Unicorns May Throw a Lifeline to Stock Analysts

For years, equity research has struggled to develop a sustainable revenue model. The spectacular growth in private markets may provide the opening that Wall Street analysts have been groping for.

With US exchange listings having halved since 1996 and 1,489 unicorns now worth $5 trillion collectively, analysts are increasingly being asked to pass their slide rule over unlisted companies. JPMorgan Chase & Co. has launched coverage of OpenAI, and Citigroup Inc. hired a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. technology analyst to lead coverage of around 100 names.

While the best analysts have long fostered relationships with private companies, the primary way of being paid for that work was via trading commissions in adjacent public equities. Now, tokenization of private company equity may provide a more direct revenue stream.

Robinhood Markets Inc. in June issued a derivative of OpenAI equity on a public blockchain, handing it out to European investors. “Our giveaway plants a seed for something much bigger,” posted Chief Executive Officer Vlad Tenev. “Since our announcement we’ve been hearing from many private companies that are eager to join us in the tokenization revolution.”

Brokers could take a commission on trading of tokens as they do on publicly traded shares right now, but they would also be able finance them and offer lending facilities, a boost to their prime brokerage businesses.

Although Robinhood may have been first, other firms are watching closely. In his latest shareholder letter, BlackRock Inc. CEO Larry Fink complains that the world’s fastest-growing companies are “locked behind high walls, with gates that open only for the wealthiest or largest market participants.” He, too, proposes tokenization as a solution to making them more accessible. The theme cropped up on earnings calls at banks including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.