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Secondary Market Offering

A secondary market offering refers to the sale of shares by existing shareholders, such as institutional investors or company insiders, after the company has gone public. In a secondary offering, no new shares are created; instead, existing shares are sold to new investors. This differs from a primary offering, where new shares are issued to raise capital. Secondary market offerings allow existing shareholders to liquidate their positions without diluting ownership for current shareholders.

Example

A company’s early investor decides to sell part of their stake in the company through a secondary market offering after the company has already gone public.

Key points

Sale of existing shares by shareholders after a company has gone public.

No new shares are created, and it does not dilute existing shareholders' ownership.

Allows institutional investors, insiders, or early investors to liquidate their holdings.

Quick Answers to Curious Questions

A secondary offering involves the sale of existing shares, while a primary offering creates new shares to raise capital.

It allows early investors, insiders, or institutional investors to liquidate their positions without affecting the company’s capital structure.

No, secondary offerings do not dilute existing shareholders since no new shares are issued.
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