Not a dumb question at all. The thing to keep in mind is that IPO stocks are allocated. There's a fixed amount of shares, and they are priced hoping for a "pop". So basically banks use IPO allocations (in hot companies) as a way to reward good customers. How important are you? Unless you are worth north of $100MM the answer is "not very."
The first step is to have a relationship with a private banker at a big bank/asset manager. You can tell her that you're interested in purchasing stock at IPO. Most big banks will have some allocation available.
Often the minimum ticket size is something like $100K--but there's no guarantee you'll get it. At some point before the IPO, your banker will tell you how much IPO stock was allocated to you. This will tell you how important you are to the bank. They might, maybe, throw you a bone and give you $10K of allocation.
You have to remember that IPOs are intended to be "free money." They are purposely underpriced. This isn't actually as nefarious as it sounds--the only people getting hurt by this is the issuing company, and not really. They want to have as good a relationship with the big bags of money as the issuing banks do. And there is some risk involved, they don't always pop, etc etc.
An important detail is that, because the IPOs tend to be mis-priced, they also tend to be pretty small. A company going public at a 2B valuation might only be offering 100MM worth of stock. At a 30% pop, that's basically 30MM of "free money" to distribute across the entire planet, which is honestly not that much.
The first step is to have a relationship with a private banker at a big bank/asset manager. You can tell her that you're interested in purchasing stock at IPO. Most big banks will have some allocation available.
Often the minimum ticket size is something like $100K--but there's no guarantee you'll get it. At some point before the IPO, your banker will tell you how much IPO stock was allocated to you. This will tell you how important you are to the bank. They might, maybe, throw you a bone and give you $10K of allocation.
You have to remember that IPOs are intended to be "free money." They are purposely underpriced. This isn't actually as nefarious as it sounds--the only people getting hurt by this is the issuing company, and not really. They want to have as good a relationship with the big bags of money as the issuing banks do. And there is some risk involved, they don't always pop, etc etc.
An important detail is that, because the IPOs tend to be mis-priced, they also tend to be pretty small. A company going public at a 2B valuation might only be offering 100MM worth of stock. At a 30% pop, that's basically 30MM of "free money" to distribute across the entire planet, which is honestly not that much.