The Dax is around a quarter below its level at the beginning of the year, a recession is likely.
No sensible board of directors dares to go public in these times.
The risk of failing is far too great.
Or you get far too little money for your shares.
Porsche goes public.
As the only large German company after the outbreak of war in the Ukraine.
And the investors "rush" to the shares, as the "Financial Times" writes.
How can that be?
And even more so: How can that be, although the shareholders will have practically nothing to say?
And the Porsche boss
Oliver Blume
(54) also steers the Volkswagen group in a part-time job?
Michael Freitag, deputy editor-in-chief of manager magazin and long-time observer of the Volkswagen Group, provides information on this in this podcast in conversation with Sven Clausen.
In the "Das Thema" podcast, the editor-in-chief of manager magazin provides information every week about the internal research status on a relevant current and at the same time promising economic topic. You can subscribe to the podcast via manager magazin as well as on Spotify , Apple , Deezer and Google.
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