The Secondary Market for Trading Company Equity: Understanding Liquidity Options
For founders and early investors in private trading companies, the secondary equity market provides liquidity options before a traditional exit. Understanding how it works, who buys, and at what price is essential knowledge as the market matures.
By Tom Harrington
InvexHuby · 19 May 2026
⏱ 2 min read· 350 words
One of the most significant developments in private markets over the past five years has been the maturation of the secondary market for private company equity — the market through which existing shareholders in private companies sell their stakes to new investors, independent of a primary fundraising round or traditional exit event.
For founders of trading companies who have built significant equity value but do not yet wish to pursue a full exit, the secondary market provides a genuinely attractive option: partial liquidity that reduces personal risk concentration while maintaining operating control and the ability to benefit from future growth.
The secondary market for trading company equity has historically been less developed than for technology company equity, partly because trading company valuations are less transparent and partly because the investor base for trading company equity is smaller. But the market has grown substantially, driven by specialist secondary funds, family offices, and the growing interest of private equity in the sector.
Price discovery in secondary transactions follows different dynamics from primary rounds. Buyers of secondary equity negotiate from a position of information advantage over sellers — they have typically done more analysis and have better comparable data than an individual founder or early employee selling a stake. Experienced advisors with specific knowledge of trading company valuations are essential for any seller seeking to achieve a fair price.
The most important variable in secondary pricing is what the buyer believes about the company's growth trajectory. A company perceived as having significant unrealised growth potential will trade at a premium to a company at a similar current revenue level but perceived to have plateaued. This means founders who can compellingly articulate their growth strategy and demonstrate early execution against that strategy achieve significantly better secondary prices.
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Tom Harrington
InvexHuby · Finance
Tom Harrington at InvexHuby delivers expert analysis and breaking coverage across global markets, trade intelligence, and business strategy — combining deep industry expertise with rigorous reporting standards to provide actionable intelligence for business leaders worldwide.
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