Shutdown silver lining? Your IPO review comes after investors buy in
In a development born of the government shutdown, the SEC announced Thursday that companies can proceed with IPOs using an obscure automatic approval process, now with the added bonus of skipping pricing information entirely.
What’s happening is that with 90% of SEC staff furloughed, startups can file their paperwork and have it automatically become effective after 20 days. This option always existed; firms just rarely use it because they prefer having SEC reviewers actually look at their disclosures before going public. The difference here is that the SEC won’t penalize companies for omitting pricing or “price-dependent information” during the shutdown, making this workaround more palatable.
Put another way, there’s still vetting, just the kind that happens after retail investors have already bought a company’s shares, which seems . . . not good, but maybe we’ll be surprised to learn that investor protection works better after the money changes hands.
Companies do remain legally liable for their disclosures, and the SEC can demand amendments later.
Latest TechCrunch
- Navan plows ahead with IPO during shutdown, aims for $6.45B valuationThe corporate travel management company is moving forward under SEC rules that allow companies in IPO limbo to proceed at their own risk during the shutdown.
- Why Deloitte is betting big on AI despite a $10M refundAI companies are making their much-anticipated enterprise plays, but the results are wildly inconsistent. Just this week, Deloitte announced it’s rolling out Anthropic’s Claude to all 500,000 employees. On the very same day, the Australian government forced Deloitte to refund a contract because their AI-generated report was riddled with fake citations. It’s a perfect snapshot […]
- Kalshi hits $5B valuation days after rival Polymarket gets $2B NYSE backing at $8BPrediction markets startup Kalshi raised $300 million, while Polymarket nabbed up to $2 billion.
- Google Chrome silences those pesky notificationsThe company tacitly admits that browser notifications, as designed, might have been a bad idea, saying that its own data shows users receive a high volume of notifications but rarely interact with them.
- The billion-dollar infrastructure deals powering the AI boomHere's everything we know about the biggest AI infrastructure projects, including major spending from Meta, Oracle, Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI.
- Prezent raises $30 million to acquire AI services firms — starting with founder’s other companyMonths after raising $20 million, enterprise-focused AI presentation startup Prezent is raising $30 million for acquisitions.