There's a big difference between being profitable on a netting basis and being profitable. If the company is not in a spot where they are profit what is the reason for that? Is it because they're aggressively spending to try to grow their customer base, ecause they're kind of in a land grab boat? But hey, bet we'll find that out in the next couple of quarters. Yes, i like the chances of a company like a terbo tax, not that they were recent, yo, know, recently public company with withinto it that that product,. More so than a consumer product that people need to be convinced to buy.
Editor's note: This episode was recorded before news of the Coinbase's insider trading case was made public on Friday.
2021 was a milestone year for companies going public. In 2022, the tide turned. Dylan Lewis and Brian Feroldi look back on the IPO boom and discuss: - Reasons why companies go public - Newly-public companies that may never come back to IPO levels - Questions for investors to ask even when financials look strong - The trends that hit Robinhood and Rocket Mortgage - Lessons from pre-revenue companies that went public
Stocks mentioned: COIN, HOOD, RKT, NKLA, SPCE, JOBY, RIVN, LCID, SEMR, INTU
Host: Dylan Lewis Guest: Brian Feroldi Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl
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