SpaceX, OpenAI, ByteDance (owners of TikTok), and Stripe have one thing in common: They are all private companies valued in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Historically, companies of this scale would have gone public much earlier, but the timeline to IPO has shifted materially.
Over the past two decades, the average age of a company at IPO has nearly doubled—from 8 years in 2004 to roughly 14 years today.1 As a result, companies are spending more time in private markets, with a greater share of value creation occurring before they ever reach public investors.
Companies are IPOing Later With More Value Accruing While Private
More economic value is now being created while companies remain private, leaving less upside available once they eventually go public. For investors, this shift increases the importance of accessing private markets to fully participate in long-term value creation.
A staggering 87% of all companies with revenues over $100m are privately owned,2 meaning a substantial portion of the real economy—and many of its most important growth themes, including AI, infrastructure, and the energy transition—is increasingly financed outside public markets.
Investors looking for a simple way to access private market value creation might consider the Tema Alternative Asset Managers (AAUM) ETF. AAUM provides a single-trade solution for accessing private-market value creation that is:
For more of our research and recent insights on Alternatives and more, view and subscribe to our insights.