You can see the investments made in a company on the company's dedicated page. Click on any company anywhere on the site and you will land on its page, which may include news, filings, DCSC sectors, and, if we have private company insights for its jursidiction, the capital structure.
SEARCHING FOR COMPANIES
You can search for companies, too. If there's an entry for it under Private Companies and Brands, there may be a capital structure page (if we cover that jurisdiction).
Note there are two sets of results in the search for Private Companies. The left side (red box) shows companies that already have dedicated pages. The right side (blue box) shows companies with a disambiguating country. These companies may or may not have full dedicated pages (including news and other content).
THE CAPITAL STRUCTURE PAGE
Once you've found your company, click on the Capital Structure tab to see the data extracted from filings (the Filings tab will also show you the latest filings but without aggregated and structured data).
At the top you'll find two charts, one for share price and one for valuation:
You can hover over these to get datapoint details.
After the charts, you'll find equity structure and corporate actions, which showcase share class breakdowns and any corporate actions.
The following section is Share Allotments, which provides details for each fundraising filing from the company. The date, share class, amount raised, number of shares, and implied price per share are given. The file icon leads to the official filing from which the data has been derived.
The final two sections detail aggregate investor holdings and changes from year to year.
The total number of shares, their implied value (from the last funding round), the date reported, and the total percentage of shares is displayed. The filing from which price-per-share has been derived may be different from the filing for number of shares.
The Change in Investor Holdings table shows the change of holdings at each funding round. The change column is based on the change in that investor's holdings, NOT their change in ownership percentage of the entire company.
If an investor's name is a link, you can view their other investments.