Direct Listing vs Secondary Offering

What is the difference beetween Direct Listing (like the one of Spotify) vs Secondary Offering (where the existing shareholder decides to cash in by selling part of its holdings).
Hope anyone can help me with this

 
Most Helpful

A direct listing is an alternative to a standard IPO process. A regular IPO determines the listing price by meeting with HFs and large institutional long-only funds, while a direct listing just starts trading on an exchange and allows market demand determine price. A direct listing can be less stable once it starts trading because demand is unknown, but it is also less costly in terms of fees paid to the investment banks underwriting the deal. Typically you must be a pretty well known private company to direct list so that investors understand its business model and are comfortable buying it when it hits the market. A follow-on offering is simply any subsequent equity offering after the IPO. It may be a PE firm selling down its position, or just the company rasing more capital for various other reasons. There can be multiple follow-on offerings throughout a company's history.

 

thank you for the response!! I was a little bit confused because in Brealey and Myers finance book its stated:

"IPO - This may be a primary offering, in which new shares are sold to raise additional cash for the company. Or it may be a secondary offering, where the existing shareholders decide to cash in by selling part of their holdings"

according to this there is no raising capital in the secondary offering, thats why I assumed that the only difference between Direct Listing vs Secondary offering was the Underwriter.

 

When a company decides to issue a follow-on offering, it can be for two different reasons. One reason is that the company needs to raise additional capital (for various reasons) and thus creates new shares to issue to investors. This is dilutive because respective ownership stakes are altered. The second reason is a large investor(s) looking to sell down their stakes, in which case no additional shares are created.

 

A note on follow-on offering:

It's my understanding that a follow-on offering is a new round of stock issuance (thus dilution to current shareholders) to the markets. Conversely a secondary offering (or secondary market offering) is meant to offer liquidity to current investors or founders in a company - since no new stock is being issued there is no dilution.

Career Advancement Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Jefferies & Company 02 99.4%
  • Goldman Sachs 19 98.8%
  • Harris Williams & Co. New 98.3%
  • Lazard Freres 02 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 03 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Harris Williams & Co. 18 99.4%
  • JPMorgan Chase 10 98.8%
  • Lazard Freres 05 98.3%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.7%
  • William Blair 03 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Lazard Freres 01 99.4%
  • Jefferies & Company 02 98.8%
  • Goldman Sachs 17 98.3%
  • Moelis & Company 07 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 05 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Director/MD (5) $648
  • Vice President (19) $385
  • Associates (87) $260
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (14) $181
  • Intern/Summer Associate (33) $170
  • 2nd Year Analyst (66) $168
  • 1st Year Analyst (205) $159
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (146) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

1
redever's picture
redever
99.2
2
Betsy Massar's picture
Betsy Massar
99.0
3
BankonBanking's picture
BankonBanking
99.0
4
Secyh62's picture
Secyh62
99.0
5
CompBanker's picture
CompBanker
98.9
6
kanon's picture
kanon
98.9
7
dosk17's picture
dosk17
98.9
8
GameTheory's picture
GameTheory
98.9
9
Linda Abraham's picture
Linda Abraham
98.8
10
Jamoldo's picture
Jamoldo
98.8
success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”