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PRE IPO... You can put down a U.S. or Canadian preoder for a truck or SUV. Or, in case you have Billions, I would call RJ directly. Other than that you will most likely have to wait until IPO which is undetermined at this time. This Forum has a plethora of info if you don't mind a little reading. Hope you enjoy.Hi Guys, How and where can I invest in Rivian Pre-IPO'S, Thanks!
Thanks! I know it will be Not easy to do IPO investing! By the way, think do you heard aboutPRE IPO... You can put down a U.S. or Canadian preoder for a truck or SUV. Or, in case you have Billions, I would call RJ directly. Other than that you will most likely have to wait until IPO which is undetermined at this time. This Forum has a plethora of info if you don't mind a little reading. Hope you enjoy.
True, but there's only one SPAC I know of with sufficient funds to interest Rivian.A lot more companies are going public via SPAC's versus IPO's recently. These are more accessible to retail investors, but unpredictable regarding what company you may end up investing into.
Lots of information online regarding how these work and the risk/return associated.
Right!True, but there's only one SPAC I know of with sufficient funds to interest Rivian.
Yes, but the target company would have to really want to go with a specific SPAC management team if they could only offer a fraction of what a much larger SPAC could offer in cash. I've not noticed a top-off PIPE funding be larger than the IPO raised, but I suppose it could be. Regardless, I'd think the target company would be more interested in a SPAC for the relative simplicity of the deal, and there'd have to be some significant weight given to consideration of the one that could offer several billion dollars with publicly stated (via SEC filings) several billion more via prearranged private equity - especially if they think they should be valued at $50 billion as per Bloomberg. "People" used to talk about 15% as the minimal float, but I can't easily find anything at the exchanges listing a percentage, and I recall one SPAC that did an 11% deal recently. A small float makes large trades harder of course, and no publicly traded company should want illiquidity.Right!
Keep in mind the SPAC also doesnt need to absorb the entire company. If Rivian is worth $25-50B a SPAC can participate in almost any series of group fundraising prior to the public offering.
Spot on. We will see what happens. I've been historically very happy with the results of SPAC investments and am currently holding several without targets so I'm selfishly hoping for this route. CheersYes, but the target company would have to really want to go with a specific SPAC management team if they could only offer a fraction of what a much larger SPAC could offer in cash. I've not noticed a top-off PIPE funding be larger than the IPO raised, but I suppose it could be. Regardless, I'd think the target company would be more interested in a SPAC for the relative simplicity of the deal, and there'd have to be some significant weight given to consideration of the one that could offer several billion dollars with publicly stated (via SEC filings) several billion more via prearranged private equity - especially if they think they should be valued at $50 billion as per Bloomberg. "People" used to talk about 15% as the minimal float, but I can't easily find anything at the exchanges listing a percentage, and I recall one SPAC that did an 11% deal recently. A small float makes large trades harder of course, and no publicly traded company should want illiquidity.