Looking to sell Cortex stock or options?
Cortex has developed an internal developer portal aimed at enhancing incident response. This portal includes an automatic onboarding workflow that thoroughly scans all potential microservices sources, discovers them, and maps metadata, identifying key information such as ownership and on-call rotations. This empowers engineers to efficiently create production readiness checklists, conduct security audits, and assess both operational and development maturity levels.
Jack Altman, Russell D'Sa, Cross Creek Advisors, WiL (World Innovation Lab), Sequoia Capital, Craft Ventures, Gaetan Castelein, Scale Venture Partners, Peter McKay, Brian Emerson, Sam Lambert, Manik Gupta, IVP, Realm Capital Ventures, Scale Asia Ventures, Patrick Collison, Kearny Jackson, Sriram Krishnan, Shawn Burke, Mathilde Collin, Dheeraj Khanna, Y Combinator, Gokul Rajaram, Firebolt Ventures, Scott Belsky.
Cortex is currently a private company. This means that the company is not listed on any public exchange and so there is no public market for its stock. However, there may still be ways to monetize Cortex stock. Depending on Cortex’s policies, you may be able to: (1) find a private buyer in the secondary market to purchase your stock, (2) borrow against your stock, or (3) exchange Cortex stock into the Collective Exchange Fund for a limited partnership interest and then borrow non-recourse against your interest to generate immediate cash. This last alternative can be much quicker and net you more after-tax cash than your other options. An exchange into our fund also reduces your risk by diversifying your holdings out of an over-concentrated position.
Collective Liquidity can provide liquidity to shareholders of Cortex stock in two ways. First, Cortex employees can exchange shares into the Collective Exchange Fund and then borrow non-recourse to generate immediate cash. This can net you more after-tax cash than a stock sale. It also reduces your risk by diversifying your holdings out of an over-concentrated position. In some cases, Collective may also be able to purchase your Cortex stock. Note that all transactions in Cortex shares are subject to the company’s policies regarding secondary transactions. Schedule a call with a Collective Liquidity representative to learn more about your private market liquidity alternatives.
Cortex stock is not listed on any public exchange and so there is no public market for its shares. Therefore, there is no single, centralized price for Cortex stock. Typically, shares of private companies like Cortex are set with buyers in one off negotiations. Collective Liquidity, however, uses a proprietary algorithm to determine its bids so we almost always have an immediately actionable price for you.
On Sep 2024, Cortex is reported to have closed an equity financing in which the investors valued the company at $470M. This valuation is typically calculated by multiplying the per share price of the preferred stock sold in the financing by the number of Cortex shares outstanding assuming the conversion of all stock options, warrants, etc.
Tickers are used to identify company’s shares on public markets like the NYSE or Nasdaq. Because Cortex is not currently publicly traded, it does not have a ticker symbol.
Cortex has not yet conducted an initial public offering (“IPO”) and so remains a private company. Though Cortex is a well-known, successful company, there can be no assurance that it will ever go public or be sold. Because of the risk this imposes on Cortex shareholders, many investors elect to gain liquidity for at least some of their shares before the IPO. Schedule a call with a Collective Liquidity representative to discuss your private market liquidity alternatives.