Private Stock Deals app for iPhone and iPad


4.2 ( 5242 ratings )
Business Finance
Developer: Scott Roberts
Free
Current version: 1.1, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 01 Mar 2015
App size: 1.13 Mb

Private Stock Deals is a bulletin board service for helping the buyers and sellers of stock in private companies locate each other. It is not an online exchange for completing transactions. The online service will keep your email address anonymous while you screen inquiries. If you want to take your conversation outside of this service, you merely have to reply to an inquiry with your contact information revealed in the body of your note.

The clock you see as the symbol for this application is a proxy for the state of the market for the stock of venture capital backed companies. 12 o’clock is viewed as the high point in the market while 6 o’clock is the low point of the market. 9 o’clock is viewed as the middle of a bull (rising) market while 3 o’clock is the middle of a bear (falling) market. These are macroeconomic cycles where a full 12 hours equates to an average of 3 years historically. However, some cycles have been less than a year and others as long as 15 years, so there are no guarantees that current conditions will last any particular amount of time. The icon for this app will change time without your having to launch the application so that you can see the state of the market at a glance.

The clock currently shows 11 o’clock which means that the venture capital industry is in an upswing and near the top of the market. With stock market indices at record high levels, the number of venture capital backed companies in the IPO queue for 2015 is a substantial increase over 2014. When the IPO market is strong, then the M&A market tends to be strong as well, since companies with cheap public currency will rush out to make strategic acquisitions while they can still afford it. Other indicators of the state include the 50+ venture capital backed companies that have private valuations exceeding $1 billion at the time of this writing. The mezzanine and secondary capital institutions that fueled these valuations are not long term investors and did so because they view IPO liquidity at even higher valuations to be imminent.