Private placement: Difference between revisions
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imported>Doug Williamson (Link with Assessing the US private placement market from a corporate perspective (WIKI Handbook).) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Remove surplus link.) |
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It usually refers to an issue that has been designed for a specific set of investor needs at a particular time. | It usually refers to an issue that has been designed for a specific set of investor needs at a particular time. | ||
As such it is not normally expected to be traded in the secondary market and is not a 'public' issue. | As such it is not normally expected to be traded in the secondary market and is not a 'public' issue. | ||
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It is not normally expected to be listed on an exchange. | It is not normally expected to be listed on an exchange. | ||
A wide variety of securities under various names are private placements. In Germany, [[Schuldschein]] are a form of private placements, for example. | |||
A wide variety of securities under various names are private placements. | |||
In Germany, [[Schuldschein]] are a form of private placements, for example. | |||
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* [[Listing]] | * [[Listing]] | ||
* [[Issue]] | * [[Issue]] | ||
* [[NAIC]] | * [[NAIC]] | ||
* [[PEPP]] | * [[PEPP]] |
Revision as of 20:24, 9 February 2019
This is a form of securities issuance that has no exact definition.
It usually refers to an issue that has been designed for a specific set of investor needs at a particular time.
As such it is not normally expected to be traded in the secondary market and is not a 'public' issue.
It is not normally expected to be listed on an exchange.
A wide variety of securities under various names are private placements.
In Germany, Schuldschein are a form of private placements, for example.
See also
- Assessing the US private placement market from a corporate perspective
- Listing
- Issue
- NAIC
- PEPP
- Placement
- Placing
- Private bond
- Rule 144A
- Schuldschein
- Secondary market
- Security
- USPP
Other links
Developing a UK Private Placement market – interim report of the PP15+ working group, 2012
Hot money just got hotter...then evaporated, Colin Tyler, ACT July 2013