ALSO CALLED: Public Offerings and IPO DEFINITION: In the United States, an IPO (initial public offering) is a first and one-time only sale of publicly tradable stock shares in a company that has previously been owned privately. An IPO is also sometimes known as "going public." Technically, an IPO is the offering to sell but virtually all IPOs result
Definition continues below.
JOURNAL ARTICLE:
Just when we thought the fast and loose spending of the dot-com bubble was well behind us, a few recent storage company IPOs remind us that we really haven't gotten a lot smarter.
JOURNAL ARTICLE:
Big news: Your company has decided to make an initial public offering (IPO), maybe your company's venture capitalists want to recoup their investment. More likely, your company thinks it has a hot product or service and needs the cash to expand.
INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS DEFINITION (continued): in all the stock offered being sold. IPOs are generally managed by companies that specialize in handling IPOs and have experience in determining what the likely IPO offering price should be. If the IPO manager determines that the stock will not sell at an offering price that is acceptable to the company, the application for an IPO is usually withdrawn until a better time. As soon as all shares of an IPO have been sold, the stock is now tradable through stock exchanges or specialists that trade Initial Public Offerings definition sponsored by SearchCIO.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
TechTarget provides enterprise IT professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs
- from developing strategy, to making cost-effective IT purchase decisions and managing their
organizations' IT projects - with its network of
technology-specific Web sites, events and magazines