Nasdaq CEO: The worst thing a private company can do
Many technology start-ups are waiting longer to go public these days, and Nasdaq (NASDAQ: NDAQ) CEO Bob Greifeld said Thursday he backs that decision in many cases.
"I think the worst thing in the world is to go public too soon," he told CNBC's "Squawk Box." "I'd rather see companies wait a little bit longer, have an opportunity to provide the proper liquidity to their investors and employees, and they make sure they come public with a mature business model."
Start-ups are putting off initial public offerings for many reasons these days, including relaxed securities regulations for small business investment and robust private capital markets, which have created a growing number of billion-dollar start-up "unicorns."
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In the last decade, the length of time it takes companies to go public has essentially doubled, according to Greifeld.
To be sure, Nasdaq is capitalizing on this trend. Its subsidiary, Nasdaq Private Market, announced last month it had acquired SecondMarket, which facilitates liquidity for private company securities.
"We certainly believe staying private is a good alternative, and we also believe when you come public you need to have a fully mature business model and you should not rush that date," he said, noting that public companies face a rigorous and endless series of quarterly reports.
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