This week, the streaming music service Spotify made its trading debut on the New York Stock Exchange. It used an unusual strategy: Rather than raising money, the company went public by listing itself on the exchange so it could avoid the longer and more regulatory process of doing an initial public offering. Already its shares have jumped and the company is positioned to do more offerings.
So could this have an impact on the IPO market? The jury’s still out. But judging from last quarter, the IPO market seems to be doing just fine.
Sure, there are a lot of reasons to be uncertain about U.S. capital markets recently what with the significant swings in the Dow Jones industrial average, interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, saber-rattling by Russia and a potential trade war with China. But that hasn’t stopped a number of companies from going public in the U.S. — and raising billions in the quarter ended March 31. It was the IPO market’s best performance since 2015, according to a study by research company Renaissance Capital.
Marketwatch reports that during this period, 43 companies went public, raising $15.6 billion, well ahead of the $10.9 billion raised the previous quarter. During the first quarter of 2018, four companies raised more than $1 billion, which was more than all of 2017.