What is a Privately Held Company in Canada ?
A privately held company is a company whose shares and related rights or obligations are not offered for public subscription or publicly negotiated in their respective listed markets. Instead, the company's stock is offered, owned, traded or exchanged privately, also known as 'over-the-counter'.
In other words, A Privately Held Company is a company that is wholly owned by individuals or corporations and does not offer equity interests in the company to investors in the form of stock shares traded on a public stock exchange. A company in the “private sector” refers to non-government-owned businesses, and includes both privately held (non-traded) and publicly traded (offering stock shares traded on an exchange) companies.
Examples of a privately held company
There are many more privately held companies than public companies in existence. While extremely large businesses tend to become publicly traded at some point (to access capital markets and gain liquidity), there are many well-known private companies.
Well-known private companies include:
- Koch Industries
- Deloitte (one of the Big Four accounting firms)
- C. Johnson
- KPMG
- Ernst & Young (E&Y, Big Four)
- PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC, Big Four)
- IKEA
- LEGO
- Rolex
Types of privately held companies IM Canada
There are various types of private company structures, each of which offers its own advantages and disadvantages. The most common types are Corporation, Limited Liability Partnership (LLP), Sole Proprietorship, and Non-Profit Organization. These types vary in their specific definitions and structures by country, but in most countries, a corporation is the most commonly used company structure.
Risks of ownership
Owning shares in a private company poses many risks. While all investments are risky, owning shares in a private business entails some unique risks, such as the following:
- Lack of liquidity (since shares do not trade on a public exchange)
- Challenging to value (private company valuation and financial modeling exercises pose challenges due to less readily available information)
- Governance issues (many private businesses lack the corporate governance structures that are in place in public companies)
- Personal liability (owners of private companies typically need to pledge personal assets as collateral to get financing from banks)
If you are planning to Set up & Open a Privately Held Company in Canada with the above description, contact me
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