In 1999, inventory consumers had a cornucopia of recent choices as U.S. firms went public at a near-record clip. The crop included names like Nvidia and BlackRock that, for many who bought them on the primary day of buying and selling, have delivered spectacular long-term returns.
Now the IPO market is heating up once more. Whereas 2026 will virtually actually not match the banner yr of 1999, which noticed 476 firms go public, buyers ought to have much more selections than they did 4 years in the past, when simply 38 corporations held an IPO. These more likely to debut this yr embody the giants SpaceX and OpenAI.
“We’re going to see some companies go public that are going to be defining the American technology and economic landscape for the next decade,” says Matt Kennedy, senior strategist at Renaissance Capital.
All of that is attractive for buyers hoping to get in early on the subsequent Microsoft or Google. However, as historical past reveals, there may be a lot to present pause to these trying to pounce on first-day share choices.
Extra IPOs, extra duds
Jay Ritter is a soft-spoken emeritus professor on the College of Florida who has acquired the nickname “Mr. IPO” for his exhaustive analysis on preliminary public choices. His knowledge reveals that new choices go on to beat the general market in some years, however in different years the alternative is true—notably in years that produce a bumper crop of IPOs.
Whereas shares in Nvidia proved a winner, that wasn’t the case with the general class of 1999 IPOs. That yr, the truth is, noticed newly public firms ship three-year returns of -48%. The quantity is very sobering on condition that Ritter’s metric measures from the first-day closing worth (which is nearly at all times larger than the official supply worth), and excludes nonconventional IPOs like reverse mergers.
For these tempted to dismiss this as historic historical past—many members of the IPO class of 1999, in any case, obtained clobbered by the dotcom crash—2021 offers one other cautionary story. That yr noticed a flood of 311 firms go public—probably the most in 20 years—however the three-year returns they collectively delivered got here in at -49%. The explanation for this isn’t notably shocking.
“When every IPO is popping, that’s when you see deals thrown together in a hurry,” says Kennedy, noting that smaller, unprofitable firms that may ordinarily not make the lower can pull off an IPO in such a local weather. He provides that buyers face an additional problem throughout IPO bull markets as a result of even sturdy firms are liable to itemizing at hard-to-justify valuations, growing the percentages of a future droop.
The upshot is that IPO increase occasions supply buyers extra alternatives, but additionally much more possibilities of a misstep. In the meantime, firms that go public throughout lean years are extra apt to be constructed to final.
19%
Common first-day return to IPOs, 1980-2025 (minimal supply worth: $5/share)
$1.19 trillion
Mixture first-day IPOs over that interval
Supply: Jay Ritter, U of Florida
Through the years, the trail to going public has additionally shifted. In accordance with Ritter, firms that debuted within the Eighties and Nineteen Nineties have been usually youthful than at the moment’s IPO entrants, but additionally extra more likely to be worthwhile. Surprisingly, although, Ritter says that profitability on the time of an IPO isn’t an enormous predictor of future success. He says that firm gross sales are much better indicators, and corporations which have $100 million or extra in annual income usually tend to carry out nicely over the long run than these that don’t.
When to purchase, what to anticipate
Any investor who has sought to buy a newly listed inventory has probably encountered a well-recognized frustration: Even when they search to purchase proper when the inventory lists, the worth they see from their brokerage is larger than the official itemizing worth.
This happens as a result of the banks that underwrite the inventory supply the itemizing worth to massive shoppers, leaving retail buyers to scramble for shares on the open market. Those that need a greater worth can accomplish that by getting in even earlier—by way of a non-public sale or throughout an organization’s pre-IPO “road show”—however that’s simpler stated than executed.
In accordance with Glen Anderson of Rainmaker Securities, which brokers private-share transactions, it’s potential to pay money for shares of corporations like SpaceX or OpenAI, nevertheless it usually requires an funding of $250,000 or extra.
However for the overwhelming majority of buyers who will purchase shares on the open market, timing can nonetheless play a task. There is no such thing as a upside to in search of to buy a inventory proper when it lists, says Kennedy of Renaissance, including that it might even be a good suggestion to purchase it on the finish of the day or on the day after the IPO.
To get a real sense of a inventory’s worth usually requires ready significantly longer for the mud to settle. Ritter makes the case {that a} newly public firm’s first earnings report isn’t notably useful, noting that analysts and company executives are closely invested in delivering outcomes in step with expectations—that means a agency will take any steps needed to take action. He says an organization’s true funding potential will turn into clearer after six months, which is when insiders are allowed to promote their shares—after which the share worth will replicate the corporate’s fundamentals greater than IPO hype.
All this stated, the subsequent Nvidia is probably going on the market amongst this yr’s IPO crop, and for many who need to attempt to purchase it on its debut day, the most effective method remains to be old school analysis, says Anderson.
“You can press the buy button right at the opening for every new stock,” he says. “Or you can do the homework and see what a stock is really worth relative to its comps and valuation, and wait for the price you want. Otherwise, you are just rolling the dice.”
This text seems within the February/March 2026 subject of Fortune with the headline “IPO boom times are back—but be careful what you buy.”
