What Is a Private Company?
A private company is a firm held under private ownership. Private companies may issue stock and have shareholders, but their shares vì thế not trade on public exchanges and are not issued through an initial public offering (IPO). As a result, private firms do not need to tướng meet the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) strict filing requirements for public companies. In general, the shares of these businesses are less liquid, and their valuations are more difficult to tướng determine.
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Key Takeaways
- A private company is a firm that is privately owned.
- Private companies may issue stock and have shareholders, but their shares vì thế not trade on public exchanges and are not issued through an IPO.
- The high costs of an IPO is one reason companies choose to tướng stay private.
Investopedia / Jake Shi
How a Private Company Works
Private companies are sometimes referred to tướng as privately held companies. There are four main types of private companies: sole proprietorships, limited liability corporations (LLCs), S corporations (S-corps) and C corporations (C-corps)—all of which have different rules for shareholders, members, and taxation.
All companies in the U.S. start as privately held companies. Private companies range in size and scope, encompassing the millions of individually owned businesses in the U.S. and the dozens of unicorn startups worldwide. Even U.S. firms such as Cargill and Koch Industries, with upwards of $100 billion in annual revenue, fall under the private company umbrella.
Remaining a private company, however, can make raising money more difficult, which is why many large private firms eventually choose to tướng go public through an IPO. While private companies vì thế have access to tướng ngân hàng loans and certain types of equity funding, public companies can often sell shares or raise money through bond offerings with more ease.
Types of Private Companies
Sole proprietorships put company ownership in the hands of one person. A sole proprietorship is not its own legal entity; its assets, liabilities and all financial obligations fall completely onto the individual owner. While this gives the individual total control over decisions, it also raises risk and makes it harder to tướng raise money. Partnerships are another type of ownership structure for private companies; they share the unlimited liability aspect of sole proprietorships but include at least two owners.
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Limited liability companies (LLCs) often have multiple owners who share ownership and liability. This ownership structure merges some of the benefits of partnerships and corporations, including pass-through income taxation and limited liability without having to tướng incorporate.
S corporations and C corporations are similar to tướng public companies with shareholders. However, these types of companies can remain private and vì thế not need to tướng submit quarterly or annual financial reports. S corporations can have no more than thở 100 shareholders and are not taxed on their profits while C corporations can have an unlimited number of shareholders but are subject to tướng double taxation.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Private Companies
The high costs of undertaking an IPO is one reason why many smaller companies stay private. Public companies also require more disclosure and must publicly release financial statements and other filings on a regular schedule. These filings include annual reports (10-K), quarterly reports (10-Q), major events (8-K), and proxy statements.
Another reason why companies stay private is to tướng maintain family ownership. Many of the largest private companies today have been owned by the same families for multiple generations, such as the aforementioned Koch Industries, which has remained in the Koch family since its founding in 1940. Staying private means a company does not have to tướng answer to tướng its public shareholders or choose different members for the board of directors. Some family-owned companies have gone public, and many maintain family ownership and control through a dual-class share structure, meaning family-owned shares can have more voting rights.
Going public is a final step for private companies. An IPO costs money and takes time for the company to tướng phối up. Fees associated with going public include an SEC registration fee, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) filing fee, a stock exchange listing fee and money paid to tướng the underwriters of the offering.
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