Black and Gilson have argued that “venture capital can flourish especially – and perhaps only – if the venture capitalist can exit from a successful portfolio company through an initial public offering (IPO), which requires an active stock market.” But nothing in the Black and Gilson analysis requires that the exit option be a domestic capital market. In this article, I use the phenomenon of Israeli hi-tech companies going public on the Nasdaq as a case study to explore the connection between a venture capital industry and domestic capital markets in a world of global capital and product markets.

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Greenhorns, Yankees, and Cosmopolitans: Venture Capital, IPOs, Foreign Firms, and U.S. Markets
Edward B. Rock1
1University of Pennsylvania Law School
Citation Information: Theoretical Inquiries in Law. Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1565-3404, DOI: 10.2202/1565-3404.1034, November 2001
Publication History:
- Published Online:
- 2001-11-06


















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