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⬆️ Direct Listing Track

What Is a Direct Listing? — A Plain-English Explanation

A direct listing is a path to going public that skips the underwriting process — no new shares issued, no lock-up period, no bookbuild. Existing shareholders list their shares directly on an exchange. It works for a narrow set of companies that meet five specific criteria.

Last updated: June 2026

Direct Listing vs. IPO

New capital raised None (standard)
Underwriting fees ~$20–35M vs. 5–7% spread
Lock-up period None — sell Day 1
Who has done it Spotify, Slack, Coinbase, Roblox
SEC S-1 required Yes — same process
Opening price Set by exchange auction

A direct listing is a path to going public in which a company's existing shares are listed on a stock exchange without a new offering of shares and without the involvement of underwriters. No new capital is raised. No lock-up period is imposed. The opening price is set by the market — through the exchange's auction process — rather than by a banker-managed bookbuild.

How a Direct Listing Works

In a traditional IPO, a company issues new shares to institutional investors through a bookbuild process managed by investment banks. In a direct listing, existing shareholders (employees, early investors, venture capital funds) simply list their already-owned shares on the exchange for the first time. Anyone can buy them on the day of listing — and sellers are not subject to lock-up restrictions.

FeatureDirect ListingTraditional IPO
New shares issued?No (existing shares only)Yes — primary offering raises capital
Capital raised$0 (standard) or limited (new NYSE/Nasdaq rules)Full offering proceeds
Underwriters involved?Financial advisors only (no underwriters)Full underwriting syndicate
Underwriting fees~$20–35M advisory fees5–7% underwriting spread
Lock-up periodNone — all shareholders can sell Day 190–180 days for insiders
Opening price set byExchange auction (DMM process)Banker bookbuild and management
RoadshowInvestor Day (educational only)2-week institutional roadshow
SEC S-1 required?Yes — same S-1 as IPOYes

Who Direct Listings Are Right For

A direct listing is viable only for companies that meet all five criteria simultaneously:

  1. No need for capital: The company has sufficient cash and does not need to raise primary proceeds at listing.
  2. Existing brand recognition with institutional investors: Investors know the company well enough to buy shares without a roadshow. Consumer brand recognition is not required — institutional investor familiarity is.
  3. Large shareholder base with liquidity motivation: Employees and early investors are eager for liquidity and willing to accept the opening auction price.
  4. Tolerance for opening-day volatility: Without underwriter stabilization, the opening price and first-day trading can be more volatile than in a traditional IPO.
  5. Comfort with full S-1 disclosure from day one: There is no testing-the-waters period or confidential filing option in the same way as an IPO.

Companies That Direct-Listed

CompanyExchangeDateReference PriceOpening PriceWhy DL Made Sense
SpotifyNYSEApr 2018$132$165.90No capital needed; strong global brand; saved ~$90M vs. traditional IPO
SlackNYSEJun 2019$26$38.50$800M+ cash; deep enterprise buyer brand recognition
PalantirNYSESep 2020$7.25$10.0017-year operating history; institutional investor familiarity; no capital needed
AsanaNYSESep 2020$21$27.00$900M+ cash; broad enterprise recognition; strong employee liquidity motivation
CoinbaseNasdaqApr 2021$250$381.00$2B+ cash; dominant crypto exchange brand; global retail and institutional awareness
RobloxNYSEMar 2021$45$64.50100M+ monthly users; very strong brand; COVID pivot to digital accelerated listing

Direct Listing with Capital Raise (DLAS)

Until 2020, a direct listing could only be used to provide liquidity to existing shareholders — the company itself could not raise new capital. The NYSE petitioned the SEC to approve a new structure allowing companies to raise primary capital through a direct listing, and the SEC approved this in December 2020. Nasdaq received similar approval in May 2021.

Under the Direct Listing with a Primary Offering (sometimes called DLAS), the company can sell newly issued shares on the day of the direct listing to raise capital, alongside existing shareholder sales. The mechanics:

  • The company registers newly issued shares on an S-1, just as in a traditional IPO, but does not engage underwriters to sell those shares on its behalf
  • The company sets a "floor price" — a minimum price below which it will not sell primary shares — which the floor must equal at least the low end of the price range in the registration statement
  • On listing day, the opening auction on the exchange matches all buy and sell orders; if the clearing price is at or above the floor price, the company's shares are sold into the auction at that price
  • If the clearing price falls below the floor, the company does not sell primary shares (existing shareholder sales still proceed at market)
  • The company receives proceeds equal to the number of primary shares sold multiplied by the clearing price, with no underwriting discount

No Company Has Yet Completed a Successful DLAS

As of mid-2025, no company has completed a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. The structure remains available and theoretically attractive (no underwriting fee), but practical concerns — including uncertainty about the opening price, no anchor investor process, and lender hesitancy about lending against capital raised through an unpriced mechanism — have prevented adoption.

