Pre‑IPO Street provides accredited investors with access to select private market investments typically reserved for institutional investors, including venture‑scale growth rounds, issuer‑led Reg D Private Placements, and curated pre‑IPO investment opportunities.
Built by the leadership behind Compliance Exchange Group (CXG), our platform applies broker‑dealer operational rigor and regulatory insight to investor onboarding, deal access, and the subscription process. We do not provide investment advice. We provide a structured path for qualified investors to evaluate opportunities and participate through issuer‑approved offering documents
A pre‑IPO investment generally involves purchasing equity or convertible securities in a private company prior to a potential public listing. “Pre‑IPO” does not mean an IPO is guaranteed or imminent. These private investments can involve significant risk, long holding periods, transfer restrictions, and limited liquidity.
We work exclusively with investors who meet SEC accredited investor standards and understand private market investment risk.
Investors should be prepared to:
Regulation D (Reg D) is a set of exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933 that allows companies to raise capital without registering securities with the SEC, provided specific conditions are met. For accredited investors, the exemption matters because it determines who may participate, whether general solicitation is permitted, and what accredited investor verification steps may apply.
Two common paths you will encounter in private placements and private markets:
Rule 506(b): Often used for relationship‑based raises. General solicitation is prohibited. Accredited investors typically self‑certify through an investor questionnaire and representations, subject to issuer suitability standards and disclosures.
Rule 506(c): Allows general solicitation, but all purchasers must be verified accredited investors. Verification is completed using “reasonable steps,” often through a qualified third party (CPA, attorney, broker‑dealer, or verification provider).
Some offerings may also accept non‑U.S. investors under Regulation S (international / offshore) where appropriate, subject to jurisdictional restrictions, offering terms, and investor eligibility. The exact onboarding steps depend on the issuer’s exemption, counsel documentation, and the investor’s profile.
Pre‑IPO Street is designed for individuals and entities that meet SEC accredited investor standards (Rule 501) and who understand private market investment risk. Private placements and alternative investments for accredited investors can be appropriate for long‑term allocators, but they are generally not a fit for investors who require public‑market liquidity, daily pricing, or short time horizons.
If you are building an alternatives allocation and can evaluate private markets—often with the support of your financial, legal, and tax advisors—our objective is to provide a curated, process‑driven experience that emphasizes disciplined screening, clear disclosure, and compliance awareness.
“Curated” does not mean “guaranteed.” It means we prioritize discipline in how opportunities are presented and how investors are onboarded.
Before an opportunity is made available, we typically assess whether the issuer is prepared to support investor diligence with coherent materials, a credible raise structure, and clear risk disclosure. We also look for alignment between the raise structure and the exemption pathway (for example, Rule 506(b) vs. Rule 506(c)) so that the subscription process can be executed through issuer counsel and the documented regulatory framework.
When opportunities are presented, investors should expect issuer‑approved offering documents and a workflow designed to support investor suitability. Investors remain responsible for their own diligence and for confirming that each private placement fits their objectives, risk tolerance, and liquidity horizon.
We focus on accredited investor deal flow that aligns with institutional expectations for documentation and process. Availability varies, but opportunities may include:
We emphasize quality and fit rather than volume. Not every deal is appropriate for every investor, and private investing is inherently asymmetric. Investors should conduct independent diligence and consult advisors before subscribing.
Private placements / private markets vary meaningfully in how economics and investor rights are defined. Common structures include:
Equity (common or preferred): Ownership interests; preferred equity often includes negotiated preferences and protective provisions.
Convertible instruments (convertible notes or SAFEs): Designed to convert into equity upon a future priced round or other conversion event, subject to caps, discounts, or related terms.
Debt instruments: Interest‑bearing obligations with defined maturity and
repayment terms.
Warrants: Rights to purchase equity at a defined price.
SPVs / syndicates: Vehicles that aggregate multiple investors into a single cap table line item, with governance and fee terms defined in SPV documentation.
Illiquidity and transfer restrictions that may prevent resale
Long timelines to potential liquidity and uncertainty around timing of liquidity events
Partial or total loss of investment
Valuation uncertainty and limited price discovery
Information asymmetry and limited reporting obligations versus public issuers
Concentration risk if positions are over‑sized
Offering‑specific restrictions that can limit secondary transactions
Yes. We work with investors who meet SEC accredited investor standards under Rule 501. Certain offerings may require additional steps depending on the exemption and jurisdiction.
No. Pre‑IPO Street does not provide investment advice, recommendations, or individualized portfolio guidance.
For offerings that require verification (commonly Rule 506(c)), verification is typically performed by a qualified third party such as a CPA, attorney, broker‑dealer, or an accredited verification service using reasonable steps.
Some offerings may accept non‑U.S. investors under Regulation S, subject to jurisdictional restrictions, investor eligibility, and offering terms.
Submit an application for access. Once onboarded, you can review opportunities and choose whether to subscribe through issuer‑approved offering documents.
