Once the epitome of a successful startup, the idea of ringing the bell to open Wall Street on the first day of trading its public shares have taken a back seat as of late. The harsh and somewhat modern truth is that in reality, more companies are staying private for longer. Well-known corporations such as Tesla are looking closely at taking themselves private, away from public markets. The number of listed companies on the US exchanges have now more than halved since their peak at 8,884 in 1997.

So why has this happened? Have the markets lost their appetite for risky investments? Have founders found the red tape is too much? Or like the way of so many technologies are they “out of date”?

IPOs may look like a perfect means of raising funds money to secure the future of your company. When taking a closer look, businesses realise the significance of the undertaking, and how only the largest of businesses are in a position to benefit.

This should not dissuade a company from going public, however, this approach should naturally be taken very seriously. The IPO route is not a guaranteed ‘money maker’ for companies and/or shareholders. Some firms have been greatly disappointed by the price performance of IPOs, as the recent Lyft and Uber IPOs have shown which again has put pressure on the CEOs of these companies.

So bearing in mind that we now know that IPOs are on the decrease, due to significant hurdles and investor frustrations, the alternative is clear – Security Token Offering or STO.

Crowdfunding: a New Era

Let’s take a step back. Crowdfunding is not new. Going through the chapters of the financial crisis of 2008, one sees a distinct pattern of overwhelming aversion to the financial markets on the part of the enterprising folk at that time. Combine that with the startups’ need for cash in the credit-starved market, add the rise of smartphone into the mix, and you can get a sense of where things were headed at the time. Eventually, the prevalent distrust for bankers morphed with the transformational power of e-commerce birthed the likes of GoFundMe and Kickstarter.

Roughly at the same time, Bitcoin ceased to be a topic for computer science lessons and turned into a mainstream media headline as a viable technology for creating a monetary system completely independent of the state apparatus. Selfless minds rejoiced, and from their midst appeared Vitalik Buterin with his Etherium ecosystem, followed by Fabian Vogelsteller – the inventor of the Ethereum-based ERC-20 technical standard that kicked off the ICO era. At its peak in 2017, many digital entrepreneurs honed their crowdfunding skills on the ICO boom perfecting the technology for use in the coming years. That technology came to be known as “the Security Tokens.”

Now, there are far better men than me who have written extensively on the topic of security tokens and I recommend to anyone attempting to go in-depth on the subject, first of all, to read up on professor Steve McKeon. But, for the purposes of this article let’s say that you trust my definitions, and one for security tokens would be that they are a complaint and legally binding digital representation of the ownership right to an asset. In other words, it’s a piece of software with a smart contract embedded with it that testifies to the fact that you own something fair and square. The contract is made irrefutable by the distributed ledger it’s registered on better known as the blockchain.

Access

The amount of STOs in the first quarter of 2019 alone has increased by 130%. This new financial instrument, which utilises blockchain technology, has the capability to revolutionise the way in which fundraising can be carried out. Below we will cover how the STO is dealing with some of the key concerns, and improving upon existing models.

Initial coin offerings (ICOs) highlighted the speed and sheer excitement a blockchain project could have within a select community. Projects were receiving millions of dollars before they even had a product ready to launch. Backed by a dedicated community who truly believed in the work that the business was going to achieve, they traded funds for utility tokens; giving them access or the ability to use the platform once it was built.

What the ICO phenomenon created were a belief in blockchain technology and rapidly growing disruptive businesses. For many, it was about being the first investors in a project and gaining access to deals that they might not necessarily have had. In doing so, it created a brand new level of access that is simply not seen in traditional markets.

You may be thinking this sounds a lot like crowd fundraising, and you’re not wrong.

Crowdfunding, in some sense, has opened up early-stage investments to many. However, it has not opened its doors to disruptive technology businesses. Tech unicorns like Lyft and Uber, both of which recently underwent their initial public offerings (IPO), sought funding from the traditional venture capital firms. These VCs have made billions of dollars from being able to get in at a much earlier stage than the public markets.

What the STO model will initiate is the next generation of business to be accessed at a much earlier stage than the traditional IPO market. Utilising the same sale structure that ICOs used, but under a much stricter and more regulated format, STOs will enable everyday investors to access these businesses, creating a fairer playing field and a new investor class of its own.

