PANews June 27 news, according to CoinDesk, Goldman Sachs has released its latest assessment of the US IPO market, pointing out that US IPOs will see a significant recovery in 2026, but market enthusiasm still falls far short of the 2000 dot-com bubble era, with AI-related financing demand serving as the core driver of this listing wave.
Data shows that in 2026, about 50 companies have already completed IPOs in the US, doubling the number year-on-year, with cumulative financing of approximately $120 billion, a scale approaching the full-year record of 2021. Goldman Sachs' chief US equity strategist Ben Snider stated that this recovery is a normal cyclical repair, with core support coming from large corporate listings and the expansion of AI industry capital expenditure.
From a horizontal comparison, over the past 25 years, US IPOs averaged about 100 per year. In 2021, the full-year total exceeded 250, and in 1999 during the internet bubble period it was close to 400. The current number of offerings does not show extreme speculative characteristics. The institution also cautioned that although the market exhibits early bubble signs such as high valuations and AI theme concentration, judging from the IPO supply dimension, the market is only undergoing a structural recovery and has not yet entered a full-blown speculative cycle.



