December 19, 2025

IPOs: Plenty of Momentum Heading into the New Year

According to PwC’s 2026 US Capital Markets Outlook, the state of the IPO market in 2025 gives us plenty of reasons to think that 2026 will be a strong year. Here are some of the signs of strength that PWC cites in its report:

– Through November 30, 72 traditional IPOs have raised more than $33.6 billion—surpassing the full-year totals of 2024 (62 IPOs; $27 billion), 2023 (35 IPOs; $17.7 billion), and 2022 (28 IPOs; $7.1 billion). Momentum accelerated meaningfully in late summer and early fall, with September becoming the busiest month for new listings in years.

– Notably, eight companies were still able to price their IPOs during the October-early November government shutdown, underscoring the depth of investor appetite and the resilience of the issuance window. The shutdown did, however, pause SEC operations and delay several in-process offerings, ultimately pushing many issuers into 2026.

– Sponsor-backed IPO activity strengthened further in 2025, marking the busiest year for sponsor-backed issuance since 2021. Year to November 30, 17 sponsor-backed companies have raised more than $8.9 billion, already surpassing the full-year total for 2024, when 13 deals raised $8.8 billion. The 2025 cohort has delivered an average return of approximately 22% since debut, reflecting solid investor demand for scaled, cash-generative businesses with clear deleveraging paths.

– VC-backed IPOs also strengthened in 2025. Year to November 30, 34 VC-backed companies have raised approximately $16.4 billion, compared to 29 issuers raising more than $8.6 billion in all of 2024. Although fewer in number than in earlier cycles, the 2025 cohort has been larger, more profitable and more operationally mature than their 2021 counterparts.

– SPAC issuance posted its most active stretch since 2021. Year to November 30, 122 SPACs have raised approximately $22.2 billion, far surpassing the 57 SPAC IPOs that raised $8.7 billion in 2024.

Sectors that PwC expects will lead the IPO charge in 2026 include AI infrastructure, insurance and specialty risk companies, and software—particularly AI-enabled platforms. It says that momentum is also building in industrials and the manufacturing sector, including reshoring, aerospace and defense.

John Jenkins

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