Last updated: June 17, 2026, 10:30 AM ET
Topic: equity markets basics (educational explainer).
This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial advice, investment advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security, cryptocurrency, or financial product. Always verify data with official sources before making financial decisions.
Short answer: what is an IPO?
An IPO, or initial public offering, is the process by which a private company sells shares to the public for the first time and lists them on a stock exchange. It lets the company raise capital and gives early investors and employees a way to sell their stakes, while the public gains the ability to buy shares. The June 2026 SpaceX IPO — the largest on record — is a high-profile recent example. This is an educational overview of how IPOs work, not advice about any specific offering.
How an IPO works, step by step
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Decision | A private company decides to go public to raise capital and provide liquidity |
| 2. Filing (S-1) | It files a prospectus (Form S-1 in the U.S.) with the SEC disclosing financials and risks |
| 3. Roadshow | Underwriting banks market the offering to institutional investors |
| 4. Pricing | The IPO price is set, usually the night before trading begins |
| 5. Debut | Shares start trading on an exchange under a ticker symbol |
Key IPO terms
- Underwriter: the investment bank(s) managing the offering.
- S-1 / prospectus: the disclosure document with financials and risk factors.
- IPO price: the per-share price set at offering, before public trading.
- Lock-up period: a window (often ~90–180 days) when insiders cannot sell.
- First-day pop: a jump on the debut, which does not predict longer-term value.
Why first-day moves can be misleading
A big first-day “pop” grabs headlines, but it reflects short-term demand and limited initial share supply, not a verdict on the business. When lock-up periods expire, more shares can hit the market, which can affect the price. Early sessions are often volatile. A useful habit is to separate the spectacle of the debut from the company’s actual financials disclosed in the prospectus.
Where IPOs show up on EskiSignal
- What Is an ETF? — how fund baskets work.
- What Is Unusual Volume in Stocks? — reading volume in new listings.
- Russell Reconstitution — how new companies enter major indexes.
Mini glossary
| Term | Plain-English meaning |
|---|---|
| Primary shares | New shares the company sells to raise money |
| Secondary shares | Existing shares sold by early holders |
| Greenshoe | An option for underwriters to sell extra shares |
| Direct listing | Going public without issuing new shares via underwriters |
Risks, uncertainty, and limits
- IPO shares can be highly volatile, especially early on.
- A first-day pop is not a signal of long-term value.
- Allocation at the IPO price is usually limited to institutions.
- This is educational content, not advice about any offering.
What this article does not conclude
This explainer defines IPOs and how they work. It does not recommend participating in any offering or predict how a newly listed stock will trade.
What does IPO stand for?
IPO stands for initial public offering — the first time a private company sells shares to the public and lists on a stock exchange.
Why do companies go public?
To raise capital for growth, give early investors and employees a way to sell shares, and gain a publicly traded currency for acquisitions and compensation.
What is a lock-up period?
A window after the IPO — often around 90 to 180 days — during which insiders generally cannot sell their shares. Its expiration can affect share supply.
Should I buy a stock on its first trading day?
This article does not give investment advice. First-day moves can be volatile and reflect short-term demand rather than long-term value.
Sources
- U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission — investor education on IPOs.
- General market references on IPO mechanics and terms.