None of which, it seems, is something which keeps Apollo Management's Leon Black up at night. He's going public, despite having privately listed his stock at a higher price:
Apollo had already broadcast its intentions to list publicly, having traded on a private Goldman Sachs Group Inc. exchange since last summer. Those shares are down more than 40%.
Since it's inconceivable that the IPO price will come at a 67% premium to the price at which Apollo is trading on the Goldman exchange, investors who bought in early are going to look a little foolish, or at best unlucky.
But I'm glad that Apollo has made this decision, if only because the convention that each equity round has to be priced higher than the last serves no useful purpose. Leon Black is rich and powerful enough to be able to ignore it; with any luck, other corporate executives will increasingly follow suit.



