The IPO market has grown quiet again. Here’s what is behind the shift in sentiment

Traders working at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), on Sept. 20th, 2023.

NYSE

It’s quiet out there in IPO land — very quiet.

This is it: the weeks before Thanksgiving usually bring a spate of large IPOs eager to go public before the holiday season starts.

“Whatever you are going to get between now and the end of the year should be happening right now,” Don Short, head of venture equity at InvestX, told me.

Except, nothing is happening.

“The bad companies can’t go public, and the good companies don’t want to go public in a bad market,” Matt Kennedy from Renaissance Capital said.

A terrible performance for stocks in October, higher-for-longer interest rates, poor after-market performances from the recent spate of initial public offerings this summer and the prospects of dramatically lower valuations appear to be causing many IPO candidates to rethink or delay their debuts.

The steady rise in the 10-year Treasury yield was a particular deal killer.

“That was a big wet blanket” for the IPO market, Greg Martin from Rainmaker Securities told me.

Companies delaying IPOs

Waystar, which was considering launching its roadshow last week, is reportedly delaying its IPO until December or into 2024.

Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Panera Bread was laying off 17% of its corporate staff in advance of a possible IPO next year.

Others still interested in an IPO may have to take very large haircuts.

Buy now, pay later firm Klarna, another oft-mentioned IPO candidate, told CNBC it has no immediate plans to go public. The company last raised cash at a valuation of $6.7 billion, which marked a massive 85% haircut to its previous valuation of nearly $46 billion.

Chinese fast-fashion giant Shein has not made a decision on the timing or valuation of an IPO, but sources familar with the company’s plans told Bloomberg the company was targeting a valuation of $80 billion to $90 billion. However, the most recent funding round in May valued the company at $66 billion.

This is in stark contrast to most years, when big IPOs went public in November and December.

Rivian, the biggest IPO of 2021, priced on Nov. 9, 2021, and began trading the next day. Hertz raised $1.3 billion in November 2021. Braze raised $500 million the same month, Sweetgreen raised $364 million. Allbirds raised $303 billion.

Airbnb went public in December 2020 and raised $3.5 billion. The day before that, Doordash raised $3.4 billion. A month earlier, in November 2020, Sotera Health raised $1.1 billion, and Miravai Life Sciences raised $1.6 billion.

But the year-end IPO gold rush fizzled in 2022, and it’s fizzling again this year.

So far, 96 IPOs have raised $18.8 billion in 2023, according to Renaissance Capital. That’s following on 2022, when a measly $7.7 billion was raised, the worst year for IPOs in decades. By contrast, a normal year should see at least $50 billion raised.

Recent IPOs aren’t helping

It didn’t help that the recent spate of IPOs have not gone well.

“What I was hearing was that everyone that was lining up after Instacart went public [in September] pulled their deal and everything went a bit quiet,” Short told me.

Three of the biggest IPOs of the year are trading below their offering prices, and, a fourth, Arm, is trading near its debut price, after dipping below it in early trading Thursday.

Largest IPOs, 2023
(from offering price)

Arm about flat
Kenvue down 13%
Birkenstock down 8%
Instacart down 10%

Source: Renaissance Capital

Marketing automation company Klaviyo, which went public in September, is also trading 8% below its offering price of $30 after reporting earnings on Tuesday.

Restaurant chain Cava Group went public in June and at $31 is trading above its initial offering price of $22, but the stock was as high as $57 in the month after it went public, so at Wednesday’s price of $31 most of the original buyers of the stock after the open are under water.

The Renaissance Capital IPO ETF (IPO), a basket of roughly 60 of the largest IPOs in the past two years, is down 17% from its July peak to October trough, S&P wasn’t as bad but similar trajectory.

Some companies may still go public

The market is not completely closed.

“I wouldn’t discount December. If the latest rally continues, we could get more activity,” Kennedy said. “Companies want to go public when there is an expectation the market is going to trade up.”

There are some small firms still in the pipeline.

