Many regard going public as the pinnacle of growth for firms, but more businesses now choose to remain private. Founders and stakeholders cite financial privacy, lighter regulation, and greater strategic control as compelling reasons to do so.
Financial Privacy and Reduced Reporting Requirements
Financial privacy stands as a core advantage of staying private. Private companies sidestep SEC regulations that govern public disclosure. Public firms must report quarterly using Form 10-Q, file Form 8-K for material developments, submit an annual 10-K, and prepare detailed proxy statements for shareholder meetings.
Private companies also have less stringent requirements than public companies. Even though private companies must keep accurate records and may have audited records for investors, lenders, or other stakeholders, they do not have to disclose financial or operational information such as revenue, margins, customers, or strategies. This type of financial security protects a company’s proprietary information and gives private companies a competitive advantage.
Long-Term Focus Without Quarterly Pressure
Public corporations must meet quarterly earnings expectations. If Wall Street’s projections are missed, even slightly, share prices drop, and public dissatisfaction arises. As a result, long-term corporate strategies, such as investing in research and development, are often ignored.
Unlike public corporations, private corporations do not have quarterly earnings calls or market analysts to review their strategies. As a result, they face fewer time constraints, enabling long-term strategies, innovative investments, and adaptation to rapid market changes or temporary losses. These factors give private corporations greater potential for superior long-term growth.
Maintaining Control and Ownership
When companies remain private, owners and initial investors retain greater control over the company’s direction. Going public increases the number of owners, allowing shareholders to submit proposals that influence how the company is managed and operated. In these organisations, boards are required to include independent members and adhere to complex governance standards.
On the other hand, private companies can tailor their governance as they wish. Major decisions may still rest with founders, principal investors, and management who share a common vision.
Capital Raising and Valuation Considerations
Public markets offer instant capital access, while private markets provide alternative funding sources, including venture capital, private equity, bank loans, and strategic partnerships. These avenues bypass the complexities of going public. Increased late-stage venture funding enables businesses to remain private yet raise substantial sums.
Private companies, unlike public companies, set their own valuations. A standard method for determining value is the 409A analysis, conducted mainly for tax compliance. These independent evaluations use methodologies such as comparable company analysis, forward-looking income projections, and asset-based approaches to arrive at a balanced valuation. In contrast to public companies, whose valuations fluctuate daily in response to market dynamics, private companies control both the timing and frequency of their valuations. Therefore, private companies experience distinct value stability.
Employee Equity and Compensation
Through stock options and other investment vehicles, private companies can still offer competitive equity compensation. Furthermore, Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code protects businesses and employees from tax penalties by requiring private companies to obtain independent valuations to determine the fair market value of the exercise price of employee stock options.
Equities that remain illiquid do not diminish employees’ interest in the upside, especially amid volatility stemming from acquisitions to public listings. 409A valuations stay ‘refreshed’ to stay in compliance and fair option pricing, so companies do these every year or after ‘material’ events like funding rounds.
The Bottom Line
Each company has its unique situation, developmental stage, and strategic aims, and these factors influence whether it remains private or goes public. Yet, from a longer-term perspective, the private model becomes more appealing due to the advantages of privacy, control, and strategic flexibility. For many growing businesses, remaining private is not a temporary strategy; rather, it is a conscious approach to foster sustainable growth while minimising costs, complexity, and public market scrutiny.
