OpenAI filed a confidential S-1 with the SEC, targeting a public debut as early as September at a valuation between $852 billion and $1 trillion.
The filing arrived inside a broader wave that Goldman Sachs says could produce a record $160 billion in US IPO proceeds in 2026, with SpaceX targeting a $75 billion raise at a $1.75 trillion valuation and Anthropic confidentially filing after a $965 billion late-May funding round.
The combined pipeline demand from SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic already exceeds the entire 2025 US IPO market by up to four times, and the rotation into AI is visible in the flow data.
For Bitcoin, the IPO wave is a liquidity test, where the same capital deciding between SpaceX and OpenAI is the capital that drove the ETF inflow cycle that took BTC to $126,000.
| IPO / market signal | Size / valuation | Why it matters for BTC |
|---|---|---|
| Goldman 2026 US IPO forecast | $160B proceeds | Potential record IPO supply |
| SpaceX IPO target | $75B raise / $1.75T valuation | Single listing could rival entire annual IPO markets |
| OpenAI target range | $852B-$1T valuation | Direct AI exposure becomes publicly investable |
| Anthropic valuation | $965B | Adds another mega-cap AI destination |
| Spot BTC ETF outflows | $1.7B first week of June; $4.4B prior streak | Shows BTC capital already leaking |
The rotation is already in the data
AI and semiconductor stocks surged roughly 170% over the past year as Bitcoin shed about 40% over the same period.
On June 3, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index advanced roughly 5.9% while Bitcoin fell about 4% that day, an intraday split that pointed directly to institutional rotation toward AI and semiconductors as crypto softened.
US-traded spot Bitcoin ETFs lost over $1.7 billion in the first week of June, adding to a prior $4.4 billion exit during a 13-consecutive-session run.
The standout day was May 28, when BlackRock’s IBIT recorded the second-largest single-day withdrawal in the fund’s history at roughly $528 million, and flow analysis pointed to concentrated institutional rebalancing, with allocators moving capital toward AI and semiconductor equities that were making new highs at the same time.
If the outflows reflect a deliberate reallocation by institutional desks, a mega-IPO calendar gives those same desks a concrete destination for capital that had previously gone into Bitcoin ETFs.
As pure-play AI labs become publicly available, the proxy demand that institutions previously satisfied through Nvidia, Microsoft, and Alphabet will unlock directly into the new listings.
Bitcoin earned its institutional allocation as the most liquid, high-beta vehicle for speculative exposure, and trillion-dollar AI listings inside traditional brokerage accounts now offer that same profile with quarterly earnings attached.
Animal spirits are contagious
Mega-IPOs on the scale Goldman Sachs is forecasting require receptive equity markets, strong retail appetite, and institutional demand for growth.
A market willing to absorb $75 billion for SpaceX and $1 trillion for OpenAI is a market running on high risk tolerance, and Bitcoin has increasingly traded as a risk asset that moves with that tolerance.
Bitcoin’s correlation with the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 intensified after institutional milestones such as spot Bitcoin ETFs and Strategy’s inclusion in the Nasdaq 100, peaking at 0.87 in 2024.
If the IPO window opens cleanly, with SpaceX pricing well, OpenAI’s roadshow confirming institutional appetite, and Anthropic’s October target holding, the resulting risk-on backdrop could pull Bitcoin ETF flows back into positive territory alongside equities.
Glassnode’s 14-day moving average of ETF flows has troughed near local Bitcoin bottoms, and sustained ETF selling has often coincided with turning points.
If that pattern holds, the current outflow streak concentrated in institutional rebalancing may already be close to exhausting the selling pressure, and a successful IPO cycle could be the macro catalyst that reverses it.
There is an estimated $8 trillion sitting in US money market funds, and SpaceX’s $75 billion raise represents roughly 1% of that pool.
At that scale, the IPO wave could tap a liquidity reservoir large enough to fund both asset classes simultaneously.
| Path | Transmission chain | BTC outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Bullish: animal spirits broaden | AI IPOs price well → Nasdaq/growth appetite strengthens → ETF buyers return → BTC reclaims high-beta role | BTC benefits from renewed risk appetite; $75K-$79K trend reclaim becomes plausible |
| Bearish: AI steals the trade | OpenAI/SpaceX/Anthropic absorb speculative capital → institutions prefer AI equity exposure → BTC ETFs keep bleeding | BTC loses its role as the default high-beta liquidity proxy |
| Shared risk: Fed pressure | Rates rise or Fed pushes back → AI valuations compress → risk assets sell off together | BTC and AI both suffer as high-duration/high-beta assets |
Bitcoin loses the high-beta role
If institutional allocators treat rebalancing away from BTC as a durable portfolio shift, the damage compounds even without a further price collapse.
AI megacaps posted record results in recent quarters, turning the AI buildout into a tangible cash-flow story. Bitcoin’s bull phases run on liquidity, narrative, and ETF-driven structural demand, consisting of a different engine that stalls when flows reverse.
OpenAI is burning $1.22 for every $1 of revenue and still targeting a $1 trillion valuation, which means the IPO wave is itself a speculative bet on a product, 50 million consumer subscribers, and an enterprise revenue run rate of $25 billion annually.
Bitcoin offers a scarcity argument, but scarcity narratives lose ground when earnings-driven momentum compounds at 170% per year within the same risk tier.
During the Bitcoin ETF outflow streak, Nvidia was up 6% and semiconductor stocks were making new highs, suggesting the sell-off was driven by crypto-specific factors and an AI rotation.
An interest rate shock that reprices AI IPO valuations would likely hit Bitcoin alongside tech, since the same correlation that amplifies upside in risk-on conditions accelerates the drawdown when sentiment reverses.
Goldman Sachs warned that volatility and exposure to software stocks are still key risks to its $160 billion IPO forecast, and a sustained repricing of AI listings would remove the risk-on backdrop that Bitcoin needs to recover.
The IPO wave’s impact on Bitcoin will resolve across whether Bitcoin ETF flows turn net positive while IPO demand rises, whether Nasdaq strength broadens beyond AI leaders into the wider market, whether Bitcoin reclaims the 30-day moving average near $75,685 and the 200-day near $78,840, and whether the Fed’s rate posture stabilizes enough to prevent equity supply at stretched AI valuations from triggering broad de-risking.
| Indicator to watch | Bullish signal for BTC | Bearish signal for BTC |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin ETF flows | Sustained net inflows return while IPO demand rises | ETF outflows continue despite AI IPO enthusiasm |
| Nasdaq breadth | Rally broadens beyond AI leaders | Gains remain concentrated in semis and AI megacaps |
| BTC technical levels | Reclaims 30-day MA near $75,685 and 200-day MA near $78,840 | Fails below trend levels and retests $60K |
| Fed / rates | Yields stabilize, supporting risk assets | Rate shock reprices AI and crypto together |
| Prediction markets | Kalshi $100K odds rise from 21% | Sub-$50K / sub-$55K odds keep climbing |
Goldman Sachs has forecast a record $160 billion in US IPO proceeds for 2026, contingent on marquee names including SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic going public.
That condition depends on market conditions staying receptive through the second half, which already has Bitcoin down 33%, ETFs in net outflow for the year, and Kalshi pricing only a 21% chance that BTC crosses $100,000 before January 2027.
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