Three of the world’s most valuable private companies are preparing to go public. SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI are expected to collectively raise around $200 billion through their IPOs, which would make 2026 a record year for public listings in the United States.
SpaceX leads the group with an expected raise of around $80 billion, backed by a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion. That would place it among the largest companies in the world from day one on the public markets.

Anthropic and OpenAI are expected to follow later in the year. Both companies are at the center of the current wave of investor interest in artificial intelligence.
The immediate impact on markets is expected to be modest. Only about 4–5% of each company’s shares will be available to trade at launch, which limits how much weight they will carry in major indexes like the MSCI World.
But that could change quickly. Once lock-up periods expire, more shareholders will be free to sell. Capital Economics estimates that if free floats rise to 25%, that could mean an additional $750 billion in equity supply entering the market.
That is a large number. Index funds and ETFs tracking global markets would need to rebalance, shifting money toward these new entrants and potentially away from existing large-cap stocks.
Alphabet has also announced plans to raise $80 billion through share sales. Reports suggest Meta may follow. Both companies are looking for ways to fund large capital spending on AI infrastructure without taking on more debt.
Capital Economics flagged that surging equity issuance has historically lined up with the late stages of major stock market booms. The firm noted that gross issuance peaked close to the top of the market in each of the last three major bull runs.
U.S. net equity issuance by non-financial corporations turned positive in the first quarter of 2026 for the first time since mid-2021. Capital Economics said that recent history suggests rising share issuance tends to signal the end of an equity boom is months away, not years.
However, not all analysts see these IPOs as a warning. Some point out that today’s AI companies are generating real revenue, unlike many firms that listed during the dot-com boom of the late 1990s.
The risk today is less about companies lacking business models and more about whether growth expectations are too optimistic.
SpaceX’s high valuation leaves little room for error. Any miss on financial targets could trigger sharp price swings.
Capital Economics stopped short of calling these IPOs a definitive market top. But it does see them as a meaningful test of how much demand the equity market can absorb.
The post Why the SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI IPOs Are Being Watched as a Stock Market Warning Sign appeared first on CoinCentral.


