Stack Capital Group Inc. Marks Five-Year Listing Anniversary on TSX with Market Opening

Stack Capital Group Inc. (STCK) will open the Toronto Stock Exchange on July 16, 2026, marking five years since the company went public in June 2021, according to Chatham Daily News. The ceremony is a milestone for a firm that gives everyday investors access to some of the world's most valuable private companies — before they ever trade on a public market.
Stack Capital's portfolio includes high-profile names like SpaceX, OpenAI, Canva, Crusoe, and Databricks, reports Stratford Beacon Herald. These are companies most retail investors cannot easily buy into on their own. Stack Capital changes that by listing on the TSX under the ticker STCK.
Stack Capital first listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange in June 2021, according to Clinton News Record. The July 16, 2026 market-open event marks exactly five years of trading under the STCK ticker. TMX Group, which operates the TSX, will host the ceremony. It is a formal recognition of the company's track record as a publicly traded vehicle for private equity exposure.
Going public was a deliberate choice. Stack Capital wanted investors to be able to buy and sell shares easily, just like any other stock. Most private equity funds lock up investor money for years. STCK shares can be held in any type of investment account, including registered accounts like RRSPs and TFSAs, Mitchell Advocate reported.
Stack Capital gives shareholders a stake in some of the world's top pre-IPO companies. Pre-IPO means the company has not yet sold shares to the public on a stock exchange. SpaceX, which builds rockets for NASA and private clients, is one of the most valuable private companies on Earth. OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, and design platform Canva round out the headline names, per The Crag and Canyon.
The portfolio also includes Crusoe, an energy-focused computing company, and Databricks, a leading data and AI platform. Owning shares in any one of these companies directly is almost impossible for most investors. Stack Capital bundles them together into a single, diversified portfolio that trades on a regulated public exchange.
Private equity — investing in companies not yet on a public market — has long been reserved for the ultra-wealthy and large institutions. Minimum investments can run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Stack Capital lowers that barrier. Investors can buy as little as one STCK share on the TSX, according to Stratford Beacon Herald.
The flexibility to hold STCK in any investment account type is a key selling point. Canadians can shelter gains inside a TFSA or save for retirement through an RRSP using the same shares. That kind of accessibility in the private equity space is rare, Mitchell Advocate noted.
Opening the TSX is a symbolic but meaningful event. Companies are invited by TMX Group to ring in the trading day, typically to mark a significant achievement. For Stack Capital, the five-year anniversary signals staying power. Many small-cap companies struggle to survive their first few years on a public exchange, according to Chatham Daily News.
The event puts Stack Capital in front of a broader audience of investors and media. With high-profile holdings like SpaceX and OpenAI generating constant news coverage, a public ceremony on July 16, 2026 could draw fresh attention to STCK shares. For a company built on access, visibility is part of the value, Clinton News Record reported.
Publishers
5
Articles
5
Reach
5