Global investor pool

Traditional capital and secondary markets are, for the most part, locked off to the everyday investor. Brokers and traders hold the keys to this market, meaning that unless you hold either of those positions or use them to trade securities, you simply cannot access shares. As well as this, there are jurisdictional issues that can also limit whether or not an investor is able to access the markets.

We have seen these existing crowd fundraising platforms, is that they simply don’t have the capabilities to deal with this. An example of this would be Monzo who had to build their own platform in order to meet the demand for their sale. Blockchain technology can scale at an incredible pace and easily, making it the perfect place for a business to issue its equity, organise a sale and track all transactions of its sale.

The security token structure is building on the work that the ICO model had already started. Businesses will have the ability to sell their tokenised equity or debt to almost every country on the globe. Whilst for some, this sparks a very controversial debate regarding Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) processes, it shouldn’t. Tokenised securities will work just as traditional securities will, under the watchful eye of the regulators.

It means that for an early-stage business, they are not confined to a select few investors or one country, but an entire planet. It means a varied customer demographic and also a more global audience for the business. This is something that, unless your business is already a large corporation, is simply not possible.

Liquidity

Without a doubt, one of the largest problems that investors face is the lack of liquidity when it comes to their shares. However, the lack of such liquidity has not seemed to deter VCs in the slightest. In 2018 alone, VC firms invested over $255 billion USD in over 15,000 businesses globally, a $75 billion USD increase from the previous year.

Investors face a long and lengthy wait if they are to receive an exit after funding an early-stage business. VC firms must wait an average of 8.2 years for an IPO and five years for acquisitions or buyouts as Pitchbook found, these are the highest levels recorded in the last decade.

For many businesses, they are simply looking to make the money received from VCs go further, avoiding a liquidity event altogether. And, in some cases, VCs are being avoided in order to remove the power away from one sole investor looking for such a large stake of equity.

Crowdfunding, in which businesses sell their equity to many investors, began to take this power from single investors and offered people shares in a growing business. However, it also kept them locked in with nowhere to sell their shares, limiting a secondary market before it had even got started.

STOs, however, will be able to combat this. Once the project is live on an exchange, investors will be able to trade their tokens immediately. These investors are not locked up for close to a decade and have the ability to trade these shares 24/7 – something that is not available in the securities industry as it stands.

Transparency

There is still a slight mysticism when it comes to shareholders. Whilst regulators around the globe have ways in which people submit their personal information regarding which assets they own, there are of course ways around this.

The 13F form requested by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the USA only requires asset managers to submit a 13F if they have over $100 million under their management. There is nothing similar for everyday investors which leaves a large grey area. Whilst these capital markets have of course tried to give investors a level of clarity when it comes to investments, it has not always worked.

Utilising the blockchain technology, STOs offer a level of transparency that is unlike anything in the traditional financial space. Transactions will be logged, time-stamped and even show other investors who which wallet address has bought the shares. This is unlike anything else currently in place in the traditional financial markets. Paper shares were only eradicated in the late 2000s, highlighting how slow capital markets have been to keep up with all changes in the market.

In doing so, blockchain will enable complete transparency, reducing the risks of securities fraud and, in the process, allowing everybody to see who is transacting. It means that small investors have the potential to see if large investment firms are backing a new project. For the business itself, it enables them to know who is buying their equity in a safer environment, keeping an immutable database of all investors.

Final Thoughts

What we hope to have shown here is how the STO funding model is taking the best bits of crowd fundraising and in combination with technology, solving a plethora of other issues, such as liquidity for investors and founders, transparency for regulators and a global pool of investors.

Combining blockchain technology with the world of traditional securities will make for a much smarter and safer way for businesses to raise money and investors to gain access to the next generation of startups.

That’s not to say the STO will replace all the other models, there will always be a place for IPOs (although they also may be recorded on the blockchain) and VC funding will also be an option (and they may invest in STOs). But as with most new technologies, once the benefits are apparent, adoption is quick.

Article originally appeared here, and was edited by Smartlands for relevance and clarity.