The Reference Price vs. The IPO Price

In a traditional IPO, the "IPO price" is set by the company and underwriters based on the bookbuild order book. In a direct listing, there is no equivalent mechanism. Instead:

  • The financial advisor (investment bank) provides a reference price — a non-binding estimate of the expected trading range based on recent 409A valuations, secondary market transactions, and comparable company analysis. This reference price is disclosed in the S-1 prospectus.
  • The reference price does not bind any transaction — it is purely informational. The actual opening price is set by the exchange's opening auction, which balances all buy and sell orders.
  • Spotify's reference price was $132/share; it opened at $165.90 — 26% above the reference price. Palantir's reference price was $7.25/share; it opened at $10.00. Coinbase's reference price was $250/share; it opened at $381.
  • The variability between reference price and opening price creates uncertainty for selling shareholders who want to know approximately what price they will receive — this uncertainty is the primary reason some companies still prefer a traditional IPO despite the higher cost.

NYSE vs. Nasdaq Direct Listing Rules

FeatureNYSENasdaq
Primary capital raiseApproved December 2020Approved May 2021
Market value thresholdMarket value of publicly held shares ≥$100M (sell-side only); ≥$100M fresh capital or ≥$250M market value (with capital raise)Different thresholds apply; Nasdaq Global Select standards
Opening mechanismDMM (Designated Market Maker) opens trading manually after balancing order flowAutomated opening auction with market maker support
Historical usageMost high-profile direct listings (Spotify, Slack, Coinbase, Roblox)Less common for direct listings historically
Financial advisor roleMandatory financial advisor; bank advises but does not underwriteSimilar requirements

Why Financial Advisors Are Still Essential

A common misconception is that direct listings eliminate the need for investment bank advisors. In practice, companies pursuing direct listings engage one or more major investment banks as financial advisors — just not as underwriters. The advisory role includes:

  • Investor education and outreach in the months before the direct listing — meeting with institutional investors to build interest without the formal bookbuild
  • Advising on the reference price and the appropriate trading range to disclose in the S-1
  • Coordinating the investor day and pre-listing communications program
  • Acting as the financial advisor in connection with the NYSE or Nasdaq listing process
  • Advising on the floor price for any primary capital raise component

Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Allen & Co. advised Spotify on its 2018 direct listing for fees reportedly in the $30–35M range — compared to the ~$100M+ underwriting fee that a traditional Spotify IPO would have cost. The saving was real, but not as dramatic as "no underwriter" implies.

How the Registration Works

In a traditional IPO, the company registers new shares for sale on behalf of itself (primary offering) — the registration statement registers a specific number of new shares at a specific offering price. In a direct listing, the registration statement is a "resale registration" — it registers existing shares held by current shareholders for resale to the public, not new shares being issued by the company.

This distinction has several practical implications:

  • No fixed price: There is no offering price set before trading begins. The first trade price is determined by the exchange's opening auction, which matches buy and sell orders submitted before the open.
  • No underwriting discount: Because there is no underwriter selling new shares, there is no underwriting spread. Savings of 5–7% of proceeds — but no proceeds are raised in the first place.
  • NYSE and Nasdaq direct listing structures: Both exchanges have adopted rules allowing direct listings. The NYSE in 2020 approved a structure that allows simultaneous new share issuance alongside the resale — the "Primary Direct Floor Listing" — but this structure has seen almost no uptake in practice, as companies that need to raise capital prefer the traditional IPO bookbuild for price certainty.
  • Section 11 liability: A question arose after the Slack direct listing about whether purchasers of shares in a direct listing could bring Section 11 claims (registration statement liability) against the company. The Ninth Circuit's 2022 decision in Pirani v. Slack Technologies confirmed that Section 11 does apply to direct listing shares — a significant legal development that affects D&O insurance structure for direct listings.

The Opening Auction

The direct listing opening auction is the price discovery mechanism that replaces the traditional IPO bookbuild and roadshow pricing process. On the day of the direct listing:

  • The Designated Market Maker (on NYSE) or lead market maker (on Nasdaq) facilitates the opening auction, matching buy and sell orders submitted before market open
  • The auction runs until a single market-clearing price is found at which supply (shares available for sale) and demand (investor buy orders) are balanced
  • There is a reference price published the day before trading — an indicative price based on recent secondary market trades and the company's financial profile — but this is not binding
  • The reference price for Spotify was $132; it opened at $165. For Coinbase, the reference price was $250; it opened at $381. Reference prices are often significantly below the opening auction price for high-demand listings.

Is a Direct Listing Right for Your Company?

The five eligibility criteria — does your company check all of them?

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Direct Listing Eligibility

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