear gap in opportunity distribution: the closer to the company's core growth stage, the more likely a few institutions and high-net-worth individuals will dominate; ordinary investors are often only allowed to participate after the IPO, at which point the market and valuation may have been re-priced multiple times.
This is the importance of pre-IPO funding (Pre-IPOs) and stock trading before the offering. It is not just hype, but a natural evolution of the financial system: for investors, it provides a channel for participation between the private and public markets; for companies, it offers a transitional phase for capital and interests between private and public status, making the capital structure, management, and shareholder liquidity more seamlessly connected.
From the company's perspective, there are three common benefits of Pre-IPOs: first, the need for funding during the ambitious period of going public, which can be used for expansion, mergers and acquisitions, R&D, and compliance costs; second, providing more controlled liquidity for early employees and longstanding shareholders, enhancing stability, expectations, and incentives; third, practicing pre-disclosure exercises and internal governance, transforming the company into a state more aligned with the public market.
For individual investors, Pre-IPOs are particularly important because they somewhat bridge the opportunity gap. Previous options were either participating very early without clear entry channels or waiting until listing to get an entry ticket.
If the Pre-IPO market can become more transparent and standardized within a regulatory framework, managing expectations through disclosure classifications, lock-up periods, risk segmentation, and understandable exit mechanisms, it can transform the period that was previously dominated by institutions into a timeframe that more participants can evaluate and bear.
Of course, the bridge is not without risks. Pre-IPOs still face challenges such as information asymmetry, valuation volatility, liquidity uncertainty, and exit periods.
Therefore, a healthy Pre-IPO ecosystem mainly depends on clarifying rules: clear ownership, transparent conditions, expected exits, proper management, and full risk disclosure.
If we consider the capital market as a fast track from innovation to managing public wealth, then the private market is the corridor, IPO is the entrance, and the secondary market is the main road.
Pre-IPOs are those often-missing stage that more smoothly connect companies and markets: enabling companies to enter the public market more stably, and allowing investors to participate early in growth-phase profits, while respecting risks and rules.