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by ddeck
3 days ago
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Broadcom is publicly listed with a public float of about 98% (i.e. 98% of it's shares are listed publicly). You're right that most shares are held by institutions (~80%), but that typically reflects the fact that most share ownership by individuals/companies goes through intermediaries (401k, fund investments, ETF etc.). Most of this institutional ownership is just asset managers, insurance, banks etc. taking their cut before passing returns/loses through to the end risk holder. The average institutional ownership of companies in the S&P500 for example is also ~80%. None of this takes away from the point that Broadcom is absolutely run like a PE firm as the original commenter noted. Not surprising given the CEO was appointed by KKR/Silverlake 20 years ago. https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AVGO/holders/?p=AVGO |
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So a public(ly-traded) private equity firm. :)