U.S. natural gas producer BKV, which filed for a $100 million IPO in November of last year, recently updated its prospectus, which is a sign they are still looking to go public.

Homebuilder Smith Douglas, which filed for a $100 million IPO in September, also updated its prospectus in mid-October.

American Healthcare REIT, which filed in September 2022, filed updated financials and announced an additional underwriter (Morgan Stanley) this week.

Here’s another problem: AI

Tough choices for IPO candidates

That leaves IPO candidates with three choices: 1) go public, likely with a substantial haircut, 2) stay private, also likely with a haircut, and hope that your venture capital source will continue to fund you, or 3) merge or go out of business.

Greg Martin from Rainmaker Securities runs one of the leading private platforms for trading pre-IPO companies. He told me the companies in the best position are those who could fund their operations from their own cash flow, but that is not a large group.

“The private financing markets are even worse than the public financing markets, so you really don’t want to be running out of cash right now,” Martin said, adding that he is seeing much lower prices for private sales of stock compared with two years ago.

That leaves many of the roughly 800 tech unicorns (those with valuations above $1 billion) in a precarious position.

“We are starting to see unicorns die,” Martin said. “There’s a lot of lower quality unicorns with negative EBIDTA [cash flow], and there’s not much demand for them in the public markets, so the M&A route is increasingly likely for a lot of companies.”

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Top Wall Street analysts are bullish on these five stocks

A logo of Meta Platforms Inc. is seen at its booth, at the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups, at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France June 17, 2022.

Benoit Tessier | Reuters

The second half has kicked off in earnest, and earnings are revving up.

Investors tracking the action may garner useful insights from Wall Street experts’ top stock picks, and this can help them make informed decisions as they seek solid returns over the long term.

Here are five stocks for investors to consider, according to Wall Street’s top professionals on TipRanks, a platform that ranks analysts based on their past performance. 

Cava Group 

First on this week’s list is the Mediterranean restaurant chain Cava (CAVA), which made a blockbuster public debut last month. The rally in CAVA shares since its initial public offering reflects investors’ optimism about the fast-casual restaurant chain’s growth prospects. Cava has expanded to 263 locations since it opened its first restaurant in 2011.  

Stifel analyst Chris O’Cull initiated a buy rating on Cava with a price target of $48. The analyst sees robust growth potential, given the company’s plan to expand to at least 1,000 restaurant locations in the U.S. by 2032. Cava’s expansion plans include a foray into new markets in the Midwest region next year.  

O’Cull expects the company’s growth plans to be backed by a healthy balance sheet. He noted that following the IPO, Cava had about $340 million in cash on hand and no funded debt. The analyst estimates annual revenue growth of 20% during the next four years, driven by at least 15% growth in Cava’s footprint. He projects adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to almost double to $112 million in 2026 from $58 million this year and the company to generate positive free cash flow starting in 2026.  

“In our view, the stock’s premium valuation can be justified by its AUV [average unit volume] and unit count growth opportunity and the potential for solid operating momentum to cause upward revisions to near-term estimates and long-term earnings potential,” said O’Cull.  

O’Cull is ranked 349th among more than 8,400 analysts tracked by TipRanks. His ratings have been profitable 62% of the time, with each rating delivering an average return of 12.3%. (See CAVA Technical Analysis on TipRanks)        

Apple  

Tech behemoth Apple (AAPL) is known for its innovative products, including the iPhone and iPad. That said, the company’s higher-margin Services segment has rapidly grown over recent years and has enhanced the firm’s revenue and profitability.  

Evercore ISI analyst Amit Daryanani, who ranks 258th out of more than 8,400 analysts tracked on TipRanks, recently revealed the results of the annual Apple Services survey conducted by his firm. The survey indicated that Apple Services continues to experience increased adoption across the board. In particular, Apple Pay, Music and TV+ saw the most notable rises in adoption compared to last year’s survey. 

The survey revealed that Services’ average revenue per user (ARPU) in the U.S. is $110, which is much higher than Daryanani’s global estimate of $81. The analyst contends that ARPU growth is the major catalyst for the Services business, given that smartphone penetration has likely reached peak levels.  

