By Fred Hubler, CEO & Chief Wealth Strategist of Creative Capital Wealth Management Group
High‑growth companies are staying private longer than ever, shifting years of value creation out of the public markets and into private hands. As IPO timelines stretch and secondary markets expand, new investment vehicles are emerging that give individuals a way to access growth earlier than they could a decade ago.
For years, the playbook was predictable: build, scale, and go public within five to seven years. Apple, Amazon, and Google all followed that path. Today, the timeline looks very different. Many of the most disruptive companies now spend a decade or more under private ownership, raising successive rounds of capital while avoiding the scrutiny and short‑term pressures of public markets.
SpaceX is the clearest example. The company created more than 20 years of value before announcing plans for an IPO — two decades of growth that public investors never saw. And SpaceX isn’t an outlier. Hundreds of late‑stage private companies are delaying their public debut, leaving retail investors shut out of much of the early appreciation.
Explore other articles by Fred Hubler at Forbes.




