2017 Highlights: IPOs And ICOs

 | Dec 13, 2017 20:30

by Clement Thibault

After a relatively dull 2016 in Initial Public Offerings (IPOs), 2017 was more interesting than ever, but not for the traditional reasons. Rather, because of new developments on the asset front. Market participants were introduced to cryptocurrencies on a massive scale. The craze surrounding digital currencies brought wealth to some and chaos to everyone who follows the once relatively calm financial markets.

One offshoot of the crypto-craze was the creation of the IPO's younger sibling, the Initial Coin Offering or ICO. As the prices of Bitcoin and Ethereum for example, zoomed higher by more than a thousand percent this year, scores of digital entrepreneurs sought to create the next big coin or token.

ICOs also became a new tool for cash-strapped startups trying to circumvent the traditional routes for raising investor capital such as VC funds or IPOs. For months during the first half of 2017 the ICO market was totally unregulated. However, in July, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) stepped in, issuing a report detailing an investigation they were conducting regarding whether a German ICO had violated federal securities laws, using the report as template for how the SEC will view ICO activity going forward. From the report:

"The Commission stressed that those who offer and sell securities in the U.S. are required to comply with federal securities laws, regardless of whether those securities are purchased with virtual currencies or distributed with blockchain technology."

Not all ICOs however, seek to raise funds for the founder. Some are service-specific and exclusive to a certain app or blockchain. These types of coins are earned by performing an action on a certain platform; the liquidity of such alt-coins remains unknown at this point. In many such cases the return on investment or the possibility of cashing out is doubtful.

Still, demand for ICOs hasn't withered; year-to-date, ICOs have raised over $3.6 billion dollars in 2017.