GoFundMe Stock: 3 Reasons Why an IPO is Unlikely
GoFundMe is a privately-owned crowdfunding platform for personal and charitable causes. You cannot buy GoFundMe stock today, and a GoFundMe IPO is unlikely in the future. Here are three reasons why.
GoFundMe is a privately-owned crowdfunding platform for personal and charitable causes. You cannot buy GoFundMe stock today, and a GoFundMe IPO is unlikely in the future. Here are three reasons why.
1Password’s blend of innovation, security, and scalability positions it as a leader in digital security. With a potential upcoming IPO, investors should watch for key signals as it prepares to capitalize on growing demand for password management solutions.
Patreon is a software company providing a membership and subscription business model service to professional creators (podcasters, YouTubers, bloggers, adult content, etc.). Access IPOs is on the watch for an investable IPO opportunity.
Canva empowers everyone to be a graphic designer. But will everyone be able to buy Canva stock in a forthcoming IPO? Let’s dig into the details of Australia’s hottest private startup.
Carta is a startup for startup founders and venture capital firms. As such, its private stock and potential IPO will gain much attention in the close-knit industry based in Silicon Valley. However, whether or not retail investors are interested is yet to be seen.
Gusto is a user-friendly human resources SaaS company with an extensive list of prominent private investors. When IPO volume returns to the market, expect Gusto to make its public debut.
Neo4j is a graph database technology company that will likely conduct an IPO when market conditions permits. The startup has already selected its preferred stock exchange and is IPO-ready.
AI software gets most of the mainstream press attention. But Cerebras aims to be a premium hardware platform for AI computing, competing against NVIDIA with a different approach designing chips and processing data.
Grammarly entices retail investors with its sexy SaaS and A.I. acronyms, boasting a healthy recurring revenue model. But will the company be compelled to pursue an IPO when market conditions improve?
Ramp is a leading corporate credit card and expense management startup. But the legacy and up-and-company environment is crowded. Can Ramp launch above and beyond its competitors?
Remote teams use “whiteboarding” as an effective tool to design workflows, collaborate, and plan and execute work. Miro offers a best-of-breed SaaS platform used by 99% of the Fortune 100 companies.
Zapier is a digital automation and integration company that enables workflows between various online platforms for marketing, lead generation, and repetitive tasks. But will retail investors ever get a chance to invest?