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Meet PWRL – High-growth Private Tech In One Ticker

Published June 29, 2026

For most of the last two decades, the innovative and fastest growing companies reshaping our world have opted to remain private for a longer duration before pursuing an IPO. By the time public-market investors could buy in, much of the value creation had already accrued to a small group of early private investors, leaving the public markets to act, increasingly, as an exit ramp for insiders rather than an on-ramp for everyone else.  Powerlaw Corp. (Nasdaq: PWRL) was built to change that – to provide access to these previously inaccessible high growth private companies. But before getting deeper into why PWRL exists, it helps to understand exactly what PWRL is, because PWRL is a different kind of instrument.

The Fund. PWRL is a publicly traded closed-end fund (a "CEF"). Unlike traditional open-ended funds which continuously create and redeem shares as money flows in and out, a closed-end fund has a fixed pool of shares that trade between investors on an exchange, just like a stock. You buy PWRL through your brokerage from another investor who is selling their shares. This structure is what enables PWRL to hold these hard-to-trade private assets while still offering you daily liquidity.

Fund Pricing. Every fund has a Net Asset Value: the value of everything it owns, minus what it owes, divided by shares outstanding. For an ETF, the share price tends to track NAV closely. For a closed-end fund, the two can drift apart, because the share price is set by supply and demand on the exchange, not by the mechanism that keeps the price of a traditional ETF in line with NAV. When the price sits above NAV, the fund trades at a premium; below NAV, a discount. Neither is unusual, and PWRL publishes its NAV every month so investors can see exactly where they stand.

PWRL came public through a direct listing, not an IPO. In a traditional IPO, a company or fund sells new shares to raise capital before the stock starts trading. PWRL did the opposite: its portfolio was already assembled, so rather than raise new money, it simply listed its existing shares on Nasdaq on May 27, 2026. When you buy PWRL today, you are buying into a fund that is already established, diversified, and invested in the underlying private companies – there is no wait for the fund to source new investment to invest your capital.

PWRL carries the guardrails of a registered fund. Because PWRL is a registered investment company, it operates with an independent board of directors, an independent auditor, and an independent custodian. It publishes NAV monthly and discloses its portfolio holdings quarterly. And because it has elected to be treated as a Regulated Investment Company, shareholders receive standard 1099 tax reporting at year-end rather than the K-1s common to private partnerships.

The WHY of PWRL. Over the past 25 years, the number of U.S. public companies has roughly halved. The average technology company now takes 12-plus years to reach an IPO, up from about six a decade ago. And by most estimates, 80–90% of U.S. households have effectively been shut out of private-market investing altogether, walled off by accreditation rules, high minimums, and closed networks reserved for the few.

The creators of PWRL believe everyone should have access to invest in these industry defining and high growth private companies. Through a single Nasdaq-listed security, PWRL seeks to offer investors exposure to a concentrated portfolio of roughly 15 to 20 late-stage private companies including leading names across AI, software, aerospace and defense, fintech, and digital infrastructure that many people already know but few could ever own, until now.

The mission, is to put the world's most transformative companies within reach of every investor, not just the privileged few.

The result is a single, Nasdaq-listed way to own a slice of the private technology companies defining this era, paired with the liquidity, reporting, and oversight investors expect from the public markets.