“We continue to see Apple Services as well positioned to maintain double digit growth through FY27 and beyond driven by increasing ARPU coupled with new product launches,” said Daryanani.  

Daryanani reiterated a buy rating on AAPL with a price target of $210. He has a success rate of 60%, and each of his ratings have returned 11.5%, on average. (See AAPL Insider Trading Activity on TipRanks)  

Meta Platforms 

Next on our list is social media giant Meta (META), which recently launched Threads, a social media app challenging Twitter.

Tigress Financial Partners analyst Ivan Feinseth thinks that the Thread launch was well-timed to take advantage of Twitter’s sliding popularity. He said that the introduction of Threads has created an additional growth catalyst that could further drive Instagram’s engagement.  

Feinseth also expects Meta’s ongoing artificial intelligence investments and integration to continue to enhance engagement and advertising revenue across all its apps. The analyst highlighted that Meta’s solid balance sheet and cash flows help support its growth initiatives, including investing in the Metaverse, strategic acquisitions, and share repurchases.  

Feinseth reiterated a buy rating on Meta and raised the price target to $380 from $285. The analyst said, “Increasing AI integration, better cost management, and increased operating efficiency will drive a reacceleration in Business Performance trends.” 

Feinseth holds the 205th position among more than 8,400 analysts on TipRanks. Sixty percent of his ratings have been profitable, with an average return of 12.8%. (See Meta Blogger Opinions & Sentiment on TipRanks) 

Nvidia  

Semiconductor giant Nvidia (NVDA) is seen as one of the major beneficiaries of the growing interest in generative AI, which is fueling tremendous demand for its GPU chips.  

Goldman Sachs analyst Toshiya Hari noted that Nvidia has already gained from the traditional AI boom for a decade, as reflected in the spike in its Data Center segment revenue from $129 million in fiscal 2013 to $15 billion in fiscal 2023. The analyst increased his revenue and earnings estimates for Nvidia, as he thinks that the company has entered a new phase of generative AI-driven growth. 

Hari projects demand for Nvidia’s products in training generative AI models to represent a cumulative revenue opportunity of about $85 billion (base-case scenario) in calendar years 2023 to 2025. (See Nvidia Financial Statements on TipRanks)     

Meanwhile, he estimated inferencing (comprises key applications that could leverage generative AI like search, productivity tools in enterprise, ecommerce, email, and social media) could be a nearly $7.7 billion revenue opportunity from 2023 to 2025, including $4.5 billion in 2025.     

Hari increased his price target for Nvidia stock to $495 from $440 and reiterated a buy rating. He continues to see “significant runway ahead for the company based on its robust competitive position in what is a rapidly growing (yet nascent) AI semiconductor market.” 

Hari holds the 171st position among more than 8,400 analysts on TipRanks. Additionally, 63% of his ratings have been profitable, with an average return of 19.1%. 

US Foods

US Foods (USFD) distributes fresh, frozen and dry food, as well as non-food products, to food service customers.  

Recently, BTIG analyst Peter Saleh reiterated a buy rating on USFD with a price target of $48, saying, “US Foods is one of the best self-help stories in our coverage, with the majority of the EBITDA growth contingent on operational improvements management has been diligently implementing for the past year.” 

Following a stellar gross profit margin in the first quarter, Saleh raised his second-quarter gross margin estimate by 20 basis points to reflect increased penetration of private brands, stock-keeping unit (SKU) rationalization, reduced waste and improved labor retention. 

The analyst also raised his Q2 EBITDA estimate and expressed confidence in US Foods’ ability to beat expectations, citing the company’s strategic initiatives, stable industry sales and its track record of handily surpassing Wall Street’s EBITDA projections in recent quarters.   

Saleh is ranked 325th among more than 8,400 analysts tracked on TipRanks. His ratings have been profitable 64% of the time, with each one delivering an average return of 12.7%. (See US Foods Stock Chart on TipRanks) 

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