A wave of mega-IPOs including SpaceX and Anthropic has investors worried about market dilution — but Deutsche Bank's historical analysis suggests the opposite outcome.
US equity issuance has surged to about $120 billion a quarter from a low of $30 billion in early 2023, raising concerns that a flood of new supply could overwhelm demand and drag down stock prices. Deutsche Bank strategists pushed back against that narrative, arguing that IPO waves are a symptom of strong markets, not their undoing.
"Issuance waves are driven by strong markets, not the other way around," said Binky Chadha, chief global strategist at Deutsche Bank. "The concern about supply is one of the most common questions we get from clients, and historically it has been misplaced."
Over the past three decades, the median S&P 500 return during IPO peaks was about 8 percent over three months and more than 20 percent over 12 months, according to the bank's analysis of multiple issuance cycles. The sole exception was the 2008-2009 financial crisis, when equity issuance was forced by systemic distress rather than driven by market opportunity.
The academic literature on issuance waves shows that returns eventually weaken after prolonged cycles — but the timing is difficult to predict, and markets typically deliver substantial gains before any reversal. "It feels like 1999, not 2000," Chadha said, referencing the dot-com era where the peak followed years of strong returns.
The Supply Calculus
Even the largest anticipated IPOs represent a fraction of total market capitalization. SpaceX, set to debut on Nasdaq on June 12 under the ticker SPCX at a $1.75 trillion valuation, would account for roughly 0.15 percent of the S&P 500's total value. Anthropic, which filed a confidential S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 1 and is reportedly targeting a valuation near $965 billion, would add a similar increment.
Deutsche Bank acknowledged that isolated large IPOs can create short-term friction, estimating a drag of about 1 percent on the broader market in a single-stock scenario. But the bank noted that the S&P 500 experiences corrections of 3 percent or more every one to two months from a variety of causes, making IPO supply just one factor among many.
The demand side of the equation remains robust. Fund inflows continue at a steady pace, corporate earnings growth is supporting valuations, share buyback activity remains elevated, and household balance sheets have sufficient capacity to absorb new issuance, the strategists said.
The 1999 vs. 2000 Question
The analogy to the late 1990s captures both the opportunity and the risk. From 1995 through early 2000, the S&P 500 delivered cumulative returns exceeding 200 percent, driven by the internet boom and a wave of technology IPOs. The eventual bust in 2000-2002 erased those gains, but only after years of outperformance.
Chadha's framing suggests the current cycle still has momentum. Issuance is rising because companies see favorable conditions — strong investor demand, high valuations, and a receptive regulatory environment — not because they are desperate for capital. That distinction, the strategists argued, is what separates this cycle from crisis-era issuance.
The key risk, according to Deutsche Bank, is not the volume of supply but the possibility that macroeconomic conditions shift — a hawkish Federal Reserve, a spike in bond yields, or a recession that dries up demand. The June 16-17 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, the first under new Chair Kevin Wars, will be an early test of whether the macro backdrop can sustain the current pace of issuance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.