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Lincoln International Just Set Terms For A $421 Million IPO

Published May 12, 2026
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Summary:
  • Mid-market M&A advisory firm Lincoln International filed terms Monday for an IPO of about 21 million Class A shares at $18 to $20, raising up to $421 million.
  • The Chicago-based firm booked $942 million in revenue for the 12 months ended March 31, 2026.
  • Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are lead bookrunners. Shares will list on the NYSE under "LCLN" the week of May 18.

Most boutique investment banks stay private for a reason: they hate having to share quarterly numbers with public investors. Lincoln International is about to break that habit.

The Pitch To Public Markets

The Chicago-based firm filed terms Monday for an initial public offering of about 21 million Class A shares at $18 to $20.

At the top end - and including the extra shares that usually get tacked on to most IPO deals - it could raise up to $421 million for Lincoln and a small group of existing shareholders.

Lincoln itself is selling about 20.6 million shares, with insiders adding roughly 446,000 more.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are running the deal as joint bookrunners.

Shares are expected to price the week of May 18 under the ticker LCLN.

For more on the IPO market and which deals are actually worth watching, Market Briefs covers it every weekday morning - and a free investing masterclass comes with signup.

What Lincoln Actually Does

Founded in 1996, Lincoln advises mid-sized private companies on M&A - mergers and acquisitions, when companies buy each other - and pitches itself as the go-to shop for private equity and private credit clients.

It runs two business lines: investment banking advisory (the M&A work most people picture when they hear "boutique bank") and valuations and opinions (the slower, fee-based work of telling clients what their portfolio assets are actually worth).

Revenue for the 12 months ending March was $942 million across more than 30 offices in 14 countries.

Why The Timing Matters

Big bank IPOs usually piggyback on deal cycles. Lincoln is going public into a market where private equity firms are sitting on near-record dry powder - capital they've raised but haven't deployed yet - and starting to hunt for exits.

That's bullish for any firm that gets paid when PE buys, sells, or refinances, and Lincoln makes money on all three.

The question: will public investors value an advisory firm at the same level as the deal flow it advises on, or treat it like a service business with thinner profit margins?

Worth Noting

LCLN won't be the only mid-market advisory firm to test the water this year. If Lincoln prices well, expect the rest of the boutique world to take notes.

If you want to know which IPOs to actually keep an eye on